The climate science peer pressure cooker

Will Replicated Global Warming Science Make Mann Go Ape?

By Patrick J. Michaels – from World Climate Report

About 10 years ago, December 20, 2002 to be exact, we published a paper titled “Revised 21st century temperature projections” in the journal Climate Research. We concluded:

Temperature projections for the 21st century made in the Third Assessment Report (TAR) of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) indicate a rise of 1.4 to 5.8°C for 1990–2100. However, several independent lines of evidence suggest that the projections at the upper end of this range are not well supported…. The constancy of these somewhat independent results encourages us to conclude that 21st century warming will be modest and near the low end of the IPCC TAR projections.

We examined several different avenues of determining the likely amount of global warming to come over the 21st century. One was an adjustment to climate models based on (then) new research appearing in the peer-reviewed journals that related to the strength of the carbon cycle feedbacks (less than previously determined), the warming effect of black carbon aerosols (greater than previously determined), and the magnitude of the climate sensitivity (lower than previous estimates). Another was an adjustment (downward) to the rate of the future build-up of atmospheric carbon dioxide that was guided by the character of the observed atmospheric CO2 increase (which had flattened out during the previous 25 years). And our third estimate of future warming was the most comprehensive, as it used the observed character of global temperature increase—an integrator of all processes acting upon it—to guide an adjustment to the temperature projections produced by a collection of climate models. All three avenues that we pursued led to somewhat similar estimates for the end-of- the-century temperature rise. Here is how we described our findings in paper’s

Abstract:

Since the publication of the TAR, several findings have appeared in the scientific literature that challenge many of the assumptions that generated the TAR temperature range. Incorporating new findings on the radiative forcing of black carbon (BC) aerosols, the magnitude of the climate sensitivity, and the strength of the climate/carbon cycle feedbacks into a simple upwelling diffusion/energy balance model similar to the one that was used in the TAR, we find that the range of projected warming for the 1990–2100 period is reduced to 1.1–2.8°C. When we adjust the TAR emissions scenarios to include an atmospheric CO2 pathway that is based upon observed CO2 increases during the past 25 yr, we find a warming range of 1.5–2.6°C prior to the adjustments for the new findings. Factoring in these findings along with the adjusted CO2 pathway reduces the range to 1.0–1.6°C. And thirdly, a simple empirical adjustment to the average of a large family of models, based upon observed changes in temperature, yields a warming range of 1.3–3.0°C, with a central value of 1.9°C.

We thus concluded:

Our adjustments of the projected temperature trends for the 21st century all produce warming trends that cluster in the lower portion of the IPCC TAR range. Together, they result in a range of warming from 1990 to 2100 of 1.0 to 3.0°C, with a central value that averages 1.8°C across our analyses.

Little did we know at the time, but behind the scenes, our paper, the review process that resulted in its publication, the editor in charge of our submission, and the journal itself, were being derided by the sleazy crowd that revealed themselves in the notorious “Climategate” emails, first released in November, 2009. In fact, the publication of our paper was to serve as one of the central pillars that this goon squad used to attack on the integrity of the journal Climate Research and one of its editors, Chris de Freitas.

The initial complaint about our paper was raised back in 2003 shortly after its publication by Tom Wigley, of the US National Center for Atmospheric Research and University of Toronto’s L. D. Danny Harvey, who served as supposedly “anonymous” reviewers of the paper and who apparently had a less than favorable opinion about our work that they weren’t shy about spreading around. According to Australian climate scientist Barrie Pittock:

I heard second hand that Tom Wigley was very annoyed about a paper which gave very low projections of future warmings (I forget which paper, but it was in a recent issue [of Climate Research]) got through despite strong criticism from him as a reviewer.

So much for being anonymous.

The nature of Wigley and Harvey’s dissatisfaction was later made clear in a letter they sent to Chris de Freitas (the editor at Climate Research who oversaw our submission) and demanded to know the details of the review process that led to the publication of our paper over their recommendation for its rejection. Here is an excerpt from that letter:

Your decision that a paper judged totally unacceptable for publication should not require re-review is unprecedented in our experience. We therefore request that you forward to us copies of the authors responses to our criticisms, together with: (1) your reason for not sending these responses or the revised manuscript to us; (2) an explanation for your judgment that the revised paper should be published in the absence of our re-review; and (3) your reason for failing to follow accepted editorial procedures.

Wigley asked Harvey to distribute a copy of their letter of inquiry/complaint to a large number of individuals who were organizing some type of punitive action against Climate Research for publishing what they considered to be “bad” papers. Apparently, Dr. de Freitas responded to Wigley and Harvey’s demands with the following perfectly reasonable explanation:

The [Michaels et al. manuscript] was reviewed initially by five referees. … The other three referees, all reputable atmospheric scientists, agreed it should be published subject to minor revision. Even then I used a sixth person to help me decide. I took his advice and that of the three other referees and sent the [manuscript] back for revision. It was later accepted for publication. The refereeing process was more rigorous than usual.

This did little to appease to those wanting to discredit Climate Research (and prevent the publication of “skeptic” research) as evidenced by this email from Mike Mann to Tom Wigley and a long list of other influential climate scientists:

Dear Tom et al,

Thanks for comments–I see we’ve built up an impressive distribution list here!

Much like a server which has been compromised as a launching point for computer viruses, I fear that “Climate Research” has become a hopelessly compromised vehicle in the skeptics’ (can we find a better word?) disinformation campaign, and some of the discussion that I’ve seen (e.g. a potential threat of mass resignation among the legitimate members of the CR editorial board) seems, in my opinion, to have some potential merit.

This should be justified not on the basis of the publication of science we may not like of course, but based on the evidence (e.g. as provided by Tom and Danny Harvey and I’m sure there is much more) that a legitimate peer-review process has not been followed by at least one particular editor.

Mann went on to add “it was easy to make sure that the worst papers, perhaps including certain ones Tom refers to, didn’t see the light of the day at J. Climate.” This was because Mann was serving as an editor of the Journal of Climate and was indicating that he could control the content of accepted papers. But since Climate Research was beyond their direct control, it required a different route to content control. Thus pressure was brought to bear on the editors as well as on the publisher of the journal. And, they were willing to make things personal. For a more complete telling of the type and timeline of the pressure brought upon Chris de Freitas and Climate Research see this story put together from the Climategate emails by Anthony Watts over at Watts Up With That.

Now, let’s turn the wheels of time ahead 10 years, to January 10, 2012. Just published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters is a paper with this provocative title: “Improved constraints in 21st century warming derived using 160 years of temperature observations” by Nathan Gillet and colleagues from the Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis of Environment Canada (not a group that anyone would confuse with the usual skeptics). An excerpt from the paper’s abstract provides the gist of the analysis:

Projections of 21st century warming may be derived by using regression-based methods to scale a model’s projected warming up or down according to whether it under- or over-predicts the response to anthropogenic forcings over the historical period. Here we apply such a method using near surface air temperature observations over the 1851–2010 period, historical simulations of the response to changing greenhouse gases, aerosols and natural forcings, and simulations of future climate change under the Representative Concentration Pathways from the second generation Canadian Earth System Model (CanESM2).

Or, to put it another way, Gillet et al. used the observed character of global temperature increase—an integrator of all processes acting upon it—to guide an adjustment to the temperature projections produced by a climate model. Sounds familiar!!

And what did they find? From the Abstract of Gillet et al.:

Our analysis also leads to a relatively low and tightly-constrained estimate of Transient Climate Response of 1.3–1.8°C, and relatively low projections of 21st-century warming under the Representative Concentration Pathways.

The Transient Climate Response is the temperature rise at the time of the doubling of the atmospheric CO2 concentration, which will most likely occur sometime in the latter decades of this century. Which means that results of Gillet et al. are in direct accordance with the results of Michaels et al. published 10 years prior and which played a central role in precipitating the wrath of the Climategate scientists upon us, Chris de Freitas and Climate Research.

Both the Gillet et al. (2012) and the Michaels et al. (2002) studies show that climate models are over-predicting the amount of warming that is a result of human changes to the constituents of the atmosphere, and that when they are constrained to conform to actual observations of the earth’s temperature progression, the models project much less future warming (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Dashed lines show the projected course of 21st century global temperature rise as projected by the latest version (CanESM2) of the Canadian coupled ocean‐atmosphere climate model for three different future emission scenarios (RCPs). Colored bars represent the range of model projections when constrained by past 160 years of observations. All uncertainty ranges are 5–95%. (figure adapted from Gillet et al., 2012: note the original figure included additional data not relevant to this discussion).

And a final word of advice to whoever was the editor at GRL that was responsible for overseeing the Gillet et al. publication—watch your back.

References:

Gillet, N.P., et al., 2012. Improved constraints on 21st-century warming derived using 160 years of temperature observations. Geophysical Research Letters, 39, L01704, doi:10.1029/2011GL050226.

Michaels, P.J., et al., 2002. Revised 21st century temperature projections. Climate Research, 23, 1-9.

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Bill Illis
January 11, 2012 4:53 pm

I don’t know how anyone could examine the experience of the last 160 years and not come to the conclusion that the transient warming is far lower than expected. One would have to be very poor at basic math.
Obviously dana1981 has published many different versions of the temperature change to date so he might fully believe it is consistent with the climate model forecasts and with 3.0C per doubling, …
But it certainly isn’t.
I note the chart that dana1981 is complaining about is provided on the GRL website publishing the paper (I’m assuming they will NOT try to get the GRL editor fired now but who knows).

Tom Curtis
January 11, 2012 5:09 pm

REP, clearly Mosher, to whom I was responding was deceived. What is more, burying the acknowledgement that relevant information was removed deep in the comments, and then only after being directly challenged is hardly proper acknowledgement.
[REPLY: Tom, Mosher is seldom deceived. Meet him in open, honorable dispute and see what falls out. Review the comments and see if your concerns have been addressed. You may not agree, but Anthony tries to provide a fair and open forum. Your comments have not been suppressed or altered, so go with it. -REP]

Genghis
January 11, 2012 5:34 pm

R. Gates – “It’s not the equation itself, but the context with which you present it, as the context was supposed to be related to climate sensitivity to a doubling of CO2, with all fast (Charney/transient) and slow (earth system) feedbacks included. Your equation has nothing to do with either of these, and if you think it does, my suggestion was that you take a physics class, or two, or three.”
You left out, “The equalibrium sensitivity will be higher”. You are talking about a system in equilibrium. I didn’t claim that the equation had anything to do with anything except the doubling of CO2 in equilibrium. What it clearly demonstrates is that doubling CO2 doesn’t change the equilibrium temperature.
What CO2 does is help the system establish equilibrium by either putting more energy into the system if the equilibrium temperature is higher than the current value or by taking energy out of the system if the temperature is higher than equilibrium. At equilibrium CO2’s net effect is neutral and C02’s net effect on temperature excursions is also neutral.
You are the one who has to demonstrate that CO2 directly warms the atmosphere in equilibrium, since you claimed that it is responsible for apx. 64% of the atmospheres warming.
And please use mathematical proofs in your answer, while I may need to take a physics class or two, or three, I dimly remember enough Physic 300 level courses to get by, barely : )

RDCII
January 11, 2012 7:48 pm

Dana1981 admits that he undestands perfectly the focus of the paper:
“…though Gillette et al. chose to focus on the results based on the 1851-2010 regression…”
and then tries to take Michaels to task for…uh…focussing on the results based on the 1851-2010 regression.
Dana calls this “distortion”.

R. Gates
January 11, 2012 8:20 pm

Genghis said: (to R. Gates)
“You are the one who has to demonstrate that CO2 directly warms the atmosphere in equilibrium, since you claimed that it is responsible for apx. 64% of the atmospheres warming.”
_______
? I never made any such claim. Either you are confusing me with someone else, or you have misunderstood or are misrepresenting something I said. Please show specifically where I made this claim, as it is not something I believe, and therefore know I would not have said it.

dalyplanet
January 11, 2012 9:30 pm

Kim You are funny !!
TSR Laugh !

Don
January 11, 2012 9:31 pm

dana1981 and Tom Curtis, the twisted and strained logic and oh-so-offended tones of your comments would make one think that your whole world was being unmade!
Oh, wait…

Genghis
January 11, 2012 10:44 pm

R. Gates – “Genghis said: (to R. Gates)
“You are the one who has to demonstrate that CO2 directly warms the atmosphere in equilibrium, since you claimed that it is responsible for apx. 64% of the atmospheres warming.”
_______
? I never made any such claim. Either you are confusing me with someone else, or you have misunderstood or are misrepresenting something I said. Please show specifically where I made this claim, as it is not something I believe, and therefore know I would not have said it.”
———————————–
———————————–
Here is the quote from the weekend thread.
———————-
——————–
R. Gates says:
January 8, 2012 at 12:27 pm
My final comments here on the “Open Weekend Thread” (big sigh of relief for some I’m sure):
Here’s a rough breakdown of where the heat in atmosphere comes from:
Short-wave radiation from the sun……………11.9%
Heat to atmosphere from condensation…………14.4%
Heat to atmosphere from convection/conduction… 4.4%
Long-wave radiation from earth………………69.4%
The atmosphere is hardly “transparent” to radiation (even Sir Hoyle knew that), either SW or LW, but certainly absorbs far more LW than SW as the above percentages indicate. To those who think and can prove that gravity and the ideal gas law explain the whole thing, there is a Nobel Prize in Physics waiting for you, and your name will be as famous as Newton and Einstein. Good luck…
——————–
——————–
You claim that “Long-wave radiation from earth………………69.4%” accounts for 69% of the atmospheric heating. What is your mechanism for heating the atmosphere via “Long-wave radiation from earth” if not through CO2 capturing the radiation?

David
January 11, 2012 11:00 pm

This isn’t rocket science; in fact it isn’t even climate science. The question is whether or not Tom Wigley’s original cow birthing and Team attack on the journal was warranted. The publication of a paper 10 years later reproducing the original result, even qualified (of course it is, so was the original, all results are), offers strong support that Tom’s minority view at the time was wrong. The existence of the higher sensitivity figure doesn’t negate this fact so it’s not unreasonable to exclude it, in this instance, given what is being argued.

Chris Nelli
January 11, 2012 11:14 pm

Don,
Good one!

Lady in Red
January 12, 2012 12:02 am

The NOVA producer lady wrote:
“good to hear from you. I will certainly give some thought to the
material you sent. Thanks very much,”
Back to: not likely.
At the same time, this is not a simple, one hour story. It is a decade long evolution, beginning with Steve McIntyre’s curiosity about the funny look of MM’s hockey stick graph. …through Peter Webster and Judith Curry…. the books on two sides of the Atlantic (none of which I’ve read. …sigh… sorry… keeping up with the blogs is almost too much) Climategate 1.0 and 2.0 and
The Released, But Encrypted, Files…. stay tuned.
This is more than a NOVA. It’s a movie. Or, a series, esp. when one factors in stories like those of Patrick Michaels….
…and, frankly, I would be interested in the personal fates, future, of Joe Romm, Michael Mann, Gavin Schmidt… et al. Who are these men? What happens to them? Do they melt into a pool of stinking liquid in the face of the cross of Feynman’s Cargo Cult Science?
This is not a NOVA. ….Lady in Red

AndyG55
January 12, 2012 12:36 am

,
“The older results are completely irrelevant unless you can show good reason why a more limited timespan and data set should be chosen”
The ONLY reason is that the shorter term data gives a result more to his liking.
I’m sure he would be even happier if it the period from 1976 to 1998 was used, and he was stupid enough to fit an extrapolate a linear trend. DOH !!
Thing is…… the LONGER the record use, the less warming is apparent, and if you are able to include proxy data from the MWP and RWP the linear trend (even though all linear trends are meaningless anyway) would be negative.

Alan Wilkinson
January 12, 2012 1:02 am

AndyG55, I couldn’t possibly comment. We shall see if Dana can improve on his previous apoplectic contributions to this thread.

January 12, 2012 3:17 am

Myrrh says: January 11, 2012 at 4:20 pm
Yes, looks like unpleasant and rude behaviour on the part of Newton. However, it did not distort and gag the whole science.
It does not, therefore, compare with what the Team, egged on by Michael Mann, Bert Bolin, Naomi Oreskes, Bob Ward, etc and amplified by Phil Jones, Al Gore, Wm Connolley, Patchy Pachauri, have done to Climate Science.

JPeden
January 12, 2012 8:06 am

Mann asks: “I fear that “Climate Research” has become a hopelessly compromised vehicle in the skeptics’ (can we find a better word?)”
Yes, because 1] “skeptic” is not derisive enough according to Mann’s, et al., anti-scientific “methods”; and, 2] unfortunately, scepticism is at the heart of the practice of real science – and right from the very start when someone observes and thinks about things and then forms their own hypothesis, and therefore should always be thinking, “what’s wrong with what I’m thinking and doing?”

oeman50
January 12, 2012 9:56 am

Lady in Red says:
January 12, 2012 at 12:02 am
This is more than a NOVA. It’s a movie. Or, a series, esp. when one factors in stories like those of Patrick Michaels….
…and, frankly, I would be interested in the personal fates, future, of Joe Romm, Michael Mann, Gavin Schmidt… et al. Who are these men? What happens to them? Do they melt into a pool of stinking liquid in the face of the cross of Feynman’s Cargo Cult Science?
=======================
I agree, the movie it reminds me of is “Hellboy”……… .

Myrrh
January 12, 2012 12:59 pm

Lucy – I was replying to the idea that previous scientists had integrity and Newton was mentioned. What Newton did is exactly what is being done now by those with like lack of integrity, and it’s only because we now have easy communications world wide that this corruption of science is capable of being organised on a world-wide scale. What is really sad is the Royal Society never did live up to its own motto, it’s as complicit now as it was then in destroying the reputations of scientists trying to do real science and squashing any findings against its own vested interest stance.
Which is what can happen when politics allowed to gain the upper hand and I think that’s always been a factor running concurrently with science exploration, sometimes to corruption, sometimes to unbiased encouragement, but political control is only part of the story, this is also aided and abetted by the scientists themselves because of their own personal biases. How many teaching the physics of ‘greenhouse gas warming’, from PhD level down, would be happy to admit they’ve been teaching a load of crock for all these years…?

R. Gates
January 12, 2012 1:02 pm

Genghis said: (to R. Gates)
You claim that “Long-wave radiation from earth………………69.4%” accounts for 69% of the atmospheric heating. What is your mechanism for heating the atmosphere via “Long-wave radiation from earth” if not through CO2 capturing the radiation?
_____
Um, I hope you’ve already figured out how foolish your statement is. CO2 only makes up a part of the 69% of the LW that is absorbed and re-emitted by the greenhouses gases in the atmosphere. Water vapor makes up a larger percentage of the 69% of the LW greenhouse effect in the atmosphere. But alas, water vapor is a condensing greenhouse gas, and thus, we need the non-condensing CO2 as well, or we go back to an ice planet.

Myrrh
January 12, 2012 3:57 pm

R. Gates says:
January 12, 2012 at 1:02 pm
But alas, water vapor is a condensing greenhouse gas, and thus, we need the non-condensing CO2 as well, or we go back to an ice planet.
For all practical purposes CO2 is condensing – since it and water vapour are irrestistably attracted to each other and so as water vapour condenses it comes down with any carbon dioxide around, all pure clean rainwater is carbonic acid. So we should be in a permanent ice planet…
Are you ever going to explain how exactly such an insignificant trace amount of carbon dioxide can bring the temps up from permanent ice planet to 15°C?

Genghis
January 12, 2012 6:26 pm

R. Gates – “Genghis said: (to R. Gates)
“You are the one who has to demonstrate that CO2 directly warms the atmosphere in equilibrium, since you claimed that it is responsible for apx. 64% of the atmospheres warming.”
_______
“? I never made any such claim. Either you are confusing me with someone else, or you have misunderstood or are misrepresenting something I said. Please show specifically where I made this claim, as it is not something I believe, and therefore know I would not have said it.”
————
Um, I hope you’ve already figured out how foolish your statement is. CO2 only makes up a part of the 69% of the LW that is absorbed and re-emitted by the greenhouses gases in the atmosphere. Water vapor makes up a larger percentage of the 69% of the LW greenhouse effect in the atmosphere. But alas, water vapor is a condensing greenhouse gas, and thus, we need the non-condensing CO2 as well, or we go back to an ice planet.”
———
You are hilarious Gates. Let me summarize your apparent positions, LW radiation heats up 69% of the atmosphere through Greenhouse gases. Gates claims he never made the claim that LW radiation via CO2 is responsible for 69% of the warming of the atmosphere. Gates then claims the Greenhouse gas H20 is responsible for that majority of 69% of the warming of the atmosphere. Gates then claims that H2O condenses so the planet is going to freeze!
Gates apparently doesn’t understand that according to the greenhouse theory that the mechanism by which it is claimed that Greenhouse gases warm the atmosphere is identical for CO2 and H2O.
Gates your reasoning and lack of scientific backing is so bad, I can only guess that you are really a skeptic trying to make the warmers look bad. Keep up the good work : )

January 13, 2012 8:35 am

For those interested, dana1981 has a post up over at Skeptical Science in which he looks at the Gillett et al. study. Interestingly, he omits a portion of the original Gillett et al. Figure 3 in order to better support a point he was trying (in my opinion unsuccessfully) to make.
Hmmm….
-Chip Knappenberger
World Climate Report

DCA
January 13, 2012 10:16 am

I suspect the reason sKs has a policy prohibiting “accusations of deception” is because they get it quite regularly. It’s ironic that he starts with “accusations from the very start”.

Bill Illis
January 13, 2012 5:34 pm

The problem dana1981 and SkS have is that they do not understand numbers. They are “emotional thinkers” if one has ever done the Myers Briggs personality profiles.
Let’s take figure 1C; GHG-influenced temperatures are supposed to be +1.5C already. But all we have gotten to is 0.7C, 10 years ago. How do we get to +3.25C by 2100 if we are already 50% off the projected trendline.
SkS sees a line going slightly up and they imagine the theory must be absolutely correct. They cannot objectively see that 50% off means 50% off because there is a line going slightly up.
Of course, it is no longer going up either.

Brian H
January 14, 2012 7:56 am

John N says:
January 11, 2012 at 1:31 pm

dana1981 your outrage and hysteria seem uncorrelated to and out of scale with this article. It is confusing.

No, it’s not. Taking into account the full data record of previous comments and the contents of SkS, it was directly on the trend line, with very tight error bars.

David Ball
January 14, 2012 9:45 am

Lady in Red says:
January 12, 2012 at 12:02 am
It started long before Steve Mc’s interest in the schlockey stick. It may have started for you then, but there is nearly 2 previous decades omitted in your statement.