Richard Black tells the BBC reporting team what to think

David Whitehouse: Biased BBC Advice Based On Sloppy Statistics. From the GWPF: The Observatory, 4 November 2011

Whatever you think about the BBC’s actual performance in reporting climate change, they are supposed to adhere to the highest standards of impartiality and be able to efficiently gather, assess and represent the state of the science. Only if one starts with a realistic and up to date understanding of the subject can one hope to put into a proper scientific perspective all its developments and weigh the many opinions held about this fascinating and often controversial topic.

The BBC should be, or at least aspire to be, the gold standard. So it is depressing to come across such a skimpy analysis, and sloppy use of statistics as in this briefing given to BBC staff by their Environment Correspondent Richard Black.

I will leave Black’s analysis of Climategate, with its several errors in the dates of some of the investigations into it, and the timing of “Glaciergate,”which he says took place before the 2009 Copenhagen meeting, and his crude analogy, and go onto the point in his briefing when he addresses the widely debated topic of the past decade’s pause in the rise of global temperatures.

Tomorrow’s World

“Did it stop in 1998?” Black asks.

Is he really unaware of the implications of skewing the data by starting at the warmest year the Earth has experienced in the instrumental period, due to a super El Nino. Most analysts of recent temperature trends would never ask that question. He then goes on to say, “by any common sense definition it ought to be true it stopped in 1997 or 1999.” This is not a logical statement. Even a cursory look at the temperature data shows it is increasing up to 1998, after which there was two cooler (la Nina) years. It is what happened then that the debate is about.

Black performs what he describes as a “simple, non-statistical exercise” that first appeared on his blog. He plots decadal trends to show that there has been no reduction in the rate of warming in the past ten years. He takes annual data from NasaGiss and looks at ten-year differences with incremental start points beginning in 1991 showing that only in 1988 – 2008 does it show a negative trend (due to the super El Nino inflating 1998). Note he gets 1999 -2009 increment slightly wrong.

As Black admits it is a simple test, but he clearly thinks it is appropriate to show such an analysis as part of his briefing to a room of BBC editors, producers and journalists. The problem with it is that it makes the rudimentary mistake of ignoring the short-term variations and noise in the data resulting in spurious trend estimates that, as statistics often does in the wrong hands, obscures more than it illuminates. A more scientific and statistically preferable approach is to start in 1991, using monthly data, and plot ten-year regression lines. It is obvious that they are converging on zero for the past decade – the exact opposite of what Black told his audience.  Whatever it means, and whatever its cause, the pause in global warming is a real effect. Black says that variability in the annual data means one probably shouldn’t do such an analysis. I concur.

A Kick Up The Eighties

After this amateurish display things get a little more confused. When describing the data (HadCRUT3v Global data this time) Black spoke of a “relative plateauing” in the past decade, even though his crude trend analysis given a moment before didn’t show it. He then said, “you could make a case that global warming has plateaued, but if you are going to say that you would also have to say global warming has plateaued there, and there and there.”

He was pointing at the much shorter standstills seen in the data in previous decades. These are well understood, and not comparable to the past decade. In two cases they are due to volcanic eruptions (Mt Pinatubo in 1991 is obvious in the data, and there have been no such eruptions in the past decade). It is highly misleading to compare apples and oranges in this way. Science can explain the slight pauses seen in the two decades before this one, though it has a harder task explaining the 1940-1980 standstill.

The point is that previous flat periods, the cause of which is debatable, occurred before the date given by the IPCC at which mankind’s influence on the global climate was dominant (sometime around 1960 – 80). A hiatus in warming is nowadays is a somewhat more important part of understanding what mankind’s influence on our planet is, hence the current considerable discussion about possible decadal influences on climate.

I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue

What Mr Black with his “non-statistical exercise” did not do is what one would have expected a BBC correspondent to do. That is, reflect the scientific literature concerning the temperature pause of the past ten years. The are many, many examples, and it is not now widely contested in scientific circles. Only a few months ago the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published a peer-reviewed article that began: Data for global surface temperature indicate little warming between 1998 and 2008. Robert K. Kaufmann, at al., “Reconciling anthropogenic climate change with observed temperature 1998–2008.” PNAS, June 2, 2011.

The pause has been discussed in Nature Climate Change, Science, and acknowledged by the Royal Society and the UK Met Office, here and here. Even Mr Black himself has previously written about the causes of the past decade’s hiatus.

Black also shows a graph he used in a 2007 article, ‘No Sun Link’ to climate change. The sense of triumphalism in this article, as well as its inadequacies, I have gone into before.

The point is that even when it was fresh and not four years old, the graph of cosmic ray intensity and of rising temperature was out of date. Can it really have escaped Mr Black the considerable debate, the uncertainties and new assessment about the sun’s influence that has been taking place following the Sun’s very unusual behaviour in the years after he wrote his 2007 article.

My experience is that BBC Editors are as intelligent and as fast-thinking an audience as you could get anywhere. Quick to pounce on strained logic and inconsistency, especially in a news report. That is why they are usually the gold standard. But they are not scientists.

This is a dismaying standard of scientific literacy from a BBC correspondent. Following Black’s presentation the BBC audience went away with the opposite impression of what is the case. Given the severe cutbacks the BBC is experiencing at the moment it would be like saying there will be more jobs, not less. I do hope that when those cuts are explained to the staff that a somewhat more sophisticated use of statistics is used.

Feedback: david.whitehouse@thegwpf.org

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

94 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Snotrocket
November 4, 2011 12:07 pm

Snotrocket said: “Ladies and Gentlemen, please give it up for [SNIP: Sorry, but that is rather crude and demeaning. Can we lift the tone a little? -REP]‘ (I leave the reader to parse the last clause).”
Thanks REP. You have a point (no snark). I really should post BEFORE a good dinner and wine. That said, having read the (low) tone of some other comments (Richard Cranium, Noggin, dip$#!^, dumb, dummies, etc) that were piling in I figure I should really have referred to RB as …….OK, I get the point.
End of day, RB needs to be reported to BBC for failing to uphold balance and impartiality.

Foxgoose
November 4, 2011 12:26 pm

From the current BBC Royal Charter Agreement:-
REGULATORY OBLIGATIONS ON THE UK PUBLIC
SERVICES
44. Accuracy and impartiality
(1) The BBC must do all it can to ensure that controversial subjects are treated with due
accuracy and impartiality in all relevant output.
(3) The UK Public Services must not contain any output which expresses the opinion of the
BBC or of its Trust or Executive Board on current affairs or matters of public policy…

So our dear Queen could chuck ’em all in the Tower of London right away if she wanted to.

nomnom
November 4, 2011 12:27 pm

Re NetDr says:
November 4, 2011 at 11:55 am
“No matter which year you start your analysis the RATE of warming has gone to almost ZERO.”
I disagree. Eg start from 2000 you get +0.145C/decade warming
http://www.woodfortrees.org/data/uah/from:2000/trend/plot/uah
“Claiming that the warming of 1978 to 1998 has continued at the same rate is silly.”
Looks like it has to me:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/uah/to:1998/trend/plot/uah/plot/uah/from:1998/trend

SandyInDerby
November 4, 2011 12:32 pm

Beesaman says:
November 4, 2011 at 11:09 am
Is it just me or do Mann and Black both have that same smug self satisfied look to them?
—-
I have often wondered if they have ever been seen in the same room together.

Ex-Wx Forecaster
November 4, 2011 12:36 pm

“End of day, RB needs to be reported to BBC for failing to uphold balance and impartiality.”
Would that it would solve anything. Sadly, the BBC and most major news organizations care little for impartiality and even less for facts. Once upon a time, it was said, “never let facts get in the way of a good story.” That’s no longer true. The current crop of pseudo-journalists in charge of news dissemination seem to put their agenda ahead of a good story.
Let’s face it: this is one of the greatest frauds ever perpetrated on the human race. What a story!!

nomnom
November 4, 2011 12:38 pm

Re Brad Tittle:
That is a really nice graph, but just because we can’t see the global average change of about 1C on that scale doesn’t mean such a change is insignificant.
“Looking at this I would guess that the next 100 years are likely to look a lot like the previous 100 years.”
I would guess all of Earth’s history would look a lot like that graph. During the last glacial period the red line would be about 6C lower, which would be a tiny change on that graph that is hard to even see. Should that be an argument that the climate of glacial periods are the same as the climate of present?

Robert of Ottawa
November 4, 2011 12:43 pm

I found this excruciating to watch, as, I’m sure, some of the smarter Beeboids in the room might have done. But, I can also imagining them squirming in their seats, thinking of the job cuts that may be on the horizon – no need to rock the boat.

lgl
November 4, 2011 12:45 pm

http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1970/mean:60/derivative/mean:60
There’s an energy deficit similar to after El Chichon and Pinatubo. Climate scientists, tell us why or find something else to do.

John Whitman
November 4, 2011 12:47 pm

Really, watching the video of the BBC seminar is like watching a journalist who was cloned from Gore teaching other clones of himself what a proper journalistic clone should report on climate science/policy/advocacy.
When the BEST Project or the IPCC calls up the BBC (or NYT) what do they say? They say, “We have a press conference coming up, so send some clones”.
Actually, the BBC (or NYT) don’t need actual clones as environmental reporters. Just a notebook PC with graphics and voice capability could do better.
John

Green Sand
November 4, 2011 12:48 pm

If you want to leave a comment with Richard Black and the BBC about the presentation you can do so here:-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/journalism/blog/2011/11/video-reporting-climate-change.shtml#dnaacs

John
November 4, 2011 12:53 pm

Funny that Richard Black should say that there hasn’t been a hiatus in warming. Roger Pielke Sr. a couple of weeks back connected to a Greenwire story called “Provoked Scientists Try to Explain Lag in Global Warming.” The link:
http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2011/10/27/candid-comments-from-global-warming-climate-scientists/
In the article, climate scientist like James Hansen, Susan Solomon, and Kevin Trenberth all give their thoughts on why the warming trend has stopped in the last 13 years. Solar scientist Judith Lean also engages on the issue.
Let’s let Prof. Black correct these innocent naifs….who do you believe, Prof. Black or your lying eyes??

DirkH
November 4, 2011 1:02 pm

Remember Black’s blunder about the “shrinking” rice yields; when in fact the rate of increase of the yield was shrinking, not the yield, which was still growing. He’s easily confused by numbers.

Wayne Delbeke
November 4, 2011 1:03 pm

Crispin in Waterloo says:
November 4, 2011 at 10:56 am
says:
I never did understand how adding energy to a system would lead to parts of the system getting colder.
++++
Let me try to help. I work with heating systems that often have negative efficiency! For example if you initiate a fire in a fireplace that is otherwise the same temperature as the surroundings in the home, you create an updraft in the chimney (think: thunderstorm, rising clouds). There is likely to be some immediate benefit (a warmer room near the fire).
However once the chimney has started working, and the stones or bricks are hot, it will continue working once the fire is out. This sends warm air from the room up the self-continuing chimney wihch remains warmer than the outside air. Cold air has to enter the home to replace teh warm air that left. The thermal efficency of of this ‘heater’ can be 200% or 300% negative, i.e. a few watts of heaeting can create many watts of cooling. Once the ‘engine’ starts, and punches a hole through the cold layer above, it can continue on long enough to provide negative net heating.
__________________________________________________________________________
NOT TRUE Crispin. Maybe true for OLD fireplaces in Britain that have not been retrofitted.
I heat my house with wood (3600 square feet) even at 30 below Celsius. I have a modern sealed house with OUTSIDE air piped into the firebox through two 6 inch ducts. I only need two fires a day to heat the house as I have three tons of thermal mass around the fireplace that absorbs the heat from the fire and re-radiates it all day/night long. The doors are sealed so there is no drafting from the room. Old fireplaces are easily retrofitted, especially those with ash pits that are emptied from the outside. You simply make that your outside air supply and install sealed doors on the front; or like many people do, you put a new insert into the old masonry fireplace with appropriate doors and outside air. And since these fires burn hot, there is minimal soot pollution.
So, a properly designed wood burning fireplace does not have negative efficiency. IMHO

Dave G
November 4, 2011 1:08 pm

All you non-UK posters here should count yourself fortunate that you’re not subsidising this ‘outfit’ to the tune of a compulsory $230/year.
The BBC are a national/global disgrace and it should be disbanded.

dave38
November 4, 2011 1:10 pm

For a journalist, Truth exists only to be raped.
RB seems to fit that profile

Werner Brozek
November 4, 2011 1:17 pm

At the following, it can be seen that both the 5 and 10 year trend line for GISS is essentially 0:
http://www.climate4you.com/GlobalTemperatures.htm#Global%20temperature%20trends
I would like to illustrate in a slightly different way what others have already said. First of all, I DO NOT agree with what Mr. Black has done. However even his own numbers can be used to dispute the fact that “there has been no reduction in the rate of warming in the past ten years”.
Since we are talking about the last 10 years, I will start with the 2002 number of 0.43. The numbers are as follows: 0.43, 0.42, 0.25, 0.26, 0.26, 0.19, -0.12, 0.25 and 0.30 and 0.11*
(*The year 2011 only has numbers to the end of September, and its average for those 9 months is 0.66. Subtracting the 0.55 value for 2001, I would get 0.11 as the tenth value although this may change slightly over the next three months.)
Anyway, if these numbers are plotted on a graph and if the best straight line is drawn through them, we would find the slope to be negative. Therefore there HAS BEEN a “reduction in the rate of warming in the past ten years”.

Gail Combs
November 4, 2011 1:24 pm

Dave G says:
November 4, 2011 at 1:08 pm
All you non-UK posters here should count yourself fortunate that you’re not subsidising this ‘outfit’ to the tune of a compulsory $230/year.
The BBC are a national/global disgrace and it should be disbanded.
________________________________________________
The BBC is a propaganda site. The only difference between it and the soviets is that you personally pay to be …

Stephen Brown
November 4, 2011 2:05 pm

Ralph says:
November 4, 2011 at 9:45 am
>>glacierman says: November 4, 2011 at 9:09 am
>>What a Richard.
A Richard Cranium, to be precise.
Methinks that Black should be crowned the real Richard the Third

Ursus Augustus
November 4, 2011 2:06 pm

Is it any wonder the blogosphere is so vibrant when outfits such as the BBC produce such tosh as this in house? And the Brits are all over the Murdoch Press! What on earth is this scientifically illiterate bozo doing in such a position as he is?

Scott Brim
November 4, 2011 2:15 pm

Suppose the true sensitivity of the climate to the presence of CO2 actually does lie somewhere between 2 and 4 degrees Centigrade for a doubling of CO2 concentration.
If this is so, if the climate’s CO2 sensitivity is indeed that high, could a temperature plateau which extends over a period of ten years (2000-2010) actually occur?
Moreover, if the climate’s CO2 sensitivity truly is that high, could a temperature decline which extends over a period of thirty years (1940s-1970s) actually occur?

AlexS
November 4, 2011 2:16 pm

“Richard Black is not a an impartial journalist, as he should be at the BBC”
BBC is a leftist organization paid by everyone in England. He is in correct place.
The only caveat is that it obviously should only be paid by leftists.

Lars P.
November 4, 2011 2:36 pm

I cannot take serious a climate temperature series where past values decrease in later releases, sorry NASA GISS.

November 4, 2011 2:54 pm

“Did it stop in 1998?” Black asks.
Is he really unaware of the implications of skewing the data by starting at the warmest year the Earth has experienced in the instrumental period, due to a super El Nino.”
David, you may have been duped by the instrumental “record high” in 1998 unaware that GISS took several years of revision of 1998 upwards and the 1930s downward to make it surpass the the record of 60 years before.

Mycroft
November 4, 2011 3:04 pm

Black needs to be sacked, how can this hack claim Impartiality when he get paid for outside speeches/semminars on climate change..shocking for the BBC

Paul Coppin
November 4, 2011 3:50 pm

Simkins, what the hell is a “Chartered Environmentalist”? Is that like a “certified nutbar”?

Verified by MonsterInsights