The Empty Chamber

Guest post by Ken Haapala who attended the Markey-Waxman BEST briefing on Monday.


“Where are they?” the lady sitting beside me asked out loud, looking around anxiously.

“Who?” I inquired.

“The press!” she said, “The place was packed the last time.” Apparently, she was referring to a hearing held in the spring of 2010. Indeed, the usual staff was setting up the television cameras and the typical photo opportunities, but nothing unusual. No commotion on Monday, November 14, 2011.

The US House of Representatives National Resources Committee Room is a deep, chamber-shaped room, dominated by a large, elongated horseshoe-shaped table adequate for seating the 48 members of the Committee with sufficient room for several staffers to sit behind each member. At the open end of the horseshoe, a table was set up for the three speakers: Professor Richard Muller of the BEST project, Ben Santer of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and William Chameides, Dean of Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Vice-Chair of the National Academies’ Committee on America’s Climate Choices. The three scientists appeared early, assuring that their visual presentations would work properly. Behind them were three rows of chairs totaling about 40 seats for the audience.

“No one is here,” the lady stated, looking at the small audience.

“Perhaps they were not notified,” I commented, hoping to be reassuring.

“That’s impossible,” she retorted, “I notified everyone I know.”

The Press Release of the event had announced: Congressional Climate Briefing to Push “End of Climate Change Skepticism.”

As the two o’clock hour approached, a number of legislative staffers dutifully filed in, filling the many empty chairs. TV cameramen despise a void.

“Will there be only two!” the lady exclaimed, noting that only two chairs were prepared for members of the Committee, both at the bend in the horseshoe, as far from the speakers and audience as possible.

There were only two:

Of a total of 48 members, only Ranking Member Edward Markey attended, along with Representative Harry Waxman (who is not a member of the Committee). Two years ago, both were powerful congressmen who were well known for their environmental advocacy. That day, the other 19 Democrats (there is a vacancy) and all of the 27 Republican members of the Committee had other business. There were no announced regrets.

Rep. Markey began the briefing with stock claims that his opponents are anti-science and that today’s briefing would reveal the scientific basis for global warming. Rep. Waxman reinforced Markey’s statements with more blunt statements as to the anti-science nature of the Republican Party.

Professor Muller presented himself as a former skeptic, but he couched his skepticism as questioning the quality of the land-base surface measurements – according to him 70% of measuring stations in the US are poorly sited with a possible error of 2 to 5 degrees C. He evaded the real issue: that most skeptics: realize that temperatures have risen, but question that human emissions of carbon dioxide are the principal cause of global warming.

He presented his research of some 39,000 stations and admitted some 13,000 of which show a cooling. His conclusions were that the poor quality of siting is not introducing a bias, that there is virtually no urban heat island effect, and there is little bias from the removal of stations covered by NOAA, NASA-GISS, and CRU. Questions concerning his research have been discussed in The Week That Was by SEPP and elsewhere.

Muller failed to mention that he told Judith Curry that the title of his Wall Street Journal op-ed, which was incorporated in the press briefing, was chosen by the editors; that he questioned the human influence on global warming; that his calculations of temperatures show no warming for the past ten years; that he has suggested that the cause for the pause in warming is a change in ocean oscillations, and that there is a disconnect between land surface data and atmospheric data.

Ben Santer began his comments with a reference to Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans. He did not mention that environmental groups had used the Federal National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to block a barrier system that would have prevented the major flooding of New Orleans from Katrina. Perhaps Reps. Markey and Waxman would not have cared to be reminded of the consequences of some Federal environmental laws.

Santer stated he has been involved with all four UN IPCC reports and emphasized that he inserted in the second report that humans have a discernable impact. He did not mention that he inserted this statement after the document was fully approved by all reviewers – an act that Fredrick Seitz publically stated was the worst abuse of the peer-review process he had witnessed in fifty years of involvement in American science.

Santer reminded the members he testified before the same committee in the spring of 2010. There was no recognizable acknowledgement of the statement by the two members attending.

Among other comments, Santer emphasized the only natural causes of temperature changes are changes in solar irradiance and aerosols from volcanoes, the standard IPCC claims. He failed to mention changes from ocean oscillations, the solar-cosmic ray influence, or other influences.

Most interestingly, after disparaging the satellite temperature data from the University of Alabama, Huntsville, for a small error since corrected, Santer presented a straight line graph from the beginning of the data to the end point – falsely implying the data indicates a trend. The data demonstrates a discontinuous jump in temperatures, indicating a cause contrary to the carbon dioxide claim. Santer’s straight line hides the meaning of the data.

William Chameides began his presentation emphasizing America’s Climate Choices. The publication is an excellent example of the logical fallacy of a false dilemma. It uses highly speculative projections from unverified computer models to present an unrealistic choice about global warming. Then, it provides an economically destructive choice as the alternative. Projections from unverified computer models are scientifically meaningless. Such is the standard of science of the National Research Council.

After a few minutes into the Chameides talk, I decided to leave to beat the traffic, almost feeling sorry for the staffers who had to sit through the remainder of briefing – a rehash of dubious science from a bygone era presented on the behalf of two once powerful Congressmen in the empty chamber.

Nov 17, 2011

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George Tetley
November 18, 2011 3:07 am

Across the pond in England,,,,
its politics as usual, seems the world has a breed that no matter what color , race, or religion are bent on out doing each other. Yep, that the Political Classes.
Dr, Richard North of EuReferendum blog, in a post entitled,
The Elective Rip/off, (as reported by the Daily Mail, )
A former British MP Sir, Peter Soulsby is granting himself an 80% pay rise as Mayor of the City of Leicester, after overseeing 1,000 job cuts etc, etc, employing his 2 daughters as junior secretaries and his wife as office manager, he like most of the breed just don’t care.

November 18, 2011 3:26 am

“– a rehash of dubious science from a bygone era presented on the behalf of two once powerful Congressmen in the empty chamber.”
Well said!

D. Patterson
November 18, 2011 4:42 am

The latest U.S Federal budget voted upon on Thursday, 17 November 2011, excluded the $322,000,000.00 the Obama Administration attempted to appropriate to fund a new Climate Change Office in NOAA (National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration).

November 18, 2011 4:46 am

I am having difficulty picturing what your “Most interestingly…” paragraph means. Is the graph available somewhere? — John M Reynolds

klem
November 18, 2011 4:55 am

This is just more proof that CAGW is old news. Al Gores 24 hours of reality thingy received almost no media coverage, we are going to see similar coverage at Durban. I expect almost no leaders will show up, almost no media coverage either except to record the arrests of the same old professional window breakers that get arrested every year. Durban will be the biggest failure of them all.
I’ll wager that Al Gore himself finds an excuse to to attend, he’ll get the flu or something. Just watch.
CAGW is dead, and Durban will demonstrate it.

Allan M
November 18, 2011 5:16 am

In the picture, Elizabeth Muller is the one who interests me.
The body language, the tense head and neck, and the facial expression, seems to indicate a closed, embattled, mind. Someone said that she is the ‘activist.’ She doesn’t break the mould by being a happy greenie. Maybe daddy daren’t say no to her. (speculation)

A Lovell
November 18, 2011 5:23 am

George Lawson says:
November 18, 2011 at 2:36 am
I most really, sincerely hope that you are right!

Fred from Canuckistan
November 18, 2011 5:45 am

Death by being ignored.
A sad ending to a sad chapter in science.

November 18, 2011 5:54 am

How do these “scientists” sleep at night? They are a disgrace to science, liars all three of them.

AdderW
November 18, 2011 6:15 am

“Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of congress. But I repeat myself.”
-Mark Twain

H.R.
November 18, 2011 6:31 am

“The Empty Chamber”
All this time they’ve been shooting blanks, and now the chamber is empty.

November 18, 2011 6:49 am

Well written report. Thanks.

Nick Shaw
November 18, 2011 7:06 am

Frankly, if the only “notables” on the horseshoe were Markey and that distasteful little troll Waxman were the only persons to look at from the gallery, I might take a pass as well!
Really, the only thing worse than having to look at Waxman for a couple of hours would be to listen to him speak!
I commend you for your tolerance Mr. Haapala!

ferd berple
November 18, 2011 7:07 am

Hansen in 1988 had 4.2K for CO2 sensitivity. The latest GISS has 2.6K.
Extrapolating this result we end up with a CO2 sensitivity of 0.0K in 2048.
This result is equally as valid as any climate science result for the future. It is based on observation of trends, using a computer model that follows the laws of science as laid out by al-Khwārizmī in 820 AD.

November 18, 2011 7:12 am

“Muller failed to mention that he told Judith Curry that the title of his Wall Street Journal op-ed, which was incorporated in the press briefing, was chosen by the editors; that he questioned the human influence on global warming; that his calculations of temperatures show no warming for the past ten years”
This is clearly shown at http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1980/to:2011.75/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1980/to:2001/trend/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:2001/to:2011.75/trend
If in Series 3 you change the From (time) Value to 1998 you will see how the trend has been flat from 1998 on (0.03°C per century).
You can substitute HADCRUT3 for BEST to see for yourself.

November 18, 2011 7:22 am

Thanks to Ken Haapala I now know what B.S. (pardon my French) stands for.
(its worst that I thought)

Brian S
November 18, 2011 7:26 am

‘Santer stated he has been involved with all four UN IPCC reports and emphasized that he inserted in the second report that humans have a discernable impact. He did not mention that he inserted this statement after the document was fully approved by all reviewers – an act that Fredrick Seitz publically stated was the worst abuse of the peer-review process he had witnessed in fifty years of involvement in American science.’
That would be the Santer clause would it?

ferd berple
November 18, 2011 7:29 am

“George Lawson says:
November 18, 2011 at 2:36 am
President Obama would do well now to get off the fence”
Like that is going to happen, not!
Not unless you are a large campaign contributor. Then the White House cannot act fast enough to protect your interests. Need another billion dollars to help contribute to next years campaign, no problem. Company goes bankrupt so the money never need be paid back, no problem. Lots more where that came from.
It is called a jobs bill. Stimulus 2. Its purpose is to create jobs by stimulating campaign contributions, paid for by taxpayer money given to large corporations to pay large salaries, bonuses and dividends to folks that make large campaign contributions to the folks that decide who gets the taxpayer money.
To minimize the taxpayer complaints this money actually doesn’t come from taxpayers, it is borrowed in the taxpayer’s name. By the time the taxpayer figures out what has happened, the money has already been spent. Sort of like lending your kids the credit card to buy groceries, only they use it to take their friends out partying. You only find out after the credit card company cuts off your credit card, and your credit rating is downgraded.

ferd berple
November 18, 2011 7:32 am

The government inaction.
Saturday 12 November 2011
The head of China’s biggest ratings agency, Dagong Global Credit Rating, is warning that it may downgrade the US’s sovereign debt rating again because of Washington’s failure to tackle the federal budget deficit.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/nov/12/chins-threatens-us-with-new-debt-downgrade

oMan
November 18, 2011 7:34 am

Brian S 7:26 AM:
“…That would be the Santer clause would it?”
Groan. Go to your room!

Douglas DC
November 18, 2011 7:44 am

The world is about to jump into a war in the mid-east, With Nuclear weapons used a real possibility, and these “leaders” want US to worry about a little warming?

More Soylent Green!
November 18, 2011 7:58 am

LazyTeenager says:
November 17, 2011 at 11:11 pm
He failed to mention changes from ocean oscillations, the solar-cosmic ray influence, or other influences
———
I have noticed this line of: oscillations affecting climate, being pushed recently.
Seems to reflect some degree of intellectual confusion about what a cycle is.
A cycle has a number of important properties:
1. Periodicity
2. A constant average value.
Since the idea of climate has implicit within it a degree of constancy, it follows that it is a strain on the concept to claim that any cyclical variation represents a change in climate. The obvious cycle is the cycle of the seasons and these are not often considered to be climate. By extension any cyclical changes due to the 11 year solar cycle, pseudo cycles such as the 3 year ENSO should not be categorized as climate change. These things are simply variations around the climate baseline.
Even random variations, climate noise, that have a fixed average value, should not sensibly be called climate change.

Is a variation not a change? Does a normal, cyclical variation not count as a change as well? Why don’t those changes count as climate change?
Perhaps you’re only talking about changes that vary from the normal, natural, cyclical climate changes? The problem is when people mistake or misrepresent those changes as being unnatural or abnormal, and then demand action be taken because of a “crisis.”

Kermit
November 18, 2011 8:35 am

Many here are celebrating. It is too early. Think about the possibility of a second term for BO when he is not concerned about re-election. Think about the possibility of generating lots of new money in taxes. Think about a coalition of the Left and businesses that expect to profit handsomely from the new taxes. It is too early to celebrate.

Steve from Rockwood
November 18, 2011 9:11 am

ferd berple says:
November 18, 2011 at 7:07 am
Hansen in 1988 had 4.2K for CO2 sensitivity. The latest GISS has 2.6K.
Extrapolating this result we end up with a CO2 sensitivity of 0.0K in 2048.
============================================================
You won’t be laughing at extrapolations when we’re in an ice age in 2145.

Dave Springer
November 18, 2011 9:17 am

Brian S says:
November 18, 2011 at 7:26 am
‘Santer stated he has been involved with all four UN IPCC reports and emphasized that he inserted in the second report that humans have a discernable impact. He did not mention that he inserted this statement after the document was fully approved by all reviewers – an act that Fredrick Seitz publically stated was the worst abuse of the peer-review process he had witnessed in fifty years of involvement in American science.’
That would be the Santer clause would it?
ROFLMAO!
Timing is everything.

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