A Response to Skeptical Science’s “Patrick Michaels: Serial Deleter of Inconvenient Data”

Guest post by Patrick Michaels

When the battle is being lost, there is a tendency to try to raise a level of distraction to shift the attention away from the desperate situation at hand. Such is the noise being raised concerning my presentation of the results from a recent series of scientific findings and observations—that lend further support to notion of modest climate change. The apocalyptics and the gloom-and-doom crowd are losing both the science battle and the policy war.

Dana Nuccitelli (aka dana1981) over at the website Skeptical Science has recently written a screed purporting that I delete “inconvenient” data in order to make my points. In fact, what I have done is to highlight the major findings of the studies I have commented on—findings that have indeed strengthened the case that global warming in this century will be in the lower end of the range of projections issued by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Mr. Nuccitelli starts by digging up the dead horse of my 1998 testimony to Congress and my presentation of the global temperature projections made ten years earlier (in 1988) by NASA’s Jim Hansen. In my testimony before the Committee on Small Business of the U.S. House of Representatives in July 1998 (available here) I elected to focus on a comparison between the observed temperatures and those projected to have occurred under Hansen’s (in his words) “business-as-usual” (BAU) scenario. Remember, this was in 1998. There was no worldwide treaty reducing carbon dioxide emissions (indeed, there isn’t one now). The only change to BAU that took place in the 1988 to 1998 time period was the Montreal Protocol limiting the emissions of CFCs. Reductions in production began only in 1994 and the radiative effect of the Protocol by 1998 was infinitesimal. To me, BAU means BAU. One of the main points that I was making in my 1998 testimony was that observations indicated that the global temperature were rising much less than Hansen had forecast under BAU, which is what happened. That was true then, and it remains true today, as the amount of warming he overforecast in 1988 is painfully obvious.

Mr. Nuccitelli then criticizes my handling of the results of a pair of new scientific studies examining the earth’s climate sensitivity by Schmittner et al. (2011) and Gillett et al. (2012). Each of these research teams reported rather lowish estimates of the climate sensitivity. As in any scientific study, there is a lot of discussion concerning data and methods and results in these papers and caveats and uncertainties. In my summary of them, I focused on the major results much as the authors did in the papers’ abstracts. In both case I wrote positively about the findings. Not having obtained the actual raw data from the authors themselves to enable me to create charts directly illustrating the paper’s main points (a task that is commonly not altogether straightforward, timely, or even successful; see the Climategate emails for examples of the myriad of potential difficulties encountered in such an effort), I did the next best thing, which was to adapt the published figures to simplify and highlight the major results (and focus my accompanying text on the main findings).

For example, from Schmittner et al., I removed from one of the original figures some data pertaining to individual components (land and ocean) because the paper was about global temperature and I am concerned about global sensitivity. I showed the global results (and noted in the caption of the Figure I presented that it had been “adapted from Schmittner et al., 2011″). The finding that I showed was the same one which the authors focused on in their abstract which I reproduce here in full:

Assessing impacts of future anthropogenic carbon emissions is currently impeded by uncertainties in our knowledge of equilibrium climate sensitivity to atmospheric carbon dioxide doubling. Previous studies suggest 3 K as best estimate, 2–4.5 K as the 66% probability range, and non-zero probabilities for much higher values, the latter implying a small but significant chance of high-impact climate changes that would be difficult to avoid. Here, combining extensive sea and land surface temperature reconstructions from the Last Glacial Maximum with climate model simulations, we estimate a lower median (2.3 K) and reduced uncertainty (1.7–2.6 K 66% probability). Assuming paleoclimatic constraints apply to the future as predicted by our model, these results imply lower probability of imminent extreme climatic change than previously thought.

And the same is true for my encapsulation of the work of Gillett and colleagues. In this case, I simplified one of the original figures by removing some results that were derived using a shorter and incomplete (1851-2010 vs. 1901-2000) temperature record while retaining the same record that was preferred by the authors (and again noted in the caption to the Figure that I presented that it had been “adapted from Gillett et al., 2012″ and additionally added that “the original figure included additional data not relevant to this discussion”).

That one of the primary scientific advances of the paper was the result derived using the more complete temperature time series is demonstrated by the paper’s title “Improved constraints on 21st-century warming derived using 160 years of temperature observations.” Note the words “improved” and “160 years of temperature data” (the full record).

I invite you to compare the “before” and “after” images from these two papers as detailed by Dana Nuccitelli with the descriptions made in summary by the paper’s original authors and you’ll see that I was being true to their work. Further, read through my articles (here and here) spotlighting their results and you’ll see that I was also quite supportive of their findings.

Mr. Nuccitelli, as a contributor to Skeptical Science—a website dedicated to trying to bolster the alarmist claims of human-caused climate change—realizes that it is in his best interest to try to obliterate evidence which paints a less than alarming picture of our climate future. Anyone who both produces and synthesizes such findings will be his target. That’s just the way the game is played by alarmists like Dana and the ever-obnoxious Joe Romm (who probably has done more damage to his cause with his over-the-top vitriol than he can possibly imagine).

If evidence continues to accrue that the earth’s climate is not changing in a manner sufficient to inspire enough fear in the general populace to demand life-altering energy limitations, attacks will continue by those, to use Mr. Nuccitelli phrase “who simply don’t want to accept the scientific reality.”

To keep up with the latest scientific findings concerning climate change highlighting the modest nature of the expected changes—findings that which are unlikely to be highlighted in the general media—I invite you to drop in from time to time here at World Climate Report , my “Climate of Fear” column at Forbes, my “Current Wisdom” feature at Cato, or any of the other sites, such as Watts Up With That? or Junk Science, that occasionally highlight my writings.

And, as always, if you ever don’t believe what I have to say, or want to investigate the issue in more detail, I include a list of references of the papers that I am discussing. So, as Casey Stengel used to say, ‘you could look it up.’

References:

Gillett, 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.

Schmittner, A., et al., 2011. Climate sensitivity estimated from temperature reconstructions of the Last Glacial Maximum, Science, 334, 1385-1388

DOI: 10.1126/science.1203513

UPDATE: Shub Niggurath shows even more integrity issues at Skeptical Science.

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260 Comments
Ian
January 17, 2012 5:55 pm

Although the piece is very interesting, posting here is really only posting to like minded readers. Getting this refutation posted on SkS would be much more useful to the sceptic cause

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 5:56 pm

John M – By all means – discuss Scenario C. And B. And A – that is the point – Michaels chose the most uncharitable (and scientifically furthest from reality) to present to the US Congress as a reason why those AGW folks were warmists and alarmists (not his words, I believe it was his intent – you can correct me IF I am wrong).
But the truth is, Scenario B is the one that both 1) matches the emissions and 2) most closely matches the current temperature (the discrepancy being due to Hansen’s use of 4.2 for sensitivity rather than 3.0).
This is really a notable misreprenstation of Hansen’s work (unless Michaels’ has Hansen’s permission) and efforts to hand wave it away say more about the waver than Hansen’s work, which was prescient in 1988 and still notable even now for how close he got to what we are experiencing (of course we know more, and Hansen himself has updated the work)

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 6:00 pm

Eric (Skeptic) when Michaels was testifying in front of Congress was this the case:
“Although Pat Michaels tends to write opinion pieces that need not mention all the angles, but the reader should not pretend that they are scientific pieces.”?
Was he testifying as an expert upon whose testimony Congress could base policy for the largest CO2 emitter (at the time)? Or was he merely sharing with Congress his opinion, and therefor, in your world, entitled to gloss over the reality bits?

REPLY:
Well at least when Michaels is before congress, he doesn’t resort to stagecraft. Funny how if the argument was so strong in 1988, why would they need to do this sort of BS?
This transcript excerpt is from PBS series Frontline which aired a special in April 2007. Here he admits his stagecraft in his own words:
TIMOTHY WIRTH: We called the Weather Bureau and found out what historically was the hottest day of the summer. Well, it was June 6th or June 9th or whatever it was. So we scheduled the hearing that day, and bingo, it was the hottest day on record in Washington, or close to it.
DEBORAH AMOS: [on camera] Did you also alter the temperature in the hearing room that day?
TIMOTHY WIRTH: What we did is that we went in the night before and opened all the windows, I will admit, right, so that the air conditioning wasn’t working inside the room. And so when the- when the hearing occurred, there was not only bliss, which is television cameras and double figures, but it was really hot.[Shot of witnesses at hearing]
Watch the Frontline video:

– Anthony

Allan Brodribb
January 17, 2012 6:06 pm

DirkH
“As one can see, for 2011 the scenario A concentration is 393 ppm, the scenario B concentration is 390 ppm, we are now at 392. So the difference isn’t that large, both A and B fit quite well concerning the CO2 concentration, but A fits better. Dana says B fits better; but I can’t see that.”
Well really when you take into account the decimal place Scenario A is 393.7, much closer to 394 than 393 and Scenario B is 390.99 which is essentially 391. I guess this puts scenario B closest to reality, but that again depends on the decimal place within the actual measurement, which I don’t know.

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 6:10 pm

Ian – what refutation? Michaels is trying to justify his poor conduct on a very, very friendly site – and not getting all that far at that. SkS would ask questions like I have asked in regards to Congressional testimony that Michaels made. I am not aware of Michaels EVER having satisfactory answers to why he chose the wrong Scenario, and used it to make specious claims like “Hansen off by 400%” – it might play well to the true believers on WUWT – but in a crowd whose baseline is 1)very friendly to AGW AND 2) very logical and fact/logic based – this “refutation” (or repudiation if you prefer) – will not do well. Not unless Michaels comes up with an explanation or an apology. Without it – he looks like just another guy desperately hand waving to avoid the ample evidence that the world is warming, and man is to blame.

January 17, 2012 6:10 pm

DirkH
It doesn’t matter. If the concentration in Hansen’ BAU (scenario A) is wrong, then that is another mistake he made as we clearly are on BAU policywise.

old engineer
January 17, 2012 6:10 pm

Reading over my comments now that they are posted, I hope it was obvious to everyone that I was referring to Patrick as the “you” and Nuccitelli as the “knave.”

January 17, 2012 6:12 pm

DirkH
Also, the difference in the current error between reality and scenario A or B is now very small–both were massive flops.

January 17, 2012 6:13 pm

Anteros,
It is interesting that you quote the IPCC 1990 as stating that their BAU might be an underestimate. Turning to Hansen 1998, while he did admit that by its construction, his Scenario A “since it is exponential, must eventually be on the high side of reality” but that its emissions growth rate “is less than the rate typical of the past century” and that the climate forcing in Scenario A “goes approximately through the middle of the range of likely climate forcing estimated for the year 2030 by Ramanathan et al. (1985)”. In other words, at the time of its creation, Hansen’s Scenario A well represented business-as-usual.
Despite all the protestation made after the fact (made louder by the fact that scenario A performed so poorly) I would guess that while Hansen wrote in 1988 that “Scenario B is perhaps the most plausible of the three cases” that he meant over the long-term, and that over the shorter term (like, say, the following decade or so—a time period commensurate with Pat Michael’s testimony) that Hansen probably had a preference for Scenario A.
-Chip Knappenberger
World Climate Report

Peter Wilson
January 17, 2012 6:18 pm

Ian says:
January 17, 2012 at 5:55 pm
“Although the piece is very interesting, posting here is really only posting to like minded readers. Getting this refutation posted on SkS would be much more useful to the sceptic cause”
Indeed. I suspect they know that too, which is why it wont be.

KR
January 17, 2012 6:22 pm

When someone writes a paper, with relevant graphs – they include the data in the graphs because they think it’s important, because it’s part of the results.
Michaels, in editing those graphs, is lying by omission (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lie#Lying_by_omission), which is still lying. I have zero sympathy for Michael being called out on it.

Nick Kermode
January 17, 2012 6:24 pm

“I elected to focus on….. ” Say no more.

January 17, 2012 6:25 pm

Actually Thoughtful,
A=A.
BAU=BAU.
Words have meaning.

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 6:27 pm

I notice some bad science apologists are attempting to ride the BAU train. Just one problem – Hansen didn’t use the term – he DEFINED it. So in order for it to be BAU (in regards to Hansen’s 1988 paper) – it MUST be the BAU that Hansen defined in 1988 – basically a logarithmic rise in emissions. That was scenario A (note it was not titled “BAU”). Scenario B was the more likely linear rise in emissions (very close to what happened).
The appeal to some common usage of BAU appears to be an admission of failure on the science and ethics front. But by all means, carry on with your BAU!

Peter Wilson
January 17, 2012 6:28 pm

Actually Thoughtful says:
January 17, 2012 at 5:56 pm
“…Hansen’s work, which was prescient in 1988 and still notable even now for how close he got to what we are experiencing”
So CO2 emissions have escalated unchecked, but warming has ceased. And Hansen, who predicted escalating temperature increases for similar CO2 increases, is prescient. OK.
As long as we redefine “prescient” to mean “doesn’t have a clue”

January 17, 2012 6:30 pm

Chip, you’re 110% correct. Hansen’s way was to write multiple threads of logic that aren’t consistent but can be invoked to cover any mistakes. His way now is different, and some might say he has graduated from his inconsistency to irrationality.

Eric (skeptic)
January 17, 2012 6:33 pm

Actually Thoughtful, not opinion in that case. He did not need to consider whether or not we were the biggest emitter, but to correctly point out that models were later adjusted to deliver less warming for the same CO2 (by adding aerosols). His choice of model runs to prove overestimation was a cherry pick like any other. I am not a big fan of his style because I believe it eventually backfires. But I don’t think it’s as bad as other pieces in 1998 on the other side.

DavidA
January 17, 2012 6:35 pm

@DirkH, I can see how Dana concludes scenario B is most relevant, it is based on the observation that the emission profile for scenario B has matched real world emissions up to now; so if Hansen’s original model was right then it’s the B line that should match the real world observation line (it doesn’t). No myth is being busted there, he actually agrees that scenario B overestimated warming due to using a bodgy CO2 sensitivity figure. Still makes the “Myth” list which supposedly forms a wall of skeptic debunking evidence.

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 6:36 pm

Chris you wrote: “Despite all the protestation made after the fact (made louder by the fact that scenario A performed so poorly) I would guess that while Hansen wrote in 1988 that “Scenario B is perhaps the most plausible of the three cases” that he meant over the long-term, and that over the shorter term (like, say, the following decade or so—a time period commensurate with Pat Michael’s testimony) that Hansen probably had a preference for Scenario A.”
Why?! You have Hansen saying AT THE TIME – “Scenario B is perhaps the most plausible of the 3 cases” – and yet you want to rewrite history and put your words in his mouth, that he ACTUALLY meant “A” – COME ON!
Why not let Hansen speak for Hansen (this would also mean presenting the entire graphic, and discussing the line where emissions most closely matched reality).

January 17, 2012 6:36 pm

Actually Thoughtful,
When have I said that the world is not warming or that people do not have a role in it?
Citation, please.

Brandon C
January 17, 2012 6:38 pm

Im sorry, but I don’t see how putting in the other lines back in changes anything. I have looked at the graphs with and without the missing lines….and it doesn’t change anything. This is trying to draw attention away from the actual point being made. They are just trying to draw public attention away from the real point being discussed.

January 17, 2012 6:56 pm

KR says:
“Michaels, in editing those graphs, is lying by omission”
In that case, the world’s biggest liar by far is Michael Mann, of Hokey Stick and Tiljander infamy.

January 17, 2012 7:04 pm

Wrestling MATCH! Pig in MUD! Such fun.
You know who likes it.
You know WHO GETS dirty! Surprise, YOU LOSE!

Actually Thoughtful
January 17, 2012 7:04 pm

michaelspj – I am assuming you are Patrick Michaels (apologies in advance if I have this wrong).
You are at least consistent in your habit of misrepresenting people!
Upthread I wrote: “he {Michaels} looks like just another guy desperately hand waving to avoid the ample evidence that the world is warming, and man is to blame.”
You respond “When have I said that the world is not warming or that people do not have a role in it?”
?? You DO look like another guy desperately hand waiving to avoid the evidence. For example, when you purposefully choose Scenario A (high emissions) and explain to Congress this shows actual temp is “more than four times less than Hansen predicted.” and DON’T point out (to the United States Congress ie the stakes could NOT be higher) that scenario A does NOT match reality for emissions AND omit scenario B (which DOES match reality for emissions, and is the one Hansen SAID would match emissions and is very close on temperature*) – then, sir, you do indeed look like just another guy desperately hand waving to avoid the ample evidence that the world is warming, and man is to blame.
Here is your citation:
http://www.cato.org/testimony/ct-pm072998.html
{I believe you are familiar with the CATO institute}
*(the difference being that Hansen used 4.2 for climate sensitivity – as more EVIDENCE has accumulated, Hansen now uses 3 – this evolution is called science – surely any impartial reader can see the difference between updating your views based on new information VS misrepresenting (to Congress no less!) the work of a scientist)

Eric (skeptic)
January 17, 2012 7:07 pm

KR, there are many examples of graphs omitting key information including at Skep Sci (although they are usually pretty good). One that comes to mind is the constantly displayed estimates of sensitivity (hand-drawn curves for the most part) without including the other part of the Knutti and Hegerl 2008 chart showing the uncertainty and inapplicability of (paleo) estimates to the current situation.