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

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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:

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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

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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.

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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.

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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

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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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October 20, 2011 12:50 pm

Berkley has joined the list of has been universities with their hand out for CAGW handouts ….

jthomas
October 20, 2011 12:58 pm

Funny how you climate change deniers all of a suddenly like “peer review”.
REPLY: Funny how a well established university team of professors, previously published that way, suddenly doesn’t – Anthony

DavidM
October 20, 2011 12:59 pm

I’m confused,
I thought the whole point of BEST was to have an open and transparent dataset that anyone could access that hadn’t been smoothed and averaged and re-smoothed by the usual suspects. So, for example, someone could plot all night-time temps from a given station against that stations day-time temps, or someone could plot only truely rural staions in a given area against urban stations. This seems like more of an audit of the original record than a new and open “unadjusted” record that anyone can use.
Did I misunderstand the intent of BEST?

DirkH
October 20, 2011 1:00 pm

Hoi Polloi says:
October 20, 2011 at 11:38 am
“The Graudian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/oct/20/global-warming-study-climate-sceptics
Ah, the Grauniad article mentions the Novim Group explicitly. It’s marketing for them.

hstad
October 20, 2011 1:02 pm

Anthony, you been taken to the woodshed! Lesson – you cannot play by their rules! Giving them the benefit of the doubt is like coming face to face with a 300 pound bear – will he attack or not?

DirkH
October 20, 2011 1:03 pm

Mooloo says:
October 20, 2011 at 12:37 pm
“The reverse is columnists who strive to insert their personality into every article. Something the British are less keen on.
(Also, I think quite a lot of their articles are group efforts, which makes naming troublesome.)”
That’s why all British TV newsspeakers have to wear identical Guy Fawkes masks, BTW. The Brits just aren’t that keen on knowing who’s talking to them. /sarc

Laurie Bowen
October 20, 2011 1:08 pm

The Economist needed some hits on their web site . . . new marketing strategy to me . . . can’t verify it, but it would be my shot in the dark!

AGW_Skeptic
October 20, 2011 1:10 pm

My emaill to BEST:
I was really looking forward to the BEST project results.
Then you go and make a dumb-a$$ed move like this.
Nothing yet peer-reviewed, simple typo mistakes uncorrected after advance notification, and different time series comparisons for the UHI paper.
Not to mention the full-court PR campaign. Just what are you trying to accomplish here?
It may be salvagable if you ever get it right – we’ll see – certainly off to a really bad start.
Way to blow a great opportunity – unless of course, this was the plan all along!

James Forbes
October 20, 2011 1:18 pm

Tell us again about how UHI skews the temperature record, and then you can recant again. Good times.

JJ
October 20, 2011 1:20 pm

My commentary, posted on the Economist website:
The title and the text of the article say ‘the world is warming’.
The unreviewed scientific paper the article claims to be summarizing does not address world temperatures. It is limited to land temperatures. Given that the land referred to comprises something less than 25% of the world, it is erroneous to make the claim that ‘the world is warming’ on this basis.
Further, the world is not a two dimensional object. Vast quantities of heat move vertically through the atmosphere, and more importantly (because of their massive heat capacity) the world’s oceans.
In point of fact, the world is not warming, and has not been for more than a decade. Given that the title of the paper clearly states that only land surface temperatures are referenced, the reporter cannot even have read that far and legitimately arrived at a conclusion regarding the world as a whole. Evidently, he is simply parroting the talking points of the papers’s authors’ PR campaign.
This is the quality of reporting that the Economist is proud to proffer?

Jay
October 20, 2011 1:23 pm

Mr Watts, above you said “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.”
Exactly what would the author have missed. This?
http://tinyurl.com/439nzcz
It seems that all the temperature records are in agreement in terms of short-term temperature variations and more importantly the underlying trend. So your seeming criticism that the data is somehow biased really does not have much merit. That there is are biases on the absolute amplitudes of the temperature is a non sequitur since satellite and ground sensors samples at different altitudes.
REPLY: Straw man argument. Astill cites 3, a clear omission. – Anthony

Keith
October 20, 2011 1:24 pm

When we initially heard that Berkeley was producing a global temperature history, many of us thought it would be towards the shaky end of the post-normal scientific spectrum. However, dare I say that it’s worse than we thought?

son of mulder
October 20, 2011 1:30 pm

From the London Times today on economists
‘We snigger at fortune-tellers yet continue to take seriously the word of economists, a profession definable as “people who have found a way to retain professorial tenure even when their predictions turn out to be entirely wrong”.’
Interestingly ‘climatologists’ is clearly interchangeable with ‘economists’.

October 20, 2011 1:30 pm

I recommend Muller start with a spelling and grammar check. e.g. in the abstract:

indicating a temperature uncertainties greater than
Such basic spelling and grammar quality control should be done before submitting it to formal peer review.

October 20, 2011 1:31 pm

PS I see the same message would help me with my draft posts!

TomRude
October 20, 2011 1:37 pm

The fact that anyone would give credence to BEST attempt is beyond me. The focus of this attempt, using anyway the same NCDC data is ridiculous pseudo science. It is as if Jones was redoing Mann’s work and came with the same results…
Now that the dEconomist would publish this with such triumphant exhuberance is no surprise.
Is it the same clown who wrote about the Ineson et al. 2011 paper:
“Dr Ineson found that at low UV levels the stratosphere in the tropics was cooler, because there was less UV for it to absorb, which meant the difference in temperature between the tropical stratosphere and the polar stratosphere shrank. That changed the way the atmosphere circulated, and as those changes spread down into the lower atmosphere they made it easier for cold surface air from the Arctic to come south in winter, freezing chunks of northern Europe. These conditions looked similar to those seen in the past two cold European winters—which occurred at a time of low solar activity. The Arctic itself, in models and in real life, was warmer than usual, as were parts of Canada. In contrast, northern Europe, swathes of Russia and bits of America were colder.”
LOL “That changed the way the atmosphere circulated, and as those changes spread down into the lower atmosphere they made it easier for cold surface air from the Arctic to come south in winter”… those changes spread down… HOW? Of course no synoptic process is offered by Ineson and co. but the dEconomist cares little about that…

ZT
October 20, 2011 1:38 pm

Strange that the ‘BEST’ team would elect to take the Pons and Fleischmann approach to science. Presumably their failing careers cannot now avoid the attractive gravitational pull of a grateful nation’s taxpayer’s largess.
I’m looking forward to the BEST team’s explanation for the Gore experiment – perhaps they’ll be able to detect the errant neutrons.

Walter Sobchak
October 20, 2011 1:42 pm

“The issue of “the world is warming” is not one that climate skeptics question”
Maybe I am not well enough informed to be a skeptic, but I do not understand how the question of global mean temperature can be answered by the available data before the satellite era. If modern surface station data is as low quality as your map above indicates, why should we think that data from 80 or 120 years ago is any better. Shouldn’t we expect it to be worse. How much do we know about instrument calibration i the pre-modern era? How many observers used a vernier to read their instruments, or were consistent in their time of day reading.
I am also flummoxed by the idea of averaging error ridden data. Doesn’t that make the mean noisier? I do not understand how we can give any credence to global means based on pre-satellite data.
Until these questions are answered I am still to stupid to even be a skeptic.

BioBob
October 20, 2011 1:45 pm

Let’s see the error bars and error calculations on that 100 years (plus or minus) of data folks.
Sure, there could be an increase in temperatures globally or in the USA for a certain period but I will be damned if someone can actually find it in all the statistical noise that is ACTUALLY present and rarely presented from those datasets.
How anyone can accurately claim point 8 degrees C Global temperature increase over the last 150 or whatever years within all the improperly calculated (with trash measurement error, standard deviation, and distribution) is beyond me. Anyone who has attempted to reconcile variance among 3 or 20 closely distributed, simultaneous samples with poorly calibrated or legacy instruments would recognize the absurdity of claimed accuracy from a few thousand discontinuous sampling disparate histories over the entire globe for 100+ years..
GIGO simple final

Theo Goodwin
October 20, 2011 1:49 pm

The BEST paper is one grand example of a Red Herring fallacy. Richard Muller had agreed with Anthony that the main topic of the paper would be criticisms of the surface temperature record with special emphasis on Anthony’s station siting research. By changing the period used from 30 years to 60 years, they changed the topic of the paper. They substituted a similar seeming but incomparable topic for the original. This is good old academic chicanery at its most flagrant. Shame on them.
As regards publishing in the Economist before the actual work is peer reviewed, BEST offers clear proof that they are not motivated by science but by a desire to contribute to the Warmista propaganda mill.
The BEST people show that their instincts are not for science but for propaganda. Genuine scientists are more interested in the scientific explanations that they produce than in a record of temperature. Genuine scientists would publicize their statistical techniques and their accounts of errors in the record. These people triumphantly announce that their record shows that Earth is warming. Their goal is propaganda.
Finally, there is the matter of the huge knife stuck in Anthony’s back. That knife is the symbol of Muller’s personal betrayal of Anthony’s trust. Shameless.

JeffG
October 20, 2011 1:54 pm

The world HAS warmed in the past century, but not in the last 10 years according to the HadCRUT data you offer in the plot above
Actually all that plot shows is that the *surface* hasn’t warmed in the last 10 years. There is more to the “world” than the surface, including parts where the temperature is not well-monitored (such as the deep oceans.)

Al Gored
October 20, 2011 1:55 pm

Same old trick.
Widely publicize and plant the scare story in the public mind, then very quietly correct/adjust/revise later.
On the bright side Anthony, while they did ‘suck you in’ a little on this – and your good faith was admirable if misguided here – you are now in a prime position to stir this pot very effectively.
Not peer reviewed even by Team peer review. And the REQUESTED review by you ignored.
No way to spin their way out of that. But in the meantime this conveniently named ‘BEST’ story will be pushed full tilt by the usual suspects.

Theo Goodwin
October 20, 2011 1:56 pm

OregonPerspective says:
October 20, 2011 at 12:35 pm
“Anthony, what you ask can now be done, and hopefully someone will do it.
Because the Berkeley group has made both their data and their methods available for download.
Any objections you have can now be tested.”
You overlook the fact that their research was not done on the topic proposed by Anthony, his 30 years of siting data, but on a 60 year period that makes the research incomparable to the original topic. They cleverly changed the topic without acknowledging the very real effects of doing so. This is one technique for hiding the pea.

P.F.
October 20, 2011 1:57 pm

My “concern for the future” meter just moved higher.
When taking these BEST efforts together with the Occupy Wall Street debris, Ottmar Edenhofer’s statement a year ago at the IPCC, the urgency of the far left, the imposition of the numerous “Climate Action Plans,” Obama’s Progressive Collectivism, and the collapsing economy, I’m getting a sense there is a deliberate global move to tyranny. I think we are in for a rough ride next year.

October 20, 2011 1:58 pm

With the code and data posted anybody with matlab can redo the study from 1979 to 2010.