Guest post by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
The truth is out. No amount of hand-wringing or numerical prestidigitation on the part of the usual suspects can any longer conceal from the world the fact that global warming has been statistically indistinguishable from zero for at least 18 years. The wretched models did not predict that.
When I told the December 2012 UN climate summit in Doha that there had been no warming for at least 16 years, the furious delegates howled me down.
The UN later edited the videotape to remove the howling. The delegates were furious not because I was speaking out of turn (they did not know that at the time) but because the truth was inconvenient.
The Guardian carried a sneer-story about my intervention. When a reader sent in a politely-worded comment to the effect that, objectively speaking, it was true that over the relevant period the least-squares linear-regression trend on the Hadley/CRU global surface temperature data was as near flat as makes no statistical difference, within two minutes The Guardian deleted the comment from its misleadingly-titled “Comment Is Free” website.
The determined reader resubmitted the comment. This time it was gone in 45 seconds, and – what is more – the stub indicating that he had commented disappeared as well. Just 28 years after George Orwell’s 1984, the hard Left are still dumping the inconvenient truth down the memory-hole.
The Met Office, as WattsUpWithThat revealed recently, has noticeably downshifted its lurid warming prediction for the rest of this decade.
When it predicted a “barbecue summer” (wrong: that summer was exceptionally cold and wet), and then a record warm winter (wrong: that was the second-coldest December in central England since records began in 1659); and then, this spring, a record dry summer for the UK (wrong again: 2012 proved to be the second-wettest on record: not for nothing is it now known as the “Wet Office”), it trumpeted its predictions of impending global-warming-driven climate disaster from the rooftops.
And the scientifically-illiterate politicians threw money at it.
If the Met Office’s new prediction is right, by 2017 the global warming rate will have been statistically indistinguishable from zero for two full decades.
So, did the bureaucrats call a giant press conference to announce the good news? Er, no. They put up their new prediction on an obscure corner of their website, on Christmas Day, and hoped that everyone would be too full of Christmas cheer to notice.
That raises – again – a question that Britain can no longer afford to ignore. Has the Wet Office committed serious fraud against taxpayers?
Let us examine just one disfiguring episode. When David Rose of the Mail on Sunday wrote two pieces last year, several months apart, saying there had been no global warming for 15 years, the Met Office responded to each article with Met Office in the Media blog postings that, between them, made the following assertions:
1. “… [F]or Mr. Rose to suggest that the latest global temperatures available show no warming in the last 15 years is entirely misleading.”
2. “What is absolutely clear is that we have continued to see a trend of warming …”.
3. “The linear trend from August 1997 (in the middle of an exceptionally strong El Niño) to August 2012 (coming at the tail end of a double-dip La Niña) is about 0.03 C°/decade …”.
4. “Each of the top ten warmest years have occurred in the last decade.”
5. “The models exhibit large variations in the rate of warming … so … such a period [15 years without warming] is not unexpected. It is not uncommon in the simulations for these periods to last up to 15 years, but longer periods are unlikely.”
Each of the assertions enumerated above was calculated to deceive. Each assertion is a lie. It is a lie told for financial advantage. M’lud, let me take each assertion in turn and briefly outline the evidence.
1. The assertion that Mr Rose was “entirely misleading” to say there had been no global warming for 15 years is not just entirely misleading: it is entirely false. The least-squares linear-regression trend on the global temperature data is statistically indistinguishable from zero for 18 years (HadCRUt4), or 19 years (HadCRUt3), or even 23 years (RSS).
2. What is absolutely clear is that the assertion that “it is absolutely clear that we have continued to see a trend of warming” is absolutely, clearly false. The assertion is timescale-dependent. The Met Office justified it by noting that each of the last n decades was warmer than the decade that preceded it. A simple heuristic will demonstrate the dishonesty of this argument. Take a two-decade period. In each of years 1-2, the world warms by 0.05 Cº. In each of years 3-20, the world does not warm at all. Sure, the second decade will be warmer than the first. But global warming will still have stopped for 18 years. By making comparisons on timescales longer than the 18 years without warming, what we are seeing is long-past warming, not a continuing “trend of warming”.
3. In August 1997 global temperatures were not “in the middle of an exceptionally strong El Niño”: they were in transition, about halfway between La Niña (cooler than normal) and El Niño (warmer than normal) conditions. Likewise, temperatures in August 2012 were not “at the tail-end of a double-dip La Niña”: they were plainly again in transition between the La Niña of 2011/12 and the El Niño due in a year or two.
4. The Met Office’s assertion that each of the past ten years has been in the top ten is dataset-dependent. On most datasets, 1998 was the warmest year on the global instrumental record (which only began 160-odd years ago). Therefore, on these datasets, it cannot have been possible for each of the last ten years to be among the warmest on record.
5. Finally, the Met Office shoots itself in the foot by implicitly admitting that there has been a 15-year period without warming, saying that such a period is “not unexpected”. Yet that period was not “expected” by any of the dozens of lavishly-funded computer models that have been enriching their operators – including the Met Office, whose new computer cost gazillions and has the carbon footprint of a small town every time it is switched on. The NOAA’s State of the Climate report in 2008 said this: “Near-zero and even negative trends are common for intervals of a decade or less in the simulations, due to the model’s internal climate variability. The simulations rule out (at the 95% level) zero trends for intervals of 15 years or more, suggesting that an observed absence of warming of this duration is needed to create a discrepancy with the expected present-day warming rate.”
In short, the Met Office lied repeatedly to do down a journalist who had uttered the inconvenient truth that there had been no global warming for at least 15 years.
The Fraud Act 2000 defines the serious imprisonable offence of fraud as dishonestly making an express or implied representation that the offender knows is or may be untrue or misleading, intending to gain money or other property (here, grant funding) or to cause loss or risk of loss to another ($30 billion a year of unnecessary “green” taxes, fees and charges to the British public).
So I reported the Met Office to the Serious Fraud Office, which has a specific remit to deal with frauds that involve large sums (here, tens of billions) and organized crime (here, that appreciable fraction of the academic and scientific community that has been telling similar porkies.
Of course, there is one law for us (do the crime, do the time) and quite another for Them (do the crime, make a mint, have a Nobel Peace Prize). The Serious Fraud Office is not interested in investigating Serious Fraud – not if it might involve a publicly-funded body making up stuff to please the corrupt politicians who pay not only its own salaries but also those of the Serious Fraud Office.
The Met Office’s fraud will not be investigated. “Why not try your local police?” said the Serious Fraud Office.
So here is my question. In the specific instance I have sketched out above, where a journalist was publicly named and wrongly shamed by a powerful taxpayer-funded official body telling lies, has that body committed a serious fraud that forms part of a pattern of connected frauds right across the governing class worldwide?
Or am I going too far in calling a fraud a fraud?
joeldshore:
I am replying to your nonsensical post addressed to me at January 25, 2013 at 7:23 pm.
You ask me
Please be assured that if I desired advice on logic then you would be the very last person on Earth whom I would ask to provide it especially if my life depended on it.
You say
That is outrageous even by your standards of evasion!
Perhaps you would care to wriggle a bit more by explaining why YOU – and nobody else – has been pressing the issue of ENSO correction?
In reality, the reason YOU – and nobody else – has been pressing the issue of ENSO correction is because everybody – including YOU – knows that is precisely the “correct criterion”.
An honourable man would admit that the recent lack of discernible warming (at 95% confidence) falsifies the models according to NOAA correction criterion.
Richard
Graham says:
How will the number of rolls it takes to get that confidence interval, or whether you can even get the exact numbers I quoted given the discreteness of this, make a difference to the argument? Does your whole argument for how one uses statistics to interpret data hinge on this or are you just creating objections to avoid dealing with the fundamental problem with the way you want to interpret statistical results?
My point is that they put the parenthetical expression after what it modified. If they had put it where you suggest then, no, I don’t for a second believe your claim that Monckton and Richard would not be misinterpreting it. I am quite sure that they would still be arguing that it modifies “zero trends” and they would have an even stronger argument since they would say, “It can’t possibly modify ‘simulations’ since that doesn’t even make sense and if it modifies ‘rule out’ then they should have put it after ‘rule out’, not before, so it must modify ‘zero trend’.”
What I did is explained to you in response why these arguments were indeed valid objections.
Well, putting it after “zero trends” would be much better. Would it be totally unambiguous? I suppose not, but it could be made so by choosing another construction like, “The simulations rule out trends that are statistically-indistinguishable from zero at the 95% confidence level for 15 years or more.” [Of course, this would still beg the question of what they mean by “rule out”…but that is an inherent problem with your interpretation. You guys have never been able to explain how your interpretation even makes sense.]
My challenge was for you to come up with a phrasing that better conveyed my interpretation of what they said. You came up with one that conveyed it less clearly by creating the “straw man” argument that my interpretation was that the parenthetical phrase modifies “simulations” when I have actually made it very clear that it modifies “rule out”, you know, the words directly proceeding it. Hence, my statement that you created a straw man.
Graham W says:
I represented your position as: “Graham: But, the RSS data shows a very slightly negative trend [over a carefully cherrypicked] interval of about 16 years, so even under this interpretation, it would be outside what the models predict.”
Note the statement “so even under this interpretation”. So, therefore, your claim that i misrepresented you is completely without foundation. However, I will note that Richard S Courtney completely misrepresented me saying:
He made this statement even though he has ample reason to know that I don’t agree with his unsupported interpretation of what the NOAA folks meant by their statement. So, again, you seem to be faulting me for things I didn’t do and then not even acknowledging the fact that Richard is guilty of these very things.
joeldshore:
In your post to Graham W at January 26, 2013 at 6:25 am you assert
Bolllocks!
The only ‘straw men’ have been presented by you.
In this debate the first of your erroneous assertions was that that “(95% confidence)” applies to “rule out”.
I, Graham W and others (e.g. Australis at January 14, 2013 at 5:03 pm) each repeatedly refuted your ludicrous assertion that “(95% confidence)” applies to “rule out”. So, you launched into a series of similarly bizarre and illogical assertions which have each been refuted in turn.
As example of a refutation of your first daft assertion I cite my post at where I wrote
“Rule out” means zero in 20 times. 95% confidence means one in 20 times.
There is no reason in reality – or that you have suggested – why NOAA would have said “rule out (at 95% confidence) zero trends” if they intended to say “zero trends only occur in 5% of simulations”.
They wrote and intended that the 95% confidence applies to the “zero trends”. That is the ONLY reading of NOAA’s words which makes sense. This has been explained to you by several people in several ways but – having had all your later assertions refuted – you have returned to the first of your patently erroneous assertions.
You have now returned to your first demolished – and daft – assertion because you are wrong, you know you are wrong, and you are desperately trying to pretend you are not wrong.
Richard
Joel: Read my post at 25th January 5:50 am enough times that you understand it. I have shown the result of putting the bracketed phrase everywhere in every grammatically correct place in the sentence. Including after “zero trends”. There is no other place to put the bracketed phrase to apply to zero trends and only zero trends other than where they put it. You need to locate the part of your mind that is refusing to accept that the sentence means what it says it means and destroy it. Destroy this mental block which is preventing you from rational thinking. There is nothing else left to say to you since everything else you are now arguing is pure nonsense.
joeldshore:
re your post to me at January 26, 2013 at 7:02 am
Please see my post addressed to you at January 26, 2013 at 7:42 am. It says all that needs to be said in response to your fallacious assertion that I have “misrepresented” you.
Admit you were and are wrong so we can move on.
Richard
Graham: There is nothing else left to say to you other than that I gave you a much better way that they could have said what you believe they were trying to say here: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/01/14/has-the-met-office-committed-fraud/#comment-1209452 I’ll repeat it again for your benefit: “The simulations rule out trends that are statistically-indistinguishable from zero at the 95% confidence level for 15 years or more.”
You, on the other hand, failed to provide a better way that they could have made it clear that “at the 95% level” applies to “rule out” and instead completely invented the notion that I was claiming it should apply to “simulations”.
Richard says:
There is no reason other than this is a standard way of discussing such issues in scientific literature even in other fields such as high-energy physics: http://blog.vixra.org/2011/12/13/the-higgs-boson-live-from-cern/
Since it is impossible to rule out something statistical with 100% confidence, saying “rule out” without a confidence level is nonsense (or, at least, it is ambiguous). I can’t say that my model of flipping a fair coin rules out the possibility that when I do 10 flips in a row they all come up heads or all come up tails; All that I can say is that my model rules it out at a 99.8% confidence level. I can’t even say that it rules out the possibility of 100 flips in a row coming up all heads or all tails. All that I can say is that my model rules it out at a 99.9999999999999999999999999998% confidence level. (I think I got the right number of 9’s there! The point is the probability of such an occurrence is less than 2×10^-30.)
Joel, I would just like to say that the point of existence is not to be “right” or “wrong”. Throughout this conversation I have made some absurd claims such as “the skeptical science trend calculator is brain-washing people”. This is a patently ridiculous claim now I look back on it. I was totally wrong. Do I regret that? Not one bit. We live and learn. Perhaps my interpretation of statistical analysis is indeed nonsensical. Perhaps you can provide the proof I requested or perhaps proof from the temperature records of why I’m wrong and if so, I’ll happily admit I was wrong about that element of this discussion. It wouldn’t surprise me.
No-one will look down on you for admitting a mistake it is only when you continuously avoid this at all costs that you incur ridicule from others. I truly wish you peace of mind and happiness. That’s all I have to say.
richardscourtney says: @ur momisugly January 26, 2013 at 7:42 am
…They wrote and intended that the 95% confidence applies to the “zero trends”. That is the ONLY reading of NOAA’s words which makes sense. This has been explained to you by several people in several ways but – having had all your later assertions refuted – you have returned to the first of your patently erroneous assertions….
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Joel is just another warmist ( Donald L. Klipstein, Philip Shehan, Nick Stokes, Eric Grimsrud, Chris Schoneveld, barry… link ) having a go at trying to rewrite that sentence. They really hate getting held to that statement do they not?
Just more Classic Groupthink Behavior [as] Exposed in Leaked CRU Emails
joeldshore:
I am replying to your nonsense at January 26, 2013 at 8:19 am.
You have managed to delude yourself but nobody else. If you are happy in your delusion then there is nothing I can offer you to help you to see reality.
Indeed, if you read your own post you will see that you are stating your delusion when you write
“Rule out” is an absolute certainty. It has NO “ambiguity”: it expresses 100% confidence.
No rational person would ascribe any confidence less than 100% to “rule out”, and you have given no reason to suppose NOAA was being irrational when they said “The simulations rule out”.
But a trend is a statistical construct which only has meaning when given a confidence. The statement “(at 95% confidence) zero trends” has meaning. No rational person would assert a statistical construct such as a trend without stating the confidence of the construct, and you have given no reason to suppose NOAA was being irrational when they said “(at 95% confidence) zero trends”.
You are expressing a delusion when you assert your certainty that NOAA was being irrational so meant other than they wrote.
Clearly, your delusion is important to you. But reality is important to me.
And reality has falsified the climate models according to the NOAA falsification criterion:
your delusion does not alter that or affect that in any way.
I will not waste further time on your delusion.
Richard
Joel you are infuriating! Sorry, but you are. Every time I feel like I’ve said my bit, you post something which is so simple to correct I feel as though I’m utterly compelled to reply to correct you. I just want to get on with my life. You say you have found a better way to state it, and then show me your example that still wouldn’t clarify that they were talking about the zero trends or the simulations. Then you continuously claim that the bracketed phrase modifies only “rule out” even though my example of how they should have written it to express your point of view DOES still modify “rule out” IN RELATION TO the simulations. That’s the only way you could read my example. So it’s not a straw man it says exactly what you would want it to say, the only problem is THEY DIDN’T WRITE THAT. They wrote it in the only way which could apply the 95% level to zero trends and nothing else. The phrase “rule out” then implies that the models are flawed since this 15 year zero trend at the 95% level was absolutely not on the cards from their projections, WITH CERTAINTY. This you can also infer from the previous sentences as well where they discuss how the models DO project zero or near-zero trends happening for periods of ten years. So it follows that they are saying “it can be this, but it DEFINITELY can’t be this, unless our models are wrong”.
Pleeeeeeeeeeeeease just accept that you are wrong. Still wish you health and happiness etc but just for God sake actually accept an error that you’ve made!
Graham W:
re your post at January 26, 2013 at 10:28 am
Welcome to the wild and wacky world of Joel Shore.
You are the latest in a long line of people who have been drawn in to his strange world, and – as you have discovered – his world is like a lobster pot: it is easy to get in but hard to get out. This is why I wrote what I did in my post to you at January 21, 2013 at 10:14 am.
My post at January 26, 2013 at 9:59 am is my final reply to him. Clearly, he will have the last word because history shows he will go on and on until he does. But he has now made such a complete fool of himself in this thread that onlookers will only gasp in wonder that anybody could choose to be so deliberately stupid in public.
Give him his last word or this thread will ramble on for ever.
Richard
I should have listened to Richard! Instead I carried on arguing. Why, why, why was I so stupid? The horror…the horror.
Graham W:
Take care…I wish you well. I have bookmarked this page so any of my scientific colleagues who ask if the “AGW skeptic” movements have serious arguments can see the level of discussion that some of the leaders of this movement like Monckton and Courtney engage in.
Cheers,
Joel
joeldshore:
At January 28, 2013 at 4:45 am you say
Thankyou. I am flattered, and I would welcome as much publicity as possible about the fact that the NOAA climate model falsification criterion has falsified the models.
My gratitude for your generosity is especially profound when showing this discussion to your “scientific colleagues” would reveal your idiocy in the debate.
Sincere thanks. And I look forward to your publicising this discussion.
Richard
Let me make an analogy. Suppose I claim “95% of the time you would have made money in the stock market if you invest for a 15 year period. So 5% of the time you will come out behind (or break even, but the odds of that are very slim and can be pretty much ignored).”
To test this, you would look at actual 15 year periods and look how often you come out ahead vs how often you come out behind. You can’t look at a 15 year period and say “the stock market was up and down a lot in the last 15 years, and I came awfully close to losing money, so your claim is wrong.”
There are two very different claims that could be made about 15 year temperature trends.
A) that the trend actually was zero (or smaller) for a 15 year period.
B) that the trend is not greater than zero for a 15 year period based on a test of statistical significance.
The two are very different. It would be easy to create a set of data where (A) was never true and (B) is always true.
My analogy above about the stock markets is an example Version (A). I read the original claim as meaning Version (A) as well (in agreement with Joel), but it would be worthwhile actually *ASKING* the authors of the report which claim they were making. Simply repeating an assertion that one or the other is true does not further anyone’s understanding.
Tim Folkerts:
re your post at January 28, 2013 at 11:08 am.
I strongly suggest that you read the discussion in this thread.
NOAA wrote plain English and not irrational gobbledygook as Joel claims.
The meaning is clear. It is as Gail Combs states at January 17, 2013 at 3:20 am and any other interpretation turns the NOAA statement into illogical nonsense.
Richard
Richard, I prefer going to the original sources. So for example …
CLAIM: 1. “… [F]or Mr. Rose to suggest that the latest global temperatures available show no warming in the last 15 years is entirely misleading.”
MONCKTON: “1. The assertion that Mr Rose was “entirely misleading” to say there had been no global warming for 15 years is not just entirely misleading: it is entirely false. ”
No. The trend may not have been statistically significant, but that is very different from saying it is false. Again, using the stock market analogy, if you come out ahead, you made money. No one says “oh, you could have done that well gambling on the flip of a coin, so you didn’t make any money, even though your account is 0.1% up in value.”
There has been no 15 year slope in the HADCRUT4 annual data that has been downward since the period ending 1977.
There has been no 15 year difference in the HADCRUT4 annual data that has been downward since the period ending 1985.
The year ending 2012 is the only year in the past decade where the 15 year slope has not been statistically significantly from 0.
CONCLUSION: This is an apples-to-oranges comparison. BOTH claims are correct for what they actually claim.
CLAIM: “2. “What is absolutely clear is that we have continued to see a trend of warming …”.”
MONCKTON: “2. What is absolutely clear is that the assertion that “it is absolutely clear that we have continued to see a trend of warming” is absolutely, clearly false. The assertion is timescale-dependent.”
It is almost humorous that he calls this statement “absolutely false”, yet then says that the claim is “timescale-dependent” — in other words, its correctness is not absolute, but depends on the time scale.
CONCLUSION: BOTH are correct on the timescales they discuss.
CLAIM: 3. “The linear trend from August 1997 (in the middle of an exceptionally strong El Niño) to August 2012 (coming at the tail end of a double-dip La Niña) is about 0.03 C°/decade …”.
MONCKTON: 3. In August 1997 global temperatures were not “in the middle of an exceptionally strong El Niño”: they were in transition, about halfway between La Niña (cooler than normal) and El Niño (warmer than normal) conditions.
The data shows (http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/catalog/climind/nino334_data.html) …
A brief La Nina ( +0.5C) started Apr 1997 and lasted ~ 14 months.
SUMMARY. The objection seems to be that “5” is not the middle of “14”. Well … I suppose that is true, but
* August is only 2 months from the middle of the El Nino.
* August is 5 months from the “transition”.
So Monckton’s statement is “farther from the truth” than the original.
*******************************************************
That’s all I have time for on this atm. Overall, Monckton seems to be changing the target, acting as if his new target was the target all along.
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As for the “95% confidence” statement, a perusal of the original statement in context still have not made it 100% clear to me exactly what they were claiming.
tjfolkerts:
re your post at January 28, 2013 at 6:20 pm.
You are attempting to pick up the baton of lunacy from Joel Shore.
All your so-called arguments have been refuted in this thread where Joel Shore has tried to use them to misrepresent the clear and unambiguous statement by NOAA.
Read the thread because I have no intention of doing your homework for you.
The facts are clear.
According to the falsification criterion set by NOAA in 2008, the climate models are falsified by the recent period of 16+ years of (at 95% confidence) zero global temperature trend. This is because NOAA says the climate models simulations often show periods of 10 years when global temperature trends are zero or negative but the simulations rule out near zero trends in global temperature for periods of 15 years. What the models “rule out” nature has done.
The climate models are falsified: this contradicts your superstitious belief in AGW, and you need to come to terms with it.
Richard