The Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project puts PR before peer review

UPDATE: see this new story

BEST: What I agree with and what I disagree with – plus a call for additional transparency to prevent “pal” review

=======================================================

Readers may recall this post last week where I complained about being put in a uncomfortable quandary by an author of a new paper. Despite that, I chose to honor the confidentiality request of the author Dr. Richard Muller, even though I knew that behind the scenes, they were planning a media blitz to MSM outlets. In the past few days I have been contacted by James Astill of the Economist, Ian Sample of the Guardian, and Leslie Kaufman of the New York Times. They have all contacted me regarding the release of papers from BEST today.

There’s only one problem: Not one of the BEST papers have completed peer review.

Nor has one has been published in a journal to my knowledge, nor is the one paper I’ve been asked to comment on in press at JGR, (where I was told it was submitted) yet BEST is making a “pre-peer review” media blitz.

One willing participant to this blitz, that I spent the last week corresponding with, is James Astill of The Economist, who presumably wrote the article below, but we can’t be sure since the Economist has not the integrity to put author names to articles:

The full article is here. Apparently, Astill has never heard of the UAH and RSS Global Temperature records, nor does he apparently know that all the surface temperature records come from one source, NCDC.

Now compare that headline and subtitle to this line in the article:

It will be interesting to see whether this makes it past the review process.

And, The Economist still doesn’t get it. The issue of “the world is warming” is not one that climate skeptics question, it is the magnitude and causes.

I was given a pre-release draft copy of one of the papers, related to my work as a courtesy. It contained several errors, some minor (such as getting the name of our paper wrong i.e. Fell et al in several places, plus a title that implied global rather than USA) some major enough to require revision (incorrect time period comparisons).

I made these errors known to all the players, including the journal editor, and the hapless Astill, who despite such concerns went ahead with BEST’s plan for a media blitz anyway. I was told by a BEST spokesperson that all of this was “coordinated to happen on October 20th”.

My response, penned days ago, went unheeded as far as I can tell, because I’ve received no response from Muller or the Journal author. Apparently, PR trumps the scientific process now, no need to do that pesky peer review, no need to address the errors with those you ask for comments prior to publication, just get it to press.

This is sad, because I had very high hopes for this project as the methodology is looked very promising to get a better handle on station discontinuity issues with their “scalpel” method. Now it looks just like another rush to judgement, peer review be damned.

Below is my response along with the draft paper from BEST, since the cat is publicly out of the bag now, I am not bound by any confidentiality requests. Readers should note I have not seen any other papers (there may be up to 4, I don’t know the BEST website is down right now) except the one that concerns me.

My response as sent to all media outlets who sent requests for comment to me:

===========================================================

In contradiction to normal scientific method and protocol, I have been asked to provide public commentary to a mass media outlet (The Economist) on this new paper. The lead author,  Dr. Richard Muller has released me from a previous request of confidentiality on the matter in a written communication on 10/14/2011. 10/15/2011 at 4:07PM PST in an email.  The paper in question is:

Earth Atmospheric Land Surface Temperature and  Station Quality [Tentative title, may have changed] by Muller et al 2011, submitted to the AGU JGR Atmospheres Journal, which apparently has neither completed peer review on the paper nor has it been accepted for publication by JGR.

Since the paper has not completed peer review yet, it would be inappropriate for me to publicly comment on the conclusions, especially in light of a basic procedural error that has been discovered in the methodology that will likely require a rework of the data and calculations, and thus the conclusions may also change. The methodology however does require comment.

The problem has to do with the time period of the data used, a time period which is inconsistent with two prior papers cited as this Muller et al paper being in agreement with. They are:

Fall et al (2011), Analysis of the impacts of station exposure on the U.S. Historical Climatology Network temperatures and temperature trends J. Geophys. Res.

http://pielkeclimatesci.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/r-367.pdf

and

Menne et al  (2010), On the reliability of the U.S. surface temperature record, J. Geophys. Res.

Both papers listed above (and cited by Muller et al) do an analysis over a thirty year time period while the Muller et al paper uses data for comparison from 1950 – 2010 as stated on lines 142-143:

“We calculated the mean temperature from 1950 to the present for each of these sites, and subtracted the mean of the poor sites from the OK sites.”

I see this as a basic failure in understanding the limitations of the siting survey we conducted on the USHCN, rendering the Muller et al paper conclusions highly uncertain, if not erroneous.

There is simply no way siting quality can be established as static for that long. The USHCN survey was based on photographs and site surveys starting in of 2007, plus historical metadata. Since the siting of COOP stations change as volunteers move, die, or discontinue their service, we know the record of siting stability to be tenuous over time. This is why we tracked only from 1979 and excluded stations whose locations were unknown prior to 2002. 1979 represented the practical limit of which we assumed we could reasonably ascertain siting conditions by our survey.

We felt that the further back the station siting changes occurred, the more uncertainty was introduced into the analysis, thus we limited meaningful comparisons of temperature data to siting quality to thirty years, starting in 1979.

Our ratings from surfacestations.org are assumed to be valid for the 1979 – 2008 period, but with Muller et all doing analysis from 1950, it renders the station survey data moot since neither Menne et al nor Fall et al made any claim of the station survey data being representative prior to 1979. The comparisons made in Muller et al are inappropriate because they are outside of the bounds of our station siting quality data set.

Also, by using a 60 year period, Muller et al spans two 30 year climate normals periods, thus further complicating the analysis. Both Menne et al and Fall et al spanned only one.

Because of the long time periods involved in Muller et al analysis, and because both Menne et al and Fall et al made no claims of knowing anything about siting quality prior to 1979, I consider the paper fatally flawed as it now stands, and thus I recommend it be removed from publication consideration by JGR until such time that it can be reworked.

For me to comment on the conclusions of Muller et al would be inappropriate until this time period error is corrected and the analysis reworked for time scale appropriate comparisons.

The Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature analysis methodology is new, and may yield some new and potentially important results on siting effects once the appropriate time period comparisons are made. I welcome the BEST effort provided that appropriate time periods are used that match our work. But, by using time period mismatched comparisons, it becomes clear that the Muller et al paper in its current form lost the opportunity for a meaningful comparison.

As I was invited by The Economist to comment publicly, I would recommend rejecting Muller et al in the current form and suggest that it be resubmitted with meaningful and appropriate 30 year comparisons for the same time periods used by the Menne et al and Fall et al cited papers. I would be happy to review the paper again at that time.

I also believe it would be premature and inappropriate to have a news article highlighting the conclusions of this paper until such time meaningful data comparisons are produced and the paper passes peer review. Given the new techniques from BEST, there may be much to gain from a rework of the analysis limited to identical thirty year periods used in Menne et al and Fall et al.

Thank you for your consideration, I hope that the information I have provided will be helpful in determining the best course of action on this paper.

Best Regards,

Anthony Watts

cc list: James Astill, The Economist, Dr. Joost DeGouw, JGR Atmospheres editor, Richard A. Muller, Leslie Kaufman, Ian Sample

===========================================================

Despite my concerns, The Economist author James Astill told me that “the issue is important” and decided to forge ahead, and presumably produced the article above.

Here is the copy of the paper I was provided by Richard Muller. I don’t know if they have addressed my concerns or not, since I was not given any follow up drafts of the paper.

BEST_Station_Quality (PDF 1.2 MB)

I assume the journalists that are part of the media blitz have the same copy.

I urge readers to read it in entirety and to comment on it, because as Dr. Muller wrote to me:

I know that is prior to acceptance, but in the tradition that I grew up in (under Nobel Laureate Luis Alvarez) we always widely distributed “preprints” of papers prior to their publication or even submission.  That guaranteed a much wider peer review than we obtained from mere referees.

Please keep it confidential until we post it ourselves.

They want it widely reviewed. Now that The Economist has published on it, it is public knowledge.

There might be useful and interesting work here done by BEST, but I find it troubling that they can’t wait for science to do its work and run the peer review process first. Is their work so important, so earth shattering, that they can’t be bothered to run the gauntlet like other scientists? This is post normal science at its absolute worst.

In my opinion, this is a very, very, bad move by BEST. I look forward to seeing what changes might be made in peer review should these papers be accepted and published.

==============================================================

UPDATE: Judith Curry, who was co-author to some of these papers, has a post on it here

Also I know that I’ll be critcized for my position on this, since I said back in March that I would accept their findings whatever they were, but that was when I expected them to do science per the scientific process.

When BEST approached me, I was told they were doing science by the regular process, and that would include peer review. Now it appears they have circumvented the scientific process in favor of PR.

For those wishing to criticize me on that point, please note this caveat in my response above:

The Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature analysis methodology is new, and may yield some new and potentially important results on siting effects once the appropriate time period comparisons are made. I welcome the BEST effort provided that appropriate time periods are used that match our work. But, by using time period mismatched comparisons, it becomes clear that the Muller et al paper in its current form lost the opportunity for a meaningful comparison.

Given the new techniques from BEST, there may be much to gain from a rework of the analysis limited to identical thirty year periods used in Menne et al and Fall et al.

My issue has to do with the lost opportunity of finding something new, the findings may agree, or they may be different if run on the same time periods. I think it is a fair question to ask since my peer reviewed paper (Fall et al) and NOAA’s (Menne et al) paper both used 30 year periods.

If BEST can run their comparison on the 30 year period for which our data is valid, instead of 60 years, as stated before, I’ll be happy to accept the results, whatever they are. I’m only asking for the correct time period to be used. Normally things like this are addressed in peer review, but BEST has blown that chance by taking it public first before such things can be addressed.

As for the other papers supposedly being released today, I have not seen them, so I can’t comment on them. There may be good and useful work here, but it is a pity they could not wait for the scientific process to decide that.

================================================================

UPDATE2: 12:08 PM BEST has sent out their press release, below:

The Berkeley Earth team has completed the preliminary analysis of the land surface temperature records, and our findings are now available on the Berkeley Earth website, together with the data and our code at

www.BerkeleyEarth.org/resources.php.

Four scientific papers have been submitted to peer reviewed journals, covering the following topics:

1. Berkeley Earth Temperature Averaging Process

2. Influence of Urban Heating on the Global Temperature Land Average

3. Earth Atmospheric Land Surface Temperature and Station Quality in the United States

4. Decadal Variations in the Global Atmospheric Land Temperatures

By making our work accessible and transparent to both professional and amateur exploration, we hope to encourage feedback and further analysis of the data and our findings.  We encourage every substantive question and challenge to our work in order to enrich our understanding of global land temperature change, and we will attempt to address as many inquiries as possible.

If you have questions or reflections on this phase of our work, please contact, info@berkeleyearth.org.  We look forward to hearing from you.

All the best,

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Muller

Founder and Executive Director

Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature

www.berkeleyearth.org

=========================================================

I’m still happy to accept the results, whatever they might be, all I’m asking for is an “apples to apples” comparison of data on the 30 year time period.

They have a new technique, why not try it out on the correct time period?

UPDATE4: Apparently BEST can’t be bothered to fix basic errors, even though I pointed them out, They can’t even get the name of our paper right:

http://berkeleyearth.org/Resources/Berkeley_Earth_Station_Quality

I sent an email over a week ago advising of the error in names, got a response, and they still have not fixed it, what sort of quality is this? Fell et all? right under figure 1

And repeated six times in the document they released today.

Sheesh. Why can’t they be troubled to fix basic errors? This is what peer review is for. Here’s my email from October 6th

—–Original Message—–
From: Anthony Watts- ItWorks
Date: Thursday, October 06, 2011 3:25 PM
To: Richard A Muller
Subject: Re: Our paper is attached
Dear Richard,
Thank you for the courtesy, correction:  Fell et al needs to be corrected to
Fall et al in several occurrences.
When we complete GHCN (which we are starting on now) we’ll have a greater
insight globally.
Best Regards,
Anthony Watts

Here is the reply I got from Dr. Muller

—–Original Message—–
From: Richard A Muller
Date: Friday, October 14, 2011 3:35 PM
To: Anthony Watts- ItWorks
Subject: Re: Our paper is attached
Anthony,
We sent a copy to only one media person, from The Economist, whom we trust to keep it confidential.  I sent a copy to you because I knew you would also keep it confidential.
I apologize for not having gotten back to you about your comments.  I particularly like your suggestion about the title; that is an improvement.
Rich
On Oct 14, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Anthony Watts- ItWorks wrote:
> Dear Richard,
>
> I sent a reply with some suggested corrections. But I have not heard back
> from you.
>
> Does the preprints peer review you speak of for this paper include sending
> copies to media?
>
> Best Regards,
>
>
> Anthony Watts

==========================================================

UPDATE 5: The Guardian writer Ian Samples writes in this article:

The Berkeley Earth project has been attacked by some climate bloggers, who point out that one of the funders is linked to Koch Industries, a company Greenpeace called a “financial kingpin of climate science denial“.

Reader AK writes at Judth Curry’s blog:

I’ve just taken a quick look at the funding information for the BEST team, which is:

Funded through Novim, a 501(c)(3) corporation, the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature study has received a total of $623,087 in financial support.

Major Donors include:

– The Lee and Juliet Folger Fund ($20,000)

– William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation ($100,000)

– Fund for Innovative Climate and Energy Research (created by Bill Gates) ($100,000)

– Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation ($150,000)

– The Ann & Gordon Getty Foundation ($50,000)

We have also received funding from a number of private individuals, totaling $14,500 as of June 2011.

In addition to donations:

This work was supported in part by the Director, Office of Science, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231 ($188,587)

So now (pending peer-review and publication) we have the interesting situation of a Koch institution, a left-wing boogy-man, funding an unbiased study that confirms the previous temperature estimates, “consistent with global land-surface warming results previously reported, but with reduced uncertainty.

The identities of the people involved with these two organizations can be found on their websites. Let the smirching begin.

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David
October 22, 2011 2:20 am

Jeff Grantham says:
October 21, 2011 at 11:53 am
Smokey: In other words, Tisdale’s image is misleading — it attributes results to a paper that didn’t present them. That does not speak well for his integrity, and is usually criticized as “appeal to authority.” Nor is their any assurance Tisdale’s addition is correct, unless they were peer-reviewed somewhere.
But even worse, Tisdale’s plot clearly doesn’t even agree with Figure 1 (p. L07608) of Levitus 2009 where they overlap. Tisdale’s peaks in 2003, and Levitus et al in 2008.
Tisdale is trying to pull a fast one here, and you’re wrong to cite it as evidence when it has clearly been doctored. Sorry.”
Jeff, once again nobody is pulling a fast one. Also the NEW “continental rebound” ajustment skewers the real story and changes here…http://www.real-science.com/hiding-the-decline-in-sea-level and the only thing Best destroys is Hansens projections…http://www.real-science.com/doubt-temperatures-rising-fast-hansens-emissions

Jeff Grantham
Reply to  David
October 22, 2011 9:31 pm

David commented:
Jeff, once again nobody is pulling a fas one. Also the NEW “continental rebound” ajustment skewers the real story and changes here…http://www.real-science.com/hiding-the-decline-in-sea-level and the only thing Best destroys is Hansens projections…http://www.real-science.com/doubt-temperatures-rising-fast-hansens-emissions
You, like some others here, are intentionally trying to obscure the issue. The issue is about Tisdale’s chart (http://i55.tinypic.com/2i7qn9y.jpg), not about ISA or Hansen or anything else.

AlexS
October 22, 2011 3:06 am

“If blog scientists have more robust, and scientifically credible hypothoses that debunk human-induced climate change”
The burden of proof is in you. It is you that have to bring evidence that something outside the norm -and the norm is naturally variating- is happening.

October 22, 2011 6:32 am

AlexS, exactly right. The alarmist crowd doesn’t understand the null hypothesis. Never did, never will.
John Brookes says: “I’m heartened to read that skeptics here don’t dispute that the earth’s atmosphere is warming.”
Brookes also doesn’t understand that scientific skeptics have always known that the climate constantly changes, and that the planet is naturally warming from the LIA. The alarmist crowd follows Mann like lemmings, believing that there was no LIA or MWP, and believing that the climate never changed until the industrial revolution came along.
David says: “Jeff, once again nobody is pulling a fast one.”
Jeffy’s mind is made up and closed tight. He has decided on his alternate reality: that Bob Tisdale is a “fraud”. I seriously doubt that Jeffy has read Tisdale’s articles and the following commentary, so Jeffy’s opinions are baseless Skeptical Pseudo-Science talking points founded on ignorance. Jeffy Grantham has no understanding of the null hypothesis and its importance in this debate, so his ravings can be dismissed as cognititve dissonance from the eco-lunatic fringe.

Jeff Grantham
Reply to  dbstealey
October 22, 2011 9:28 pm

Smokey commented:
I seriously doubt that Jeffy has read Tisdale’s articles and the following commentary, so Jeffy’s opinions are baseless Skeptical Pseudo-Science talking points founded on ignorance.
Tisdale’s other writings have no bearing the issue of this image and neither does the null hypothesis.
His image:
1) attributes results to a paper that does not make them, and
2) uses an incorrect definition of “anomaly,” probably to make it appear that the increase in ocean heat content has stopped.
Both of these are misleading and, because they are intentionally misleading, fraudulent.

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 7:15 am

[snip. Read the site Policy. ~dbs, mod.]

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 7:35 am

[snip. Referring commentators as being in denial or denialists violates site Policy. Try again without using the d-word. ~dbs, mod.]

Jl
October 22, 2011 7:41 am

“If a man is offered a fact which goes against his instincts, he will scrutinize it closely, and unless the evidence is overwhelming, he will refuse to believe it. If, on the other hand, he is offered something which affords a reason for acting in accordance to his instincts, he will accept it even on the slightest evidence.” -Bertrand Russell

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 7:54 am

[snip. Stop using the word “denial”. ~dbs, mod.]

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 9:05 am

Dear Smokey,
The conventional meaning of “null hypothesis” would imply that you propose that global warming has nothing to do with human activity and/or carbon dioxide, if so your “alternative hypothesis” is what, exactly? That it is sunspot activity, solar flares, cosmic rays, total radiance, water vapour, volcanoes, anything other than CO2, or all of the above? If you still believe that any or all of these alternatives can (or rather do) withstand objective scrutiny, I think you really are (to use your word) “delusional”.
All of that assumes you accept that global warming is actually happening, as does a certain Dr Muller. So that is the first of your six pillars of climate “scepticism</em” demolished, how long will it take I wonder for the remaining five to collapse?

otter17
October 22, 2011 9:16 am

From the article above.
>> “And, The Economist still doesn’t get it. The issue of “the world is warming” is not one that climate skeptics question, it is the magnitude and causes.”
From “Surface Temperature Records: Policy Driven Deception?”
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/originals/surface_temp.pdf
>> “Instrumental temperature data for the pre-satellite era (1850-1980) have been so widely, systematically, and uni-directionally tampered with that it cannot be credibly asserted there has been any significant “global warming” in the 20th century.”
I guess the magnitude of the current warming is not significant according to the SPPI report from last year, is that still the case now with the more recent peer reviewed material and the potential BEST results?

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 9:19 am

[snip – if you have something to say, say it, don’t make a post with 10 places where we have to fill in the blanks – Anthony]

October 22, 2011 10:22 am

“I’m prepared to accept whatever result they produce, even if it proves my premise wrong.”
I see the goalposts have already been packed up and are now being transported cross-country.
[see this – apparently you don’t know how the linky things work http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/10/21/best-what-i-agree-with-and-what-i-disagree-with-plus-a-call-for-additional-transparency-to-preven-pal-review/ ~mod]

Martin_Lack
October 22, 2011 12:39 pm

Anthony are you for real? The post had only one word (repeatedly) omitted – the word I am not allowed to use. The word that caused me to have to make 4 attempts to get my last post accepted.
This is very clearly censorship by stealth. Why don’t you go the whole hog and block my IP address. If you are going to delete everything I post, you might as well. However, if you do, I will know that you are not really interested in debating the implications of current events; and that this site is, in fact, just an echo chamber for the latest conspiracy theories.
[Reply: Anthony did not delete your comments, I did because they violated site Policy. I recommend that you familiarize yourself with it. ~dbs, mod.]

October 22, 2011 1:40 pm

Jeff, my statement about how meaning is assigned in science — from falsifiable theory — is entirely true. There is no other way.
I’ve read the Nature paper by Harries, (abstract page here). It’s a spectroscopy paper, showing the difference absorption bands giving evidence for the known increases in atmospheric concentrations of CO2, methane, CFCs and other gases. The global warming meaning of those gas increases is purported by GCM models, and by no other way. And GCM models are too crude to provide any such meaning.
That paper in and of itself does not prove the greenhouse potential of CO2 or any other atmospheric gas. It shows only that the concentrations of those gases have increased.

Jeff Grantham
Reply to  Pat Frank
October 22, 2011 9:22 pm

Pat Frank commented
I’ve read the Nature paper by Harries….
That paper in and of itself does not prove the greenhouse potential of CO2 or any other atmospheric gas. It shows only that the concentrations of those gases have increased.

It shows more than that–it shows the difference in brightness temperature (Fig. 1c) — that is, warming from the increase in CO2 and CH4.
In my opinion it is the most important climate science paper ever published.

October 22, 2011 3:47 pm

Neither Lack nor Grantham understand the null hypothesis. Its definition is: The statistical hypothesis that states that there are no differences between observed and expected data.
They probably don’t even understand the definition at this point. I’m here to help.
The expected data in this case is the climate parameters of the pre-industrial Holocene, including temperature extremes, trends, duration, etc. It is expected that the current observed data will continue within the parameters of the Holocene [and in fact, none of the parameters of the Holocene have been exceeded].
Against the null hypothesis is postulated the alternate hypothesis, in this case catastrophic AGW [CAGW]. All that is necessary to falsify the null hypothesis is to show that any of the parameters of the Holocene have been exceeded. Since that is not the case, the alternate hypothesis fails.
Kevin Trenberth is so exasperated with the long-accepted null hypothesis that he wants to change its meaning. There are two reasons for his unreasonable demand: first, the null hypothesis deconstructs Trenberth’s alarmism; there is no hidden “heat in the pipeline”. And second, Trenberth knows that the null hypothesis is a valuable and long accepted tool of the scientific method. Since it falsifies his alternate CAGW hypothesis, he wants it changed to suit him. You can’t get much more anti-science than that.

Elinor Mapplethorpe
October 22, 2011 8:42 pm

CORRECTION RE: ”One willing participant to this blitz, that I spent the last week corresponding with, is James Astill of The Economist, who presumably wrote the article below, but we can’t be sure since the Economist has not the integrity to put author names to articles..”
IN FACT, it not a question of integrity, it is merely the house style at the Economist magazine to print unsigned articles, it has always been this way, it is their UK style. So you are wrong, Mr Watts to attack the article on that basis. Just the facts, ma’am…

David
October 22, 2011 10:50 pm

Jeff Grantham says:
October 22, 2011 at 9:31 pm
David commented:
Jeff, once again nobody is pulling a fas one. Also the NEW “continental rebound” ajustment skewers the real story and changes here…http://www.real-science.com/hiding-the-decline-in-sea-level and the only thing Best destroys is Hansens projections…http://www.real-science.com/doubt-temperatures-rising-fast-hansens-emissions
“You, like some others here, are intentionally trying to obscure the issue. The issue is about Tisdale’s chart (http://i55.tinypic.com/2i7qn9y.jpg), not about ISA or Hansen or anything else.”
Jeff, if you wish to define the issue, start your own blog.

October 23, 2011 12:23 am

Actually, Jeff, Figure 1c in Harries is just the simulated difference absorption spectrum showing the net change in absorbance due to increased gases. The difference absorptions are converted into brightness temperature by assuming Earth radiates as a blackbody. Any net positive absorbance change in the atmosphere can be turned into an increased “brightness temperature,” but that doesn’t mean the the absorbance change is causing the climate to warm. It just mean the concentration of the gas has increased and is absorbing more radiation.
The really take-home Figure from the Harries paper is Figure 1b, Top and, especially, Bottom. Virtually the entire region from 750 cm^-1 to 1050 cm^-1 shows positive intensity. Only the blip near 750 cm^-1 and the spikes in the 1250-1300 cm^-1 range show negative (meaning more absorbance). The 1050 – 1250 cm^-1 region is about net zero, as is 1300 – 1400 cm^-1. The positive intensity 750 – 1050 cm^-1 region shows net increased radiation into space has occurred over the intervening 30 years.
The relevant question is whether the positive integrated intensity of 750-1050 cm^-1 is greater than the summed negative integrated intensities of 700-750 cm^-1 and 1250-1300 cm^-1. It looks to me that it is, and that means net outgoing radiation to space has increased even as CO2, CH4, N2O, and CFCs have increased. That result contradicts standard GHG logic.
P.-H. Wang, et al. (2002) GRL 29, NO. 10, 10.1029/2001GL014264, abstract page here, found the same result — that outgoing radiation (OLR) has increased between 1986-1999. They specifically point out that, “It should be recognized that the observed OLR increase of 3.9 Wm^-2/decade during 1985–1998 cannot be attributed to increases in greenhouse gas concentrations because the increased concentrations would trap more thermal radiation leading to reduced, not enhanced, OLR. (my bold)”
If the Harries paper is “the most important climate science paper ever published” for you, then you’ll have to put your AGW alarm to rest because its results contradict your present position.

Jeff Grantham
Reply to  Pat Frank
October 23, 2011 11:46 am

Pat Frank commented
Actually, Jeff, Figure 1c in Harries is just the simulated difference absorption spectrum showing the net change in absorbance due to increased gases. The difference absorptions are converted into brightness temperature by assuming Earth radiates as a blackbody.
Of course. Are you going to now say the Stefan-Boltzmann law is invalid?
Any net positive absorbance change in the atmosphere can be turned into an increased “brightness temperature,” ; but that doesn’t mean the the absorbance change is causing the climate to warm. It just mean the concentration of the gas has increased and is absorbing more radiation.
Exactly–the gas is absorbing radiation. An equivalent way of saying that is “the atmosphere is getting warmer.”
The really take-home Figure from the Harries paper is Figure 1b, Top and, especially, Bottom. Virtually the entire region from 750 cm^-1 to 1050 cm^-1 shows positive intensity. Only the blip near 750 cm^-1 and the spikes in the 1250-1300 cm^-1 range show negative (meaning more absorbance). The 1050 – 1250 cm^-1 region is about net zero, as is 1300 – 1400 cm^-1. The positive intensity 750 – 1050 cm^-1 region shows net increased radiation into space has occurred over the intervening 30 years.
Harries et al discuss 800-1000/cm band on their 2nd page, right-hand column, first full paragraph, and attribute the ~ 1K enhancement to “small changes in amount, size, or shape of small ice crystals” from differences in the satellites fields of view.
Other work since has made it clear that there is an integrated difference of about 0.9 +/- 0.5 W/m2 between radiation entering the planet and leaving it (Trenberth and Fasullo, Science, 16-Apr-2010 and references therein, especially Trenberth et al, BAMS 90, 311 (2009). Since planetary systems are warming, there has to be a net gain in heat.

October 23, 2011 12:43 am

Jeff, the contents of Mann’s own “back to 1400 CENSORED” folder prove that he knew the r^2 statistics invalidated his MBH98 analysis before he ever submitted it, and the files in that same folder show he also knew that eliminating the bristlecone pine series also eliminated his hockey stick. The contents of that folder also prove that he misrepresented the case before Congress when he claimed to not have calculated the r^2 statistic, testifying that doing so ‘would be a foolish and wrong thing to do,’ when in fact he had calculated it.
See Steve McIntyre’s really damning discoveries of illicit proxy data truncation here, and Jeffid’s extended comments here for some flavor of what has gone on in the proxy temperature world.

Martin_Lack
October 23, 2011 3:58 am

Smokey, Now is not a good time for debating the finer points of scientific method. All Trenberth is seeking to do is invoke the “precautionary principle” and to advocate pollution prevention rather than “end-of-pipe” control measures – in other words – treat the cause not the symptoms. Oh but, yet again, I am getting ahead of myself, we have not yet knocked down pillars 2, 3, and 4 of [you know what – but let’s just call it “uncertainty“]. Well, sorry to inform you of this but, we have. However, what we are still waiting for is one of your own kind, like Muller, to admit that we have.
However, for the record, although necessary for photosynthesis (etc), CO2 becomes a pollutant once you pump it into the atmosphere faster than it can be assimilated. Given that most fossil fuel is (or was) at least 330 million years old – and we are burning 3 million years worth per year – we are currently releasing it into the atmosphere 1000 times faster than it can be re-processed. So, stick that in your null hypothesis and smoke it!

October 23, 2011 4:22 am

As David and Pat Frank make clear, Bob Tisdale is on the level and Michael Mann is mendacious. Mann’s “censored” file is nothing less than climate charlatanism, and the fools who defend him are nothing but kool aid drinkers. Michael Mann is a self-serving fraud who practices pseudo-science.
And Muller is not ‘one of my own kind’; he is a backstabbing reprobate who cannot be trusted. Muller has no professional ethics. Obviously Lackeyboi hasn’t read the WUWT articles documenting Muller’s underhanded tricks. An archive search would help get Lack up to speed, but he appears to be too lazy to make the effort to educate himself.
Finally, it is always a good time to “debate the scientific method.” Anyone who avoids the scientific method is tantamount to believers in witch doctors – and that includes all the true believers in CAGW. They hate the scientific method, because it debunks their ridiculous CAGW belief system.

Jesse Fell
October 23, 2011 5:35 am

Anthony,
When did become such a believer in the value of peer review — which I believe you were previously inclined to dismiss as a ritual of self-approbation by members of the international conspiracy of grant-hustling academic bureaucrats that has promulgated the global warming “hoax”.
REPLY: I’m only going by what BEST told me. Dr. Muller said that they would go through the traditional peer review process, which is fine. No mention of a media blitzkrieg ahead of peer review when I visited them for an entire day. A lie of omission is still a lie. And, they got errors in the analysis, which have been distributed worldwide. The result of peer review won’t get the sane reception. If they’d done peer review, then press release, I’d have little room to complain. Instead they went full bore PR without giving science process a chance. to speak.
But you seem OK with that sort of dishonest tabloid style approach to science. – Anthony

jthomas
October 23, 2011 9:05 am

What goes around comes around. It’s time for you to give up the endless conspiracy theories, Anthony, and stop backing yourself in the corner. You’ve only made it worse for yourself.

REPLY:
Show one place where I have claimed “conspiracy” or retract your statement. And read the link at the top, there’s much I agree with in the BEST analysis, or did you conveniently miss that? – Anthony

Rob
October 23, 2011 10:30 am

[snip]

October 23, 2011 2:39 pm

Anthony, you tried and deserve credit for that.
They must be afraid of losing the political debate.

Jeff Grantham
Reply to  Keith Sketchley
October 23, 2011 3:47 pm

Keith Sketchley commented
They must be afraid of losing the political debate.
Or maybe they want to do good science, no matter what it conclusions?
If anyone can convince skeptics AGW is not politically driven, it should be Muller and his project. He’s been an outspoken (and at times unfair) skeptic in the past, when other skeptics heralded his views. But since he’s spoken before Congress and, now, taken a good, hard look at the data and come to the same conclusion at everyone else, he’s being accused of following the party line. His case makes it especially clear just who is being “political….”

October 23, 2011 4:49 pm

OK, Watts has to
a. Acknowledge the study to be accurate, apologize for prior accusations against scientists who cited evidence for AGW, and adopt a different position, or
b. Publish counter-evidence to the study, or
c. Double down.
Watts seem to have chosen c.
REPLY: We are doing B….And how am I supposed to get a study published in 4 days over the weekend ? Doing it right, instead on making a PR blitzkrieg prior to peer review like BEST did takes effort and time.
Also why do you need to hide behind a fake name? “human@whoever.com” isn’t a valid email address (required by our policy page) and neither is “marconidarwin”. If you have something to challenge me with, have the nads to put your own name to your words. Otherwise you are just another anonymous coward. – Anthony Watts

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