Here’s the story/transcript from Spencer Michels, along with video that follows. I have not seen the piece that will be airing nationally yet, and I don’t know how much of me they use, but this just appeared on the PBS website.
One note: when they talk about “heat sync” they really meant to say heat sink. – Anthony
Conversation with global warming skeptic Anthony Watts – Climate Change Skeptic Says Global Warming Crowd Oversells Its Message
From PBS:
It was about 105 degrees in Chico, Calif., about three hours north of Sacramento, when we arrived at the offices of one of the nation’s most read climate skeptics. Actually, Anthony Watts calls himself a pragmatic skeptic when it comes to global warming. Watts is a former television meteorologist, who has been studying climate change for years. He doesn’t claim to be a scientist; he attended Purdue. He’s the author of a blog, Watts Up with That?, which he calls the world’s most viewed site on global warming. For a story I was working on for the PBS NewsHour, Watts was recommended by the Heartland Institute, a conservative, Chicago-based non-profit that is one of the leading groups that doubt that climate change — if it exists — is attributable to human activities.
Watts doesn’t come across as a true believer or a fanatic. For one thing, he has built a business that caters to television stations and individuals who want accurate weather information and need displays to show their viewers. He has developed an array of high tech devices to disseminate weather data and put it on screens. He has several TV stations around the country as clients.
But Watts’ reputation doesn’t come from his business — IntelliWeather — but rather from his outspoken views on climate change. He says he’s been gathering data for years, and he’s analyzed it along with some academics. He used to think somewhat along the same lines as Richard Muller, the University of California physicist who recently declared he was no longer a skeptic on climate change. Muller had analyzed two centuries worth of temperature data and decided his former skepticism was misplaced: yes, the earth has been warming, and the reason is that humans are producing carbon dioxide that is hastening the warming the planet.
Watts doesn’t buy Muller’s analysis, since, he believes, it is based on faulty data. The big problem, as Watts sees it, is that the stations where temperatures are gathered are too close to urban developments where heat is soaked up and distorts the readings. So it looks like the earth is warming though it may not be, he says.
Read a transcript below.
SPENCER MICHELS: So let’s start out with the basic idea that there’s this debate in this country over global warming. There’s some people who call it a complete hoax and there are some people who completely embrace it and so forth. Where do you stand in that spectrum?
ANTHONY WATTS: Well, I at one time was very much embracing the whole concept that we had a real problem, we had to do something about it. Back in 1988 James Hanson actually was the impetus for that for me in his presentation before Congress. But as I learned more and more about the issue, I discovered that maybe it’s not as bad as it’s made out to be. Some of it is hype, but there’s also some data that has not been explored and there’s been some investigations that need to be done that haven’t been done. And so now I’m in the camp of we have some global warming. No doubt about it, but it may not be as bad as we originally thought because there are other contributing factors.
SPENCER MICHELS: What’s the thing that bothers you the most about people who say there’s lots of global warming?
ANTHONY WATTS: They want to change policy. They want to apply taxes and these kinds of things may not be the actual solution for making a change to our society.
SPENCER MICHELS: What are you saying? That they’re biased essentially or motivated by something else? What?
ANTHONY WATTS: [T]here’s a term that was used to describe this. It’s called noble cause corruption. And actually I was a victim of that at one time, where you’re so fervent you’re in your belief that you have to do something. You’re saving the planet, you’re making a difference, you’re making things better that you’re so focused on this goal of fixing it or changing it that you kind of forget to look along the path to make sure that you haven’t missed some things.
I started looking into the idea that weather stations have been slowly encroached upon by urbanization and sighting issues over the last century. Meaning that our urbanization affected the temperature. And this was something that was very clear if you looked at the temperature records. But what wasn’t clear is how it affected the trend of temperatures. And so that’s been something that I’ve been investigating. Anyone who’s ever stood next to a building in the summertime at night, a brick building that’s been out in the summer sun, you stand next to it at night you can feel the heat radiating off of it. That’s a heat sync effect. And over the last 100 years our country, in fact the world, has changed. We’ve gone from having mostly a rural agrarian society to one that is more urban and city based and as a result the infrastructure has increased. We’ve got more freeways, you know more airports, we’ve got more buildings. Got more streets, all these things. Those are all heat syncs. During the day, solar insulation hits these objects and these surfaces and it stores heat in these objects. At night it releases that heat. Now if you are measuring temperature in a city that went from having uh maybe 10% of um, non-permeable surface to you know maybe 90% over 100 years, that’s a heat sync effect and that should show up in the record. The problem is, is that it’s been such a slow subtle change over the last 100 years. It’s not easy to detect and that’s been the challenge and that’s what I’ve been working on.
SPENCER MICHELS: Well in a way you’re saying that the records aren’t accurate, the data isn’t accurate.
ANTHONY WATTS: I’m saying that the data might be biased by these influences to a percentage. Yes, we have some global warming, it’s clear the temperature has gone up in the last 100 years. But what percentage of that is from carbon dioxide? And what percentage of that is from changes in the local and measurement environment?
SPENCER MICHELS: I want to go back to what we were talking about a little bit earlier, the idea that there is, there are people who are sort of invested in promoting the fact that there is global warming. There’s money involved and grants. Is that what you were saying? Maybe explain that.
ANTHONY WATTS: Well global warming had become essentially a business in its own right. There are NGOs, there are organizations, there are whole divisions of universities that have set up to study this, this factor, and so there’s lots of money involved and then so I think that there’s a tendency to want to keep that going and not really look at what might be different.
SPENCER MICHELS: Now Dr. Muller at the University of California Berkeley had similar concerns. Went back and looked at the data, took much more data than anybody else had, and concluded, well maybe there was some problems, but basically the conclusions were right. There is global warming and it comes from carbon dioxide which is meant, made by man. Do you buy that?
ANTHONY WATTS: Unfortunately he has not succeeded in terms of how science views, you know, a successful inquiry. His papers have not passed peer review. They had some problems. Some of the problems I identified, others have identified problems as well, for example, he goes much further back, back to about 1750 in terms of temperature. Well from my own studies, I know that temperature really wasn’t validated and homogenized where everything’s measured the same way until the weather bureau came into being about in 1890. Prior to that thermometers were hung in and exposed to the atmosphere all kinds of different ways. Some were hung under the shade of trees, some were on the north side of houses, some were out in the open in the sun, and so the temperature fluctuations that we got from those readings prior to 1890 was quite broad and I don’t believe that provided representative signal because the exposure’s all wrong. And Dr. Muller did not take any of that into account.
SPENCER MICHELS: His conclusion though is that basically global warming exists and that the scientists, no matter what the problems were, were pretty much right on.
ANTHONY WATTS: I agree with him that global warming exists. However, the ability to attribute the percentage of global warming to CO2 versus other man-made influences is still an open question.
SPENCER MICHELS: I want to ask you a little bit about attitudes towards this among the public. We talked to a public opinion specialist at Stanford who says there’s been 80 percent belief in global warming and man-made global warming consistently over at least the last 15 years in this country. Do you buy his theory?
ANTHONY WATTS: Well I look at a number of opinion polls. You’ll find a lot of them on my blog and that we’ve covered. And depending on how you ask the question we’ll sometimes give you a different answer. My view is, is that the view of global warming peaked about at the time that Al Gore came out with his movie, An Inconvenient Truth. But ever since then other factors have kicked in. Climate Gate for example. And it has become less of an issue, in fact you hardly see politicians talking about it anymore, or pushing it as an issue. What’s been happening now it’s just become a regulation issue. It’s gotten away from the political arena and into the bureaucratic regulation arena. And so people I believe based on the polls I’ve seen, aren’t quite as believing as they used to be. And I think the trend is downward.
SPENCER MICHELS: What do you think is the upshot of your attitude toward this? Should the Congress, should the American public say, you know nothing’s been proven yet. We should wait. Or should we go ahead with trying to solve what many people consider a really scary problem?
ANTHONY WATTS: Hmm…You mentioned a really scary problem and I think that’s part of the issues. Some people don’t respond well to scare tactics and there have been some scare tactics used by some of the proponents on the other side of the issue. And that’s where the overselling of it comes in. But this is a slow problem and it requires a slow solution I believe. For example, our infrastructure for electricity and so forth and highways didn’t happen in 5 years or 10 years. It happened over a century. We can’t just rip all that up or change it in the space off five, 10 or 15 years because it’ll be catastrophic to our economy. We need a slow change solution, one that is a solution that changes over time at about the same rate as climate change. More efficient technologies, new technologies, the use of more nuclear for example. There’s a nuclear type of a reactor that’s more safe called a, a liquid thorium reactor that China is jumping on right now. And we should be looking into things like that.
SPENCER MICHELS: Has this issue, I know you think it’s been oversold and scare tactics have been used. Do you think it’s become too politicized?
ANTHONY WATTS: Oh, it’s definitely become too politicized. In fact, some of the scientists who are the leaders in the issue have become for lack of a better word, political tools on the issue.
SPENCER MICHELS: One final question, do you consider yourself a skeptic when it comes to global warming?
ANTHONY WATTS: I would call myself a pragmatic skeptic. Yes, we need to make some changes on our energy technology but more efficient technology’s a good thing. For example, I have solar power on my own, you know, I have done energy reductions in my office and in my home to make things more efficient. So I think those are good things. Those are good messages that we should be embracing. But at the same time I think that some of the issues have been oversold, may have been oversold, because they allow for more regulation to take place. And so the people that like more regulation use global warming as a tool, as a means to an end. And so as a result, we might be getting more regulation and more taxes that really aren’t rooted in science, but more in politics.
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This article appears online here
Related: I’ll be on the PBS Newshour tonight
UPDATE: If it caused this guy to be mad at PBS, then I feel like I’ve accomplished something. 😉

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fair editing, biased reporting: ESPECIALLY the claim that you represent a mere 3% of the “scientific community.” Crap.
Par for the course for the hopelessly Lefty PBS/NPR mouthpiece for commy gubmint.
Great Job Anthony!! Thanks for all your efforts. 🙂
Good work Anthony.
It will be educational to see how this is repackaged and delivered.
Tried downloading in case it gets disappeared, no success. 🙁
DaveE.
Excellent Anthony! I hope the finished product fairly reflects your views.
It wouldn’t happen on the BBC. You would have been clipped out of context, followed by acerbic, dismissive comments about you by Sir Paul Nurse. “Huh, only went to Purdue…” 🙂
Watch out for the next dirty alarmist campaign: “Forecast the facts” attempting to threaten TV stations who use your services. Sigh.
Congrats again.
Good work, Anthony.
Send the following email to Michael Getler, the PBS ombudsman.
Sir,
Thank you for showing the “Global Warming” segment on todays show. Although the show was mostly trying to be unbiased, it did have the “normal” biases in footage and lack of in-depth research. For instance, Dr. Richard Muller never was a sceptic as can be readily determined here:http://www.populartechnology.net/2012/06/truth-about-richard-muller.html
I think you could have done yourself a favour and emphasized more strongly that the “Best” paper never did pass peer review. You left the viewer with the distinct impression that it did, in fact, pass peer review. Finally could you please explain why the water vapor coming from a smokestack had to be included? I am surprised that no polar bear showed up. Therefore, you end up with a “C”.
Anthony:
Excellent! Well done. Thankyou.
Richard
Good. You came across very much yourself.
Luther Wu says:
September 17, 2012 at 3:35 pm
“He doesn’t claim to be a scientist; he attended Purdue.”
Ok, I’ve finally stopped laughing.
REPLY: It’s a famous engineering school, go Boilermakers – Anthony
________________
Yes!
I was laughing at the phrasing.
To this day, the most brilliant engineer/physicist I’ve ever worked with was a graduate of Purdue and a trusted and valued mentor of mine.
He was also an ornery practical joker.
He doesn’t claim to be a scientist; he attended Purdue.
Well I guess that’s that then, the matter is settled. Nothing to hear here folks, move along quietly now…
/sarc…
Very well done, sir.
Polite, concise and very well balanced. I still wish people would get it through their heads though that CO2 is not the global bogey man. We need it, we’re all carbon based life forms that thrive in elevated levels. Trying to completely wipe it out would be wiping out life itself. Or maybe that’s what the warmists are secretly trying to do 😉
Excellent job. When PBS starts showing segments like this, you know the writing in on the wall. The rats are jumping off the ship.
Just watched the clip – when they get around to the economic issues, don’t forget the carbon markets! They alone will produce a raft of PhDs in the not too distant future.
Muller: “Between 20 years from now and 50 years from now, we’ll be experiencing weather that’s warmer than anything Homo Sapiens has ever experienced”.
Richard Muller, your last little bit of credibility just fell over.
Watched it all the way up to where the moron quoted the ” 97% ” idiotic statement. On the bright side Anthony came off looking normal. Still heavily biased but is the best Skeptics have been expressed in something close to main stream media.
Well done Anthony, other than that, just about what was to be expected, including the bogus 97% of scientists figure they love to throw out.
Was was the map with the entire world orange or red and the claim that California has warmed five degrees?
Also they brought in the 97% consensus number. Might be worth politely pointing out to Spencer Michels the details behind that.
Ahhh those were the days.
[My bold]
Many skeptics have trodden a similar path of just wanting to find out more.
Something in the paint?
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2007/07/14/the-stevenson-screen-paint-test/
Hugely impressed, worth it for the explaination of “Noble cause corruption” alone.
Cui Bono beat me to it, this kind of interview simply wouldn`t happen at the bbc and i can`t help but be impressed by the interviewer Spencer Michels.
I shall be watching far more pbs news here in the uk. Bye bye Monbiot, black et al, bye bye bbc…can i have my money back?
I just looked at the PBS News Hour website and Anthony’s interview is the only one of the fifteen there in the last six weeks there that was balanced. On the positive side Anthony’s interview is located at the top of the segment interviews and it was a very well done interview. All of the others are in the scary “climate-gone-wild” category of more destructive heat, hurricanes, droughts, agricultural disruption, the world will end unless we do something now (send your taxpayer checks to_____).
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/topic/climate-change/
Great interview Anthony. Nice to put a face, and voice to a name too!
You are so right to discuss thermometers being placed in heat sinks. As I have mentioned before, I can watch the temperature rise by 10 Celsius in a couple of hours in our Spanish backyard as the sun moves westward in the sky. The terracotta tiles will not allow bare feet to walk on them, they get far too hot. Back home in the North east of England, we rely on this phenonemen to have friends round and sit outside after a BBQ. The patio and south facing bricks of the house radiate the heat absorbed during the day to make the evening pleasant. Our first house had a north facing back garden and sitting out was a chilly experience! We very quickly wised up!
Its all about context. Wait for the full program – lets see how they set up this interview and how they characterize you and your responses in the rebuttal. Have seen to many media hatchet jobs on skeptics to trust that this will not be spun negatively.
Was Muller ever a skeptic?
Has the planet warmed? Yes.
Has extra co2 got something to do with it? Yes.
Has co2 caused most of the recent warming? I am still waiting for evidence and “we can’t think of anything else” is not evidence. Model runs is not evidence. Nothing unusual is going on when you look back over the Holocene. We have had quite a few warmer periods with lower co2.
But what about the Arctic? Show me that the gas co2 was the major cause of the following.
http://www.pnas.org/content/101/2/423.short
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1352231005002165
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0004698185901131
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.08.016
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007AGUFMPP11A0203F
http://geology.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/21/3/227
http://noconsensus.wordpress.com/2009/06/16/historic-variation-in-arctic-ice-tony-b/
WOW! The transcript starts off with propaganda, “It was about 105 degrees in Chico, Calif…”. Leading like this was not an accident but a deliberate attempt to color the story. Most PBS viewers do not have a clue as to the normal temperature in Chico.
was typing and it disappeared…here I go again.
I believe that some of Watt’s words can be used to make the warmists’ arguments. Watts explains that urban encroachment has resulted in temperature increase. 1:45 to 3:08That statement, without context, serves the anti-industrial sentiments that fuel the GW philosophy. There was a clear edit break at 3:08. Later Watts explains that thermometers are affected by surroundings. A warmist could simply thank Anthony for making the case that human population migration into previously “empty” countryside has made the temperature increase. We know what Watts meant, that temperature sets from specific stations are in error since they are being irradiated by IR from structures. Please re listen from a warmists’ perspective. The editors fragmented the context of Anthony’s explanation.
I added a comment BTW…screen capped for good measure.