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.

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

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 4:06 pm

Unless BEST actually take on board the feedback given here and on other thoughtful blogs – they will not have a hope of convincing anyone half knowledgeable that they have actually applied properly the scientific method. Trouble is the other half will fall for it hook line and sinker.
Myself I have anyways being somewhat suspect of a project run by academia to provide a definitive independent result ‘above’ the results provided by other academics – smacks of trying to make the science even more settled…
What we really need is a community run project, following the Open Source model, that finally puts this whole issue to bed – or at least provides a bar against which the quality of other work can be assessed. Won’t be easy but would be a force to be reckoned with.

David Davidovics
October 20, 2011 4:07 pm

Anthony, this doesn’t help but I remember warning you to keep a very close eye on the pea under the thimble. I hate being right about this because I did like many of the things Muller said. I really wanted to believe he was the real deal.

Maus
October 20, 2011 4:11 pm

Mosher:
“If the errors are normally distributed, then its doesnt make the mean noiser.”
If ain’t is. And I’m certainly unaware of any publications from BEST on Urban Cold Islands; perhaps you could point me to them.
“At some point skeptics will realize that the best arguments against AGW are found WITHIN the science.”
The science of Sociology, sure.
“The world is getting warmer. The measurements of that are uncertain, but we know that it is warmer now than in the LIA. We’ve got good estimates of how much warmer.”
The world is getting colder. The measurements of that are uncertain, but we know that it is colder now than in the MWP. We’ve got good estimates of how much colder.
Seems it’s just as valid to drive the conversation in one direction as it is another. eh, Mosher?

Former_Forecaster
October 20, 2011 4:11 pm

“Hasn’t it warmed in last century and a half?”
Yes, absolutely. Ever since the end of the Little Ice Age. Wait. I forget–does current propaganda claim the Little Ice Age did or didn’t occur?
I can’t help but wonder:
These people can’t even agree amongst themselves whether or not past climatic events, such as the Little Ice Age or the Medieval Warming, even occurred, Isn’t it just a bit arrogant to say that you know with certainty what the future climate holds in store, when you can’t even agree on climatic trends of the recent past?
Silly me. That question would only apply if we were talking about *science*.

October 20, 2011 4:12 pm

“…I would accept their findings whatever they were…”
WHAT’S UP with the crossed fingers. HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA! And I’ll use my real name.

Luther Wu
October 20, 2011 4:14 pm

gbaikie says:
October 20, 2011 at 3:56 pm
Hasn’t it warmed in last century and a half?
___________________
Know what?
150 yrs ago (roughly speaking) marks the end of the “Little Ice Age”.

gbaikie
October 20, 2011 4:15 pm

What is the average global land temperature
What is the average ocean temperature
Not talking about Temperature Anomalies, but global temperature is around 15 C
What is land average and ocean average?

October 20, 2011 4:15 pm

‘Given the dramatic effect of those adjustments — they largely account for the trend reported in the final datasets — shouldn’t any verification of those datasets include an analysis of the reasonableness of those adjustments? Did the BEST researchers do this? How did they handle the homogenization process?
The USHCN adjustments have all been poured over by skeptics and others. me inlcuded. The only issue of note is the uncertainty associated with the adjustments.
To my knowledge BEST has handled the issue in the best way known which is to split stations into shorter segments as indicated by station changes. So that way “adjustments” are empirically made as a part of the entire estimation process.

October 20, 2011 4:18 pm

I saw this report triumphed on he BBC so thought I’d look elsewhere. Now I know it’s not even Peer Reviewed and getting all the plaudits I think I might have a go at this science thing myself. How hard can it really be? /sarc

October 20, 2011 4:20 pm

Maus:
“If ain’t is. And I’m certainly unaware of any publications from BEST on Urban Cold Islands; perhaps you could point me to them.”
I was trying to explain to someone with a valid question about “errors” in data how averaging can be proven to work. That’s just basic math.
WRT Urban cold Islands. They certainly exist. You can find them yourself. Just download the software and run the code. You dont like BEST software, write you own. or use mine, or RomanMs or Nicks.
urban warm islands exist urban cool islands exist. same with rural.
The real question is do these facts make a difference in the global temperature average?
Not the local average.. Note tokoyo versus its neighbors.. not japan.. the WHOLE average.. all the stations.. BEST paper says no. You have their code, you have their data. knock yourself out

Steve in SC
October 20, 2011 4:20 pm

Anthony, I believe you were warned about this possible outcome and you even experienced some of the behavior in the beginning. Don’t say you were not warned. Do not act surprised. The result was very predictable.

Theo Goodwin
October 20, 2011 4:20 pm

steven mosher says:
October 20, 2011 at 2:37 pm
“C02 warms the planet, the question is how much. That’s the real debate. join it”
The debate is about Muller’s behavior in attempting to create a media circus, skipping peer review, and betraying Anthony’s trust. Please try to focus.

EFS_Junior
October 20, 2011 4:24 pm

“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.”
_______________________________________________________________________________
So if BEST releases all their data and codes, you know fully transparency, what’s to stop someone else from using a 30-year base period (for CONUS or OCONUS or whatever geographical region one chooses to use) that is exactly the same as the two papers you’ve mentioned above?
I mean, if this makes the 30-year base period BEST results so diffenent from the results that others have produced, than a Reply to the AGU JGR (and any other BEST papers using the 60-year anomaly period) would seem to be in order. Shouldn’t it?
AFAIK. that’s how things are usually handled in the scientific literature.
As an aside, what specifically invalidates all surface temperature datasets taken prior to 1979?
Because you said so?
REPLY
” As an aside, what specifically invalidates all surface temperature datasets taken prior to 1979? ”
Wow, reading comprehensions fail. Way off the mark junior. I’m taking about my OWN dataset, the surfacestations survey dataset, which in our own peer reviewed paper we did several different analysis on the 1979-2008 period, as did NOAA’s Menne et al. The reason: we couldn’t ascertain siting quality that far back, there simply is no metadata. Muller should have realized this and done identical comparisons. He didn’t. I notified him of the issue and he still stuck with it. If you can tell me what the siting characteristic of the USHCN weather stations in the USA were during the 1950’s, 1960’s and 1970’s then I’ll gladly retract my concerns.
Until then, they stand – Anthony

MichaelM
October 20, 2011 4:30 pm

To any interested party – this analysis would be way beyond me to accomplish, but it’s curious to me how much greater the temperature trend is from CRN 1 to CRN 2 stations. Why would the CRN 2 stations trend warmer than CRN 3 and 4, and be so simliar to the awful CRN 5 stations.
To get to the point…a really thorough analysis would examine the urban distribution as well as equipment histories (recording length) between CRN 1 and 2..and then also CRN 2 and 3 perhaps. As Steven Mosher always likes to point out, it seems to me there is still much to be done with the sorting out of Metadata and issues surrounding station citing and urban bias.
(to reiterate, the groupings by Fall et al and BEST of CRN 1,2,3 or 4,5…etc. are fascinating and novel, but my point above addresses a couple comparisons I haven’t yet seen. (could’ve missed em))
_Michael

Richard "Heatwave" Berler, CBM
October 20, 2011 4:34 pm

Anthony…
Have you found evidence of a +3C (+5F) systematic error for class #4 sitings and +5C (+9F) for class #5 station sitings? My experience has been quite different. I wrote on this in the guest blog that I wrote on Dr. Roger Pielke Sr.’s site (you reposted this) on bad numbers remaining uncorrected from Laredo. A change in siting characteristics for an existing site from class #1 to class #5 would, without question, introduce a bias into the record. My experience, and the Berkeley study (if I read it correctly) suggests an absolute error of a fraction of a degree with a class #5 station.

REPLY:
Trends versus daily Tmax/Tmin – Anthony

Kevin MacDonald
October 20, 2011 4:37 pm

Former_Forecaster says:
October 20, 2011 at 4:11 pm
“Silly me. That question would only apply if we were talking about *science*.

Okay, so we’ve been warming since the end of the little ice age, and the centennial warming trend is accelerating, what is your scientific explanation for this?

AlexS
October 20, 2011 4:41 pm

“The issue of “the world is warming” is not one that climate skeptics question”
I certainly question it.
As if anyone know what is the earth temperature – and not even enterring in definitions what should measured – to 0.X Cº precision with an incomplete temperature recording even today to not talk about 100 years ago.

October 20, 2011 4:41 pm

Have you and Joe D’Aleo ever told Heartland and SPPI to stop distributing that white paper? Have you ever explicitly acknowledged that your own data disproved the conclusions you wrote in that white paper? Has Joe?
You attacked the Menne paper when it came out and you’re attacking BEST now, even though your own paper agrees with both analyses – surface station location and UHI don’t significantly alter the US temperature record. So rather than playing the victim card, why don’t you try some contrition first.

REPLY:
Why don’t you look at what has actually occurred here? I’m arguing because with BEST’s new methodology, they may have been able to find something Menne and I could not. But because they used the wrong time period, it (the siting error signal) likely got swamped in the cooling period of the 40–70’s
Now consider the reverse. If I had made a claim that from recent photographs and metadata gathered from NOAA, I was able to ascertain what the siting conditions of a station looked like in 1950, I’d be vilified. Even NOAA knew enough about our siting data not to do this. Muller didn’t, and he’s invalidated his own study with this error. All I’m asking for is a identical time period. If there’s a difference, great we learned something new. If not, I’m happy to accept it because it matches the other studies including my own.
Why is that so hard to understand? – Anthony

kramer
October 20, 2011 4:46 pm

I got an email today from the BEST team saying they finished graphing just the data (unadjusted) from rural stations only but I can’t find it on the link they gave me.

October 20, 2011 4:47 pm

Publishing articles or “papers” in non-reviewed places is not new or surprising. It is one way of spreading the word. If you are intending to publish in reviewed journals then one should not preempt the process. This is not science by scientists is is science by pseudosciences in the political science and advertising departments. Once errors are out it is very hard to call them back. To bad this was an opportunity to build credibility. Now only one missed.

Mike Abbott
October 20, 2011 4:49 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

That article includes this gem:
“However, the Berkeley study found that the so-called urban heat island effect, which makes cities warmer than surrounding rural areas, is locally large and real, but does not contribute significantly to average land temperature rises. This is because urban regions make up less than 1% of the Earth’s land area.”
I hope WUWT readers appreciate the absurdity of that statement. The author apparently thinks that skeptics believe that urban heat islands increase overall land temperatures. (The skeptic’s claim is that the UHI introduces a bias into temperature datasets, which is a far cry from saying the UHI increases average land temperatures.)
By the way, I read the BEST article on UHI and found it fairly convincing. I’m a skeptic and I think they make a strong case that there is no UHI bias in the datasets (or it is a little negative.) I think Anthony came to the same conclusion previously.

EFS_Junior
October 20, 2011 4:51 pm

“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.”
But spelled correctly 11 other times.
In other words the same two totals, 6 as Fell and 11 as Fall, in their 30 September 2011 copy vs their 17 October 2011 copy, so appearently they have not made the necessary correction yet.
Maybe you can go through both versions word-by-word, and tally the results, so that we can see if this is just an error of omission, or if they’ve just singled your paper out from the editing process.
I mean seriously, what’s the big deal? Surely this will be corrected prior to actual publication, particularly what with you all making such a big deal over a very minor pre-publication error.
REPLY: It goes to the overall sloppiness, such as claiming they can know what the station siting quality is as far back as 1950 Can’t make up metadata where there isn’t any. And they can’t be troubled to correct it? You were bent out of shape over a date, which I corrected within minutes, now you want to give Muller a pass for not fixing a problem in week, after being notified? Sheesh.
Show me how to get station siting metadata for 1950, still waiting there on your flash of genius junior. – Anthony

Simon Nasht
October 20, 2011 4:51 pm

So, let me see if I understand it this. We have been continuously attacking the peer review process as corrupt, yet when Muller publishes his data ahead of peer review – so there can be no suggestion the process isn’t open- he is to be attacked?
Apparently the data in question is analysed back to 1950. Anthony says his data only goes back 30 years. So somehow Muller’s more comprehensive analysis is less valid?
Meanwhile we seem to be expending an awful lot of energy examining the behaviour of journalists instead of thinking about the conclusions that BEST has come to: the much vaunted question of Heat Islands turns out to be a non-issue. I am surprised, even disappointed that this is the case. But we must open our minds to new information based on rigorous analysis.
Question the analysis by all means, but let’s not pretend they are not important and highly significant.
REPLY: Muller can’t make up station quality data where there isn’t any, that’s the issue. We have no siting metadata valid from 1950-1979. Even NOAA knew enough not to make this fatal mistake. – Anthony

October 20, 2011 4:51 pm

Anthony,
I am beginning to see, through your postings about the journey you have taken to publish in a science journal and now with this BEST experience, that there are parallel cultures . . . government ones, academic ones, media ones, blogosphere one and private enterprise ones.
You are ramping up fast in the academic one . . . you will be a better man for it. You have a lot of support.
And you are providing me with a valuable education by your activities. Thanks.
John

Konrad
October 20, 2011 4:53 pm

I find it surprising that Richard Muller missed one of the most interesting findings of Fall et all. For the worst sited stations Tmin was found to rise faster than Tmax. AGW believers have often postulated that UHI or micro site problems would “raise all boats equally”. However Fall et all shows that the worst rated stations exhibited a slight warming with a reduced diurnal range, previously claimed to be the exclusive signature of AGW. Sadly Dr. Muller states in his papers’ conclusion that diurnal maxima and minima were not addressed. Further to this there appears little in the BEST paper that indicates any reliable method for determining the difference between gradual micro site degeneration, gradual UHI increases and a gradual AGW trend.
The BEST paper references the Fall et all paper that was kept confidential until peer reviewed, despite one of the authors having new media access to millions of readers per month. Regardless of the content of the BEST paper, Dr. Muller appears to have chosen the wrong PR. He has chosen press release over peer review. He has chosen propaganda. He has chosen poorly. Sceptics will never forgive and the Internet will never forget.

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