Why BEST Will Not Settle the Climate Debate

By S. Fred Singer (first published in American Thinker)

Global warming has re-entered public consciousness in recent days, partly because of the buzz surrounding the release of warming results from the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST) project. The reaction of the “warmistas” has been jubilant, yet hilariously wrong. Will they ever learn?

They’ve latched on to the BEST result as their last best hope for rescuing misbegotten schemes to control emissions of the greenhouse gas CO2. Leading the pack has been the Washington Post (Oct. 25), whose columnist tried to write off Republican presidential candidates Bachmann, Cain, and Perry as “cynical diehards,” deniers, idiots, or whatever.

I sent the WP a letter pointing out obvious errors, but I got a peculiar response. It turned out that they were willing to publish my letter, but not my credentials as emeritus professor at the University of Virginia and former director of the U.S. Weather Satellite Service. Apparently, they were concerned that readers might gain the impression that I knew something about climate.

Unfortunately, it has become expedient (for those who condemn CO2 as the cause of warming) to deride their opponents with terms like “climate deniers.” A complacent and inattentive media has made the problem worse, by giving the impression that anyone who doesn’t buy the CO2 hypothesis doesn’t believe that climate changes, and hence is a total Luddite. Even the WSJ got carried away. Prof. Richard Muller, the originator and leader of the BEST study, complained to me that some eager editor changed the title of his op-ed (Oct. 21) to “The Case Against Global-Warming Skepticism” from his original “Cooling the Global Warming Debate. ”

The (formerly respected) scientific journal Nature chimed in and announced in an (Oct. 26) editorial[i] that any results confirming “climate change” (meaning anthropogenic global warming — AGW) are welcome, even when released before peer review. Of course, we’ve known for many years that Nature does not welcome any contrary science results, but it’s nice to have this confirmation.

Their hearts filled with bubbling joy and their brains befuddled, none of the warmistas have apparently listened to the somewhat skeptical pronouncements from Prof. Muller. He emphasizes that the analysis is based only on land data, covering less than 30% of the earth’s surface and housing recording stations that are poorly distributed, mainly in the U.S. and Western Europe. In addition, he admits that 70% of U.S. stations are badly sited and don’t meet the standards set by government; the rest of the world is probably worse. He disclaims to know the cause of the warming found by BEST and favors naturally caused oscillations of the atmosphere-ocean system that no climate model has yet simulated or explained.

The fact that the BEST results agree with previously published analyses of warming trends from land stations may indicate only that there is something very wrong with all of these. There are two entirely different ways to interpret this agreement on surface warming. It might indicate important confirmation, but logic allows for an alternate possibility: since both results rely on surface thermometers, they are not really independent and could be subject to similar fundamental errors. For example, both datasets could be affected by urban heat islands or other non-global effects — like local heating of airports, where traffic has been growing steadily.

But the main reason I have remained a skeptic is that the atmosphere, unlike the land surface, has shown no warming during the crucial period (1978-1997), either over land or over ocean, according to satellites and independent data from weather balloons. And did you know that climate models run on high-speed computers all insist that the atmosphere must warm faster than the surface — and so does atmospheric theory?

BEST has no data from the oceans, which cover 71% of the planet’s surface. True, oceans are not subject to urban heat islands, but they have problems with instrumentation. It is very likely that the reported warming during 1978-97 is simply an artifact — the result of the measurement scheme rather than an actual warming. Anyway, supporting data don’t show any ocean warming, either.

And finally, we have non-thermometer temperature data from so-called proxies: tree rings, ice cores, lake and ocean sediments, stalagmites. Most of these haven’t shown any warming since 1940!

Contrary to some commentary, BEST in no way confirms the scientifically discredited hockey stick graph, which was based on multi-proxy analysis and had been so eagerly adopted by climate alarmists. In fact, the hockey stick authors never published their post-1978 temperatures in their 1998 paper in Nature — or since. Their proxy record suddenly just stops in 1978 — and is then replaced by a thermometer record that shows rapid warming. The reason for hiding the post-1978 proxy data: it’s likely that they show no warming. Why don’t we try to find out?

None of the warmistas can explain why the climate hasn’t warmed in the 21st century, while CO2 has been increasing rapidly. It’s no wonder that Herman Cain, a former math and computer science major in college, says that “man-made global warming is poppycock” (NYT, Nov. 12). He blames climate fears on “scientists who tried to concoct the science” and “were busted because they tried to manipulate the data.”

Mr. Cain is not far from the truth — at least when one listens to Rich Muller. Muller’s careful to make no claim whatsoever that the warming he finds is due to human causes. He tells us that one third of the stations show cooling, not warming. Muller admits that “the uncertainty [involved in these stations] is large compared to the analyses of global warming.” He nevertheless insists that if he uses a large enough set of bad numbers, he could get a good average. I am not so sure.

Muller thinks that he has eliminated the effects of local heating, like urban heat islands. But this is a difficult undertaking, and many doubt that the BEST study has been successful in this respect. Some of Muller’s severest critics are fellow physicists: Lubos Motl in the Czech Republic and Don Rapp in California. Somewhat harshly, perhaps, Rapp would change the study designation from BEST to “WORST” (World Overview of Representative Station Temperatures).

I am one of those doubters. While many view the apparent agreement of BEST with previous analyses as confirmation, I wonder about the logic. It might be a good idea if BEST would carry out some prudent internal cheeks:

** Plot number of stations used between 1970 and 2000 and make sure that there have been no significant changes in what I call the “demographics”: station latitudes, altitudes, or anything that could induce an artificial warming trend.

**I would pay particular attention to the fraction of temperature records from airport stations — generally considered among the best-maintained, but subject to large increases in local warming.

** I would also decompose the global record of BEST into regions to see if the results hold up.

Of course, the most important checks must come from records that are independent of weather station thermometers: atmospheric temperatures, ocean temperatures, and temperatures from non-thermometer proxy data. But even then, it may be difficult to pinpoint the exact causes of climate change.

I conclude, therefore, that the balance of evidence favors little if any global warming during 1978-1997. It contradicts the main conclusion of the IPCC — i.e., that recent warming is “very likely” (90-99% certain) caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gases like CO2.

And finally, what to do if CO2 is the main cause, and if a modest warming has bad consequences — as so many blindly assume? I am afraid that the BEST project and Muller are of no help.

On the one hand, Muller is dismissive of policies to control CO2 emissions in the U.S. — much less in his State of California. In an Oct. 31 interview with the Capital Report of New Mexico, he stated:

… the public needs to know this, that anything we do in the United States will not affect global warming by a significant amount. Because, all projections show that most of the future carbon dioxide is going to be coming from China, India, and the developing world. … [A]nything we do that will not be followed by China and India is basically wasted.

On the other hand, Muller told MSNBC’s Morning Joe (Nov.14):

[W]e’re getting very steep warming … we are dumping enough carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that we’re working in a dangerous realm, where I think, we may really have trouble in the next coming decades.

So take your choice. But remember — there is no evidence at all for significant future warming. BEST is a valuable effort, but it does not settle the climate debate.

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John B
November 18, 2011 2:15 pm

Tom_R says:
November 18, 2011 at 2:02 pm
>> John B says:
November 18, 2011 at 11:34 am
Tom,
Do you have any idea of how little of the Earth’s surface is “urban”? Even if corrections weren’t applied, the UHI effect would be small. With proper, honest, statistically-principled corrections, it is miniscule. Give it up, fight a better battle. <<
You don't apply corrections to the entire Earth's surface. You apply corrections to station data, which are extrapolated over areas without station data to claim an anomaly of the temperature of the Earth's surface. Do you even understand that UHI affects the calculated anomaly, not the 'real' anomaly?
—————————-
Yes Tom, I understand that. But the bottom line is this: every study that has looked at effects of siting, UHI, etc. with a bit more rigour that "ooh look, here's a photo of a station near an air conditioner" has concluded that the effect ON TRENDS is small in the first place and has been properly dealt with. You are clutching at straws.
G'night.

Tom_R
November 18, 2011 2:17 pm

>> John B says:
November 18, 2011 at 12:42 pm
And where on Earth do yet get that statistic from? <<
80% was a conservative guess as to the number of poorly sited stations worldwide. In the US 92% of the stations are poorly sited.
http://www.surfacestations.org/

Tom_R
November 18, 2011 2:29 pm

>> John B says:
November 18, 2011 at 12:14 pm
But that is a whole other discussion. This thread is about BEST, and Muller specifically said they were not looking at attribution. They concluded that the surface temperature record is as reliable as mainstream scientists always said it was. Do you accept that? <<
Based on BEST's finding that 1/3 of the sites show cooling and they are spread amongst warming sites (my item 3 above that you didn't address) I'd say BEST has shown the surface temperature record is unreliable.

KR
November 18, 2011 2:35 pm

Regarding UHI – has anyone here objecting to BEST results on those grounds actually read the paper?
http://berkeleyearth.org/Resources/Berkeley_Earth_UHI.pdf
They:
“…split sites into very-rural and not very-rural. We defined a site as “very-rural” if the MOD500 map showed no urban regions within one tenth of a degree in latitude or longitude of the site. We expect these very-rural sites to be reasonably free from urban heating effects.” (emphasis added)
Their results?
<em"We observe the opposite of an urban heating effect over the period 1950 to 2010, with a slope of -0.19 ± 0.19 °C/100yr. This is not statistically consistent with prior estimates, but it does verify that the effect is very small, and almost insignificant on the scale of the observed warming.” (emphasis added)
So they’ve investigated UHI, and it’s really not a factor here.

Back to the thread: Dr. Singer cherry-picked the longest possible period (1978-1997) where he could almost plausibly claim a lack of tropospheric heating – add only 10% more data and the trend more than triples. The full period (1978-2011) shows an equally high rate, demonstrating that the full set of data contradicts Singer’s assertions.
As shown here (http://tinyurl.com/6tkxogy), it’s always possible to cherry-pick a short term that will show anything you desire. That certainly doesn’t mean it’s significant, or real – or that the person presenting that short term is being honest with you.

Tom_R
November 18, 2011 2:37 pm

>> John B says:
November 18, 2011 at 2:15 pm
Yes Tom, I understand that. But the bottom line is this: every study that has looked at effects of siting, UHI, etc. with a bit more rigour that “ooh look, here’s a photo of a station near an air conditioner” has concluded that the effect ON TRENDS is small in the first place and has been properly dealt with. You are clutching at straws. <<
Now we're back to an appeal to authority.
Frankly, if a study didn't specifically look at each site and get a full history of the changes in microclimate and nearby urbanization, then claiming that site is rural or urban is just a WAG.

November 18, 2011 3:07 pm

JohnB says “They aren’t done to adjust for human error necessarily, they are done to correct for things that are not climatically likely, no matter what the cause.”
If the adjustments are not correcting for error in human measurement then they represent naturals variations that rightfully should contribute to the calculated average. You emphasize “sudden change” but these adjustments are often changes in trends that extend over decades. Oscillations can cause those trends and those differing trends should never be removed.
Wang 2003 warned “If the ultimate goal of the changepoint detection is to form homogeneous climate data series by correcting biases, a trend-type change in climate data series should only be adjusted if there is sufficient evidence showing that it is related to a change at the observing station, such as a change in the exposure or location of the station, or in its instrumentation or observing procedures”
But you are right the adjustments are applied wholesale without doing the individual analyses. The adjustment procedures are in essence arguing “changes in trends” have tainted the real trend even if they have not identified a reasonable mechanism. They are arguing everything should be homogeneous. That is an absurd assumption. Unlike the rest of science that shows great diversity, climate science is reverting back to some Neo-Platonic view of an existing perfect form that can be perceived via homgenization. What will end the data controversy is to provide a data base with only documented changes that stands firmly alongside their adjusted data using the change point detection procedures used by NASA or BEST. We should use both data sets along with a data set based just on maximum temperatures as mutual working hypotheses and see which better addresses things such as the tree ring divergence issues and other proxy calibration issues.
The adjusted data has now led to all sorts of statistical and theoretical contortions. Like eliminating change points, they similarly eliminated the observed decline of tree ring data when constructing a global averrage. Briffa noted, similar to station inhomogeneities that “Perhaps one of the most notable features is that the extended relative warm and cool depar-
tures are rarely, if ever, synchronous at all locations.” He here reveals the theoretical bias that departures should be homogeneous.
Briffa even admitted that “Hence, the magnitude of modern warming might be overestimated in the context of earlier reconstructed variability.” But Briffa as compelled to address the broad scale tree ring change points, he then suggested that that trees may no longer be sensitive to modern temperatures because the tree rings diverged significantly from these adjusted data sets. But curiously he and others doesn’t question the adjustments. And such an assumption of suddenly “insensitive trees” is totally absurd because most of those trees are genetic clones that somehow measured temperatures correctly 9000 years ago when global temperatures were much warmer and tree line reached the Arctic Ocean. But Mann’s hockey stick is an example of change point detection and adjustment where real world observation are eliminated. There is very good reason for any rational person to question what is the basis of eliminating real observed tree ring data, or station data because it doesn’t fit the CO2 trend.

November 18, 2011 3:29 pm

It is nice to see healthy discussion of the issue. I work in a national lab, so pretty much everyone I work with is a scientist (I am a computer scientist) although only a few are climate scientists, but they all have opinions. And I keep hearing from the media and the official climate scientists that there is agreement on the issue, they try to say that everyone agrees that this warming is man made.
The problem I have is that I don’t see that agreement, among climate scientists or scientists in general. If you are seeing agreement then we aren’t looking at the same scientists.
Anyway if you believe the one side then we are too far gone to do anything anyway and if not then there is nothing to do. Either way, discuss, stay civil and buy each other a beer; all this arguing is making me thirsty.

November 18, 2011 3:35 pm

Tom_R says:
November 17, 2011 at 9:50 am
1. Why 1978-1997? I don’t think BEST limited their results to these years. Dr. Singer may have a very good reason for limiting his discussion to those particular years, but he needs to state it.

His reason is simple, it allows him to quote erroneous data from before the major correction to the UAH MSU results because of orbital decay, which was reported in 1998. Subsequent recalculation using the correction for orbital decay indicated a positive trend.

Tom_R
November 18, 2011 4:19 pm

>> Phil. says:
November 18, 2011 at 3:35 pm
His reason is simple, … <<
I'd like to hear HIS reason rather than speculation of some ulterior motive. He's not getting millions of dollars per year in grants, so there's no financial reason for him to fudge the data. In fact, if he started publishing pro-AGW analyses he'd open himself to that funding, so there's every financial reason to cherrypick his data in the other direction.
But yes, I would like to hear his reason.

November 18, 2011 7:13 pm

Tom_R says:
November 18, 2011 at 4:19 pm
>> Phil. says:
November 18, 2011 at 3:35 pm
His reason is simple, … <<
I'd like to hear HIS reason rather than speculation of some ulterior motive.

I’m not speculating, as of his lecture at Portland State University in May of this year he was using a slide of UAH data to make this point, unfortunately he appears to use version 5.0 of that data in his analysis, which preceded the correction I mentioned above (Wentz and Schabel, Nature, 1998). He first made this argument in 1996 and apparently hasn’t updated his data ( the UAH data at that time erroneously showed a cooling of -0.05K/decade). The current version (5.4) shows warming over that period, when this was brought to his attention he claimed ignorance of the fact! He still is using the same data, draw your own conclusion. His claim that “the atmosphere, unlike the land surface, has shown no warming during the crucial period (1978-1997)”, is false, the agreement is rather good.
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadat/images/update_images/global_upper_air.png

Lars P.
November 19, 2011 6:04 am

KR says:
November 18, 2011 at 2:35 pm
“Regarding UHI – has anyone here objecting to BEST results on those grounds actually read the paper?”
Maybe the problem lies in the way how BEST identifies rural sites. If UHI is really not a factor then unadjusted rural temp average RUTI should be about the same as the adjusted temp values which includes UHI. What is not the case. The rural unadjusted temp differs greatly from BEST and invalidades the conclusion that UHI does not matter:
http://hidethedecline.eu/pages/posts/ruti-global-land-temperatures-1880-2010-part-1-244.php
Logically thinking, if less then 1% of surface is biased versus warming and is overrepresented in the data (27%) we get a biased trend. It is the basis of any statistical analysis.
I doubt that the methodology used is the right one: “sites that deviate substantially from the group behavior have their weights reduced for the next iteration “. Why a station that shows a cooling trend should have its weight reduced? What logical explanation does one have for it?
As John Daly said long ago the use of land measured values instead of satellite data is convenient for the pro-CAGW crowd as it is biased into warming:
http://www.john-daly.com/ges/surftmp/surftemp.htm
I wonder where is the parallel satellite control series done by any pro-CAGW group for low altitude temp data and comparison to the results?
The “urban cooling” and “rural warming” that BEST finds may be another proof against BEST conclusions. It may be very simple the fact that UHI has reached a certain limit for the big cities and there is no much room to increase, whereas the small locations are growing in number of population and have a greater UHI increase.
Further logical thinking, with the global population increase, one would expect the adjustment to increase into negative, if any adjustment are done. Why do the adjustment do not show such trend? Why do they show the opposite trend? Where is the total adjustment trend overview and comments how it influences the data?
So Berkeley did not clarify UHI or the real warming.

John B
November 19, 2011 7:04 am

Lars, Are you confusing UHI, which everyone knows about and agrees is real, with the effect of UHI on trends? Of course urban sites register warmer than rural, but if they always have done, no problem. And if a site starts to register warmer than its neighbours, that effect is discounted as being likely caused by some non-climate effect. Ditto if it cools anamolously – as it may be due to e.g. resiting.
And 27% of sites being urban, assuming that is correct, does not mean they are over-represented in the average. If they only represent 1% of the land area, they will only contribute 1% to the average.

Steve Keohane
November 19, 2011 8:17 am

Any database that includes this ‘data’ is BS. http://i42.tinypic.com/vpx303.jpg
IIRC, New Zealand shows very similar ‘adjustment’, approx. 6° of CCW rotation with the 60s as a pivot. Apparently this nonsense is global standardization of mangled and meaningless numbers.

Lars P.
November 19, 2011 10:14 am

John B says:
November 19, 2011 at 7:04 am
“Lars, Are you confusing UHI, which everyone knows about and agrees is real, with the effect of UHI on trends? ”
John, is UHI effect constant, the same, not changing over time or increasing with city growth, population density or other? Take the link that was posted here at WUWT:
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/goodridge_1996_ca-uhi_county.jpg
are you able to see trend differences? 0F+1F and +4F? Does it make my point clear?
It is self delusion to think UHI is always a +x° constant difference.
On the average, having much more urban sites and less rural sites, when “sites that deviate substantially from the group behavior have their weights reduced for the next iteration ” are aligned to the biased high amount of urban data, it is changing the trend.
If a rural station between urban stations shows cooling or constant trend it will be considered erroneous. When we have too many urban and few rural the results are easy to predict. Where is the list of the resulted adjustments with overview what has been done and analysis per some test samples to check if the function made sense?
Until now I heard only of UHI and no VCE (village cooling effect) or UCE (Urban Cooling Effect) over the environment so considering averaging is a bias towards the warming trend. Look at Tokio versus the rest (Fig 1 in BEST paper) do you see any trend difference? Or is it the same warming that you see there?
Take the Goodrige 1996 example and average it as per BEST. The resulted trend will be around +2° or +3°. Is it really so? Are you really telling the Goodrige shows the same trend as per all counties?
Well at least for the 21st century the cities in the developed nations are not growing any more so I predict a stop in the temperature growth for these cities. Even a cooling. Well at least the unadjusted values.

DavidG
November 19, 2011 11:00 am

Geochemist, I’d like to get you a muzzle for christmas, your frantic ignorance is beyond belief. No one is listening to the apocalyptic tunes you and your fearless leaders, Gore and Hanson are squealing in seriously unmusical fashion. Carbon schemes are failing worldwide, as they should. Wake up from your dogmatic slumber.

November 23, 2011 4:12 am

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December 11, 2011 6:10 pm

Robbi;
Does your babble make sense even to yourself? Honestly?
I don’t believe you.

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