The Birth of CGR Science

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I was reading a study published in November 2011 in Science mag, paywalled of course. It’s called “The Pace of Shifting Climate in Marine and Terrestrial Ecosystems”, by Burrows et al. (abstract here,  hereinafter B2011). However, I believe that the Supplementary Online Information (SOI) may not be paywalled, and it is here.

The study has 19 authors, clear proof of the hypothesis that the quality of the science is inversely proportional to the square of the named authors. They study has plenty of flash, something akin to what the song calls “28 color glossy photos with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one”, like the following:

Figure 1 from B2011.  ORIGINAL CAPTION: (A) Trends in land (Climate Research Unit data set CRU TS3.1) and ocean (Hadley Centre data set Had1SST 1.1) temperatures for 1960–2009, with latitude medians (red, land; blue, ocean).

It’s interesting how they don’t waste any time. In the very first sentence of the study, they beg the conclusion of the paper. Surely that must break the existing land speed record. The paper opens by saying:

Climate warming is a global threat to biodiversity (1). 

I’d have thought that science was about seeing if a warming of a degree or two in a century might be a global threat to biodiversity, and if so, exactly which bio might get less diverse.

I would have expected them to establish that through scientific studies of the plants and animals of our astounding planet. Observations. Facts. Analyses of biodiversity in areas that have warmed. But of course, since they state it as an established fact in the very first sentence, all the observations and evidence and analyses must surely have been laid out in reference (1).

So I looked in the list of references to identify reference (1), expecting to find a hard-hitting scientific analyses with observations and facts that showed conclusively that plants and animals around the globe hate warming and that it damages them and saps their vital bodily fluids.

It was neither encouraging, nor entirely unexpected, to find that reference (1) is entitled “Global Biodiversity Scenarios for the Year 2100”.

Again the paper is paywalled, must be a better way to do science, abstract here. The abstract says:

ABSTRACT

Scenarios of changes in biodiversity for the year 2100 can now be developed based on scenarios of changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide, climate, vegetation, and land use and the known sensitivity of biodiversity to these changes. This study identified a ranking of the importance of drivers of change, a ranking of the biomes with respect to expected changes, and the major sources of uncertainties.

There you have it, folks. They didn’t bother looking at the real world at all. Instead, they had their computer models generate some “scenarios of change” for what the world might look like in 2100. These model results represent the current situation as projected forwards a century by carefully following, in the most scientificalistic and mathematically rigorous manner, the prejudices and preconceptions of the programmers who wrote the model.

But they didn’t just release the model forecasts. That wouldn’t be science, and more to the point, it entails the risk that people might say “wait a minute … what does a glorified adding machine know about what’s gonna happen in a century, anyway?” Can’t have that.

So first, they intensively studied the results in the most intensive and studious manner. They pored over them, they weighed and measured them, they pieced them and plotted them and mapped them, they took their main conclusion and “washed it in permanganate with carbolated soap” as the poet has it, they pondered the eigenvectors, they normalized the results and standardized them and area-adjusted them and de-normalized them again. That is the kind of mystical alchemy that transmutes plain old fallible computer model results into infallible golden Science.

And what did they find? To no one’s surprise, they found conclusive proof that the programmers’ prejudices and preconceptions were 100% correct, that plants and animals despise warming, and they do all they can to avoid warm places. They showed beyond doubt that even the slightest warming over a century is intolerable to wildlife, that there are only costs and no benefits from gradual warming, and … wait, say what?

In other words, the B2011 study is models all the way down. No one has shown that a few degrees of warming over a century is a “global threat to biodiversity”, that is a very poorly supported hypothesis, not a fact. If the feared warming does occur, the majority of the warming is projected to be at night, in the winter, in the extratropics. Call me crazy, but I don’t foresee huge effects on biodiversity if midnights in Siberia in December are minus 37° rather than minus 40° … sure, every change brings changes, and if it warms there will be some, but I don’t see any evidence supporting a “global threat to biodiversity”.

In any case, I started out by looking at their results of the first study, B2011, but I got totally sidetractored by their error bars on their results shown in Figure 1. (That’s like being sidetracked but with a lot more pull.)  They used a tiny, 1° x 1° grid size, and given the scarcity of temperature observations in many parts of the world, I wondered how they dealt with the uneven spacing of the ground stations. At that size, many of the grids wouldn’t have a single temperature station. So I looked to see how they handled the error estimate for the temperature trend in a 1° x 1° gridcell that contained no temperature stations at all. Interesting philosophical question, don’t you think? What are the error bars on your results when you have zero data?

I was amazed by their error procedure, which is what led me to write this post. Here’s what the B2011 SOI says about error estimates for their work:

We do not reflect uncertainty for our estimates or attempt statistical tests because all of our input data include some degree of model-based interpolation. Here we seek only to describe broad regional patterns; more detailed modeling will be required to reflect inherent uncertainty in specific smaller-scale predictions.

So … using model based interpolation somehow buys you a climate indulgence releasing you from needing to display your error estimates? If you use model results as input data, you can just blow off “statistical tests”? This “post-normal science” is sure easier than the regular kind.

It was not enough that their first sentence, the underlying rock on which their paper is founded, the alleged “danger” their whole paper is built around, exists only in the spectral midnight world of computer models wherein any fantasy can be given a realistic looking appearance and heft and ostensible substance.

Indeed, I might suggest that we are witnessing the birth of a new paradigm. The movie industry has been revolutionized by CGI, or “computer-generated imagery”. This includes imagery so realistic it is hard to distinguish from images of the actual world. Here’s an example:

Figure 2. Computer generated fractal image of an imaginary high mountain meadow. Image Source.

CGI has saved the movie industry millions of dollars. Instead of requiring expensive sets or filming on location, they can film anywhere that is comfortable, and fill in the rest with CGI.

We may be seeing the dawn of the same revolution in science, using what can only be described as CGR, or “computer-generated reality”. I mean, the actual reality seems to specialize in things like bad weather and poisonous snakes and muddy streams filled with leeches, and it refuses to arrange itself so that I can measure it easily. Plus it’s hard to sneak up on the little critters to find out what they’re actually doing, somehow they always seem to hear my footsteps. But consider the CGR mice and rabbits and small animals that live in the lovely high CGR meadows shown in Figure 2. When the temperature rises there in the high meadow, it’s easy for me to determine how far the shrews and rock coneys that live in the meadow will have to move. Using CGR a man can do serious, rigorous, and most importantly,  fundable scientific study without all the messy parts involving slipping on rocks and wet boots and sleeping on the ground and mosquitoes and sweating. Particularly the sweating part, I suspect that many of those CGR guys only sweat when there’s emotional involvement. Personally, I think they are way ahead of their time, they’re already 100% into CGR, because studying actual reality is soooo twentieth century. Instead, they are studying the effects of CG climate on CG foxes preying on CG voles, in the computer-generated reality of the high mountain meadow shown above … to my dismay, CGR seems to be the wave of the future of climate science.

But it’s not bad enough that they have forsaken studying real ecosystems for investigating cyberworlds. In addition, they are asserting a special exemption from normal scientific practices, specifically because they have built their study, not on the rock of solid scientific investigation of the real world, but on the shifting sand of conclusions based on their CGR world. It reminds me of the guy who kills his parents, and then wants special treatment because he’s an orphan … you can’t choose to study CGR, and then claim that the fact that you are not studying actual reality somehow exempts you from the normal requirements of science.

Finally, they’ve modeled the global temperature on a 1° x 1° grid, but they say they need “more detailed modeling”. Now, that’s a curious claim in itself, but it also brings up an interesting question, viz:

They say they can’t give error estimates or uncertainty bounds on their current work because they are using modeled results as input data … and their proposed cure for this is “more detailed modeling” to “reflect inherent uncertainty”?

I’d rave about this, but it’s a peaceful morning and the sun is shining. And besides, in response to the urging of my friends, not to mention the imprecations of my detractors, I’ve given up my wicked ways. I’m a reformed cowboy, but it’s a work in progress, and it looks like I have to reform some more, no news there. So let me simply say that this is an example of post-normal, post-reality climate “science” and peer-review at its worst. Why does using a model somehow make you exempt from the normal scientific requirement to make error estimates and conduct statistical tests?

Sadly, this is all too typical of what passes for climate science these days, models all the way down. Far too much of climate science is merely the study of CGR, and special exemptions apply …

My regards, as always, to everyone.

w.

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Blue Sky
January 20, 2012 3:12 pm

I used to respect Eschenbach. But now i don’t know if this is some mind game he is playing.
[REPLY: You’ve commented only twice here at WUWT and both have been cryptically and oddly negative. Please be kind enough to expand on your comments. -REP]

Peter Miller
January 20, 2012 3:13 pm

Another example of what happens in ‘climate science’ would simply not be permissable in any real science. The whole concept of ‘climate science’ has been corrupted by: the snouts in the grants’ trough practices of its adherants, a funding addiction which requires ever-increasing sizes of troughs..
Presumably the reason for needing 19 authors is the concept of safety in numbers – presumably this is meant to show that 19 ‘climate scientists’ cannot all be spouting BS at the same time.

January 20, 2012 3:20 pm

Willis: I thoroughly enjoy your reviews. It would be interesting to know the contributions of each of the 19 authors to the computer program which doesn’t need data but only the input from 19 scientists. Did they hold hands when someone pushed the compute button? It is sad that 19 sites are so dependent on funding that they feel so compelled to prove that AGW is real that they are willing to make up stuff to keep the dream alive. Who verified the program predicted anything about biodiversity?
There used to be a magazine called the Journal of Irreproducible Results that was “tongue in cheek science”. This paper is a candidate for another magazine yet to be published but would house a lot of the climate science papers you have reviewed. Maybe we could launch it on WUWT someday. I would call the magazine the Free Journal of Insignificant Results, although others may come up with a better name. Jon

wayne Job
January 20, 2012 3:31 pm

If the people who compiled this paper are titled as scientists, I shudder at the thought of the quality of the education system.
In days past studies such as this would have been thought of as the work of charlatans. I have seen better work from people who obtained their qualifications by filling out a form on the back of a corn flakes packet.

Jimbo
January 20, 2012 3:57 pm

It should be obvious to everyone that a warmer world is utterly loathed by life. That is why NASA hopes to look for life in our solar system in Pluto as opposed to possible warm vents on nearby moons. Our own boiling vents in the Atlantic are clearly lifeless with shrimp etc. while central Antarctica is teeming with lions and tigers.
Thank the Lord Hominids came from Antarctica as opposed to tropical Africa. I rest my case.
P.S.
Stop pumping the toxic co2 gas in greenhouses. It’s killing the plants for goodness sake.

Christopher Hanley
January 20, 2012 4:04 pm

Surely there’s enough empirical data available from the past two centuries of warming, regardless of the cause(s), to study the effect on biodiversity.
That biodiversity increases towards The Equator and that most life forms evolved in much warmer climates are facts that apparently escape screen-scientists.

January 20, 2012 4:21 pm

Instead of science fiction, this should be called fictional science. Any science based on GIGO computer simulations should immediately be termed fictional science.
Regarding the Hugo Awards, I’m just now reading John Barnes’ “Mother of Storms” (review here: http://www.epiphyte.net/SF/mother-of-storms.html ). It was nominated for a Hugo, and, having been written in 1994, was probably the model for much of the hysteria surrounding clathrates and global warming.

Mike Bromley the Canucklehead
January 20, 2012 4:33 pm

Septic Matthew says:
January 20, 2012 at 2:25 pm
Baa Humbug: So I could write a paper based on models titled “Environmental Impacts of Increased Lunar Tourism” and expect it to be accepted as science.
It would depend on the details. Say, a projection from Richard Branson on how many flights he expects to conduct each year; some details about the pollutants from the rocket engines used, and so on. Preliminary information could come from a review of the effluents of the Apollo Project.
Lots of science has seemed pretty stupid when presented at first: random variation and natural selection; spherical earth; gravitational singularities; heavier than air flying machines.

And for you to imply that this bizarre effort be lumped into the above grouping is rather odd! And using the marvellously hypocritical Branson as a source for effluent data is completely consistent with aforementioned oddness.

Jimbo
January 20, 2012 4:35 pm

A warmer climate will clearly lead to less biodiversity in Russia, Siberia, Canada, Norway, Finland, Northern China etc. I REPEAT life loathes warmth. Warmth is the killer. Cold is good. CO2 is a toxic, satanic gas plant killer.

tckev
January 20, 2012 4:35 pm

Strange how “They used a tiny, 1° x 1° grid size, and given the scarcity of temperature observations in many parts of the world, I wondered how they dealt with the uneven spacing of the ground stations. At that size, many of the grids wouldn’t have a single temperature station.” – can be interpolated/ extrapolated to cover the whole globe.
Rather like a computer model of a grain of sand giving an accurate view of the beach!

Gary Hladik
January 20, 2012 5:08 pm

Whoa! Those virtual people in that virtual world are really (virtually?) screwed! Let’s hope this study causes those virtual despoilers to change their virtual ways and save their virtual planet!
Gives me chills just to think about it. I better turn up the heat.

January 20, 2012 5:14 pm

AnonyMoose says:
January 20, 2012 at 1:42 pm
catweazle666 says:
January 20, 2012 at 10:17 am
>>“Global Biodiversity Scenarios for the Year 2100″<<
When I was a lad this stuff used to be called science fiction.
By catweazle666, I think he’s got it!
The world is warming because it’s wearing a helmet, and an insulated jumpsuit with shoulder pads and a cape!

Look, you guys seem to have as credible an explanation as the paper. I used to be able to pull down a few million in NRC grants… Suppose I could get you one…! Could you expand on the cape thing and give it a little more substance (some stats and PC Analysis or whatever) and some oomph? Amplify somewhat on the shoulder pads and the helmet, relate it to Arctic ice loss (The kitten boiling thing,…) and you have a paper you could be proud of — by these standards anyway. The jumpsuit? I dunno — Maybe you can relate it to acidification of coral reefs …maybe… Takers?

Gary Hladik
January 20, 2012 5:16 pm

Rob Crawford says (January 20, 2012 at 1:39 pm): “Columbus only had one underlying assumption that was in error.”
Wiki lists at least three:
“Where Columbus did differ from the view accepted by scholars in his day was in his estimate of the westward distance from Europe to Asia. Columbus’ ideas in this regard were based on three factors: his low estimate of the size of the Earth, his high estimate of the size of the Eurasian landmass, and his belief that Japan and other inhabited islands lay far to the east of the coast of China. In all three of these issues Columbus was both wrong and at odds with the scholarly consensus of his day.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Columbus
Which only goes to show that it’s better to be lucky than smart. 🙂

January 20, 2012 5:20 pm

RockyRoad said January 20, 2012 at 11:36 am

So taking the inverse position from this multi-author paper, biodiversity is enhanced when marine organisms are frozen in the ice? I’m trying to envision how reproduction takes place under said circumstances–without success, I might add.

Imagine that there is a movie of the 3.8 billion year history of life on earth. These dickwads have decided that just one frame in that sequence is the one to preserve. No need for reproduction in preserved specimens.

January 20, 2012 5:47 pm

What’s striking about figure 1 is how warming is concentrated in the northern hemisphere temperate latitudes and the further you get away from these latitudes the less warming there is.
Its hard not to conclude that warming originates from people living in developed societies.
It can’t be a well mixed greenhouse gas, which have a more or less uniform global effect, and the only other possibility is reduced aerosols since 1970 (in developed societies).

Brian H
January 20, 2012 5:54 pm

Gary H;

Gary Hladik says:
January 20, 2012 at 5:16 pm

Which only goes to show that it’s better to be lucky than smart. 🙂

Serendipity rulz! “If we knew what we were going to find, we wouldn’t call it research.”
Except in climate science, where you must certify in blood in advance what your “discoveries” will be. Or no funny money for you!

KV
January 20, 2012 6:05 pm

Back on track and fantastic Willis. Have you got ESP? How else could you put my sentiments and feelings into words I have not even thought of yet, but wish I had?
My own little laymans effort to restore some real world sanity back into what seems to have become a computer modelled virtual reality inhabited by people suffering a collective incurable madness.
Welcome help of TonyfromOz and his ‘Wind Power Australia – The Musselroe Wind Farm Travesty in Tasmania’
http://papundits.wordpress.com/2012/01/18/wind-power-australia-the-musselroe-wind-farm-travesty-in-tasmania/
and Jennifer Marohasy;
The Musselroe Wind Farm Travesty:KeithH
http://jennifermarohasy.com/2012/01/the-musselroe-wind-farm-tavesty-keith-h
Everyone, feel free to help spread the ripples. It won’t cost you a cent!
Cheers to all.
w

adolfogiurfa
January 20, 2012 6:21 pm

Perhaps some people applied CGR to economics…and the world is now enjoying its consequences… 🙂

Steve in SC
January 20, 2012 6:27 pm

It would be my considered opinion that these authors should be arrested for littering, fined, made to go pick up their trash, and then sit for a while on the group w bench.

Anton Eagle
January 20, 2012 6:37 pm

Hmmm….
>Alan Statham says:
>January 20, 2012 at 2:03 pm
>Someone who has “absolutely no credentials at all” and “no scientific education” generally >doesn’t have much credibility when trying to disparage scientific papers. On what grounds do you >think your opinion on this paper is worth anything?
On the grounds that what he is saying is correct. You can’t do science, at least not this kind of science, by computer modelling. You need to experiment in the real world on real dynamic systems. A computer model is just going to tell you what you program it to tell you, essentially confirming your assumptions.
Credentials aren’t needed to understand this. And yes, I do have the necessary credentials to say that.

Katherine
January 20, 2012 6:47 pm

Another nice one, Willis! Had to laugh at the “sidetractored.”
Typo alert: midnights in Siberia in December are minua 37° rather than minua 40°
I think that should be “midnights in Siberia in December are minus 37° rather than minus 40°”

Another Ian
January 20, 2012 7:21 pm

Willis,
Some words which might be applicable are being introduced at
http://diggingintheclay.wordpress.com/2012/01/15/neologism/

Jim Barker
January 20, 2012 7:46 pm

Great post, Willis. I don’t really know how much time and effort went into their paywalled extravaganza, but they probably could have just reported on their results after playing a team game of SimEarth. Just as enlightning.

Laurie
January 20, 2012 8:34 pm

Look for the silver lining… at least they weren’t out there in the field spredding froggy viruses.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
January 20, 2012 9:22 pm

Google Scholar found the second paper, “Global Biodiversity Scenarios for the Year 2100″, un-paywalled version. From Science, Vol 287, 10 March 2000. Note: Looks like photocopies, my pdf reader isn’t picking up the words for selection, treats the pages only as images for cut-and-paste.
http://rydberg.biology.colostate.edu/~poff/Public/poffpubs/Sala2000(Science_Biodiver).pdf
Submitted 1999? Makes it positively ancient concerning computer modeling. First line after the abstract:
Global biodiversity is changing at an unprecedented rate (1,2) as a complex response to several human-induced changes in the global environment (3).
Near as I can tell, they did find Land Use to be a more important driver of biodiversity change than Climate, but they also listed Atmospheric CO2 as the last one of the five major drivers looked at.