Nuccitelli gets a bruising by the factual hand of Monckton

Cook “the books” is wrong to slam Roy Spencerjosh_scooter_nuccitelli

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Anyone who has met Roy Spencer knows him to be a careful, thoughtful, unpolemical scientist of formidable skill and knowledge. With John Christy he presents the monthly real-world data from the microwave sounding unit satellites that provide the least inaccurate global temperature record we have.

The satellites reveal the inconvenient truth that there has been no global warming for approaching two decades.

However, John Cook, the cartoonist turned warming fanatic who runs the misleadingly-named Skeptical Science website, has just posted a piece by his still more fanatical sidekick, Dana Nuccitelli, attacking Roy Spencer’s recent verbatim interview with the Catholic Online website.

Cook “the books” has a favorite small-boy yah-boo tactic. He condemns anyone who raises any question about “global warming”, however sensible, as perpetrating or perpetuating what he calls “climate myths”.

Sure enough, his latest characteristically malevolent hatchet-job is entitled “Roy Spencer’s Catholic Online Climate Myths”. It appears next to a sidebar headed “Most-Used Climate Myths”. You will also find plenty of other alleged “Myths” at Cook The Books’ website, including Monckton Myths.

Nuccitelli begins by condemning Roy Spencer for saying, “No one knows whether it is currently warming, because we only see warming in the rear-view mirror, after it has occurred.” This truism is characteristic of Roy, who gently nudges the language of climate science in the direction of greater rigor. One cannot measure that it is warming, only that it has warmed. 

Yet Nuccitelli, in a fine illustration of that blind faith that TH Huxley denounced in 1860 as “the one unpardonable sin”, asserts that “We absolutely do know that the planet is currently warming”.

He references this assertion by a link to another page of Skeptical Science that provides multiple lines of evidence for the proposition, agreed – as St. Vincent of Lerins used to put it, fere omnibus (by very nearly everyone) that the planet has been warming. But not that it currently is warming.

Nuccitelli adds, “We know that the planet will continue to warm as long as we continue to increase the greenhouse effect.” Again, he would have benefited from a more careful use of language. We know that adding CO2 or other greenhouse gases to the air will cause warming, but that cannot prevent natural factors from causing a countervailing cooling from time to time, which is why we have had the 17-year “pause” in global warming that Railroad Engineer Pachauri has now admitted. Spencer 1, Nuccitelli 0.

Next, Nuccitelli attacks Roy Spencer for having said it was entirely possible that summer sea-ice melt was no worse now than it had been in the 1920s and 1930s, when explorers had reported unprecedented warming and loss of sea ice in the Arctic.

Yet he fails to admit that the reports – for instance, an often-quoted report from 1922 about the unprecedented Arctic warming and loss of sea ice observed by meteorologists – support what Roy Spencer says and are inconsistent with the largely speculative results in the various papers suggesting sea ice extent scarcely changed until it began to decline in the 1970s.

He also fails to explain how the global warming from 1860-1880 and again from 1910-1940, which occurred at exactly the same rate as the warming from 1976-2001, did not cause any loss of sea-ice extent. Spencer 2, Nuccitelli 0.

Nuccitelli then turns to the embarrassing increase in Antarctic sea-ice extent mentioned by Roy Spencer, and produces various papers saying more sea-ice in Antarctica is what we should expect from global warming.

However, he very carefully fails to mention that Antarctica has been cooling during the 33 years of satellite observation. Warming during the satellite era has not been global, suggesting, as recent papers have confirmed, that a naturally-occurring change in advection of warmth from the tropics to the Arctic – but not to the Antarctic – is the chief cause of melting Arctic sea ice. Spencer 3, Nuccitelli 0.

Onward to superstorms. Roy Spencer had said there has been no increase in superstorms, which happen every year. Sandy was unusual only in that it happened over a built-up area. Nuccitelli cites Kerry Emanuel’s paper of 2005 showing an increase in hurricane strength over previous decades.

He is culpably silent on Dr. Ryan Maue’s Accumulated Cyclone Energy index, which shows that since 2005 the combined frequency, intensity, and duration of all tropical cyclones, hurricanes, and typhoons worldwide, expressed as a 24-month running sum, shows the least activity in the entire satellite record. Spencer 4, Nuccitelli 0.

Nuccitelli moves on to condemn Roy Spencer for saying, “The consensus is only that humans are contributing to warming,” and to announce (blind faith again) that “Humans are Causing Global Warming”.

He cites various papers asserting that human greenhouse-gas emissions are the dominant cause of the global warming over the past 50-100 years. However, he fails to take account of the startling absence of correlation between the rate of increase in CO2 concentration and the rate of increase in temperature.

Like many true-believers, he is insufficiently trained in logic to know that absence of correlation between two datasets necessarily indicates absence of causation between them. The sharp fluctuations in global temperature in phase with the 60-year cycles of the ocean oscillations are not correlated with the monotonic changes in CO2 concentration.

Since the rate of warming from 1976-2001, to which we could in theory have contributed, is statistically indistinguishable in the rates from 1860-1880 and from 1910-1940, to which we could not, Roy Spencer was right to say we cannot easily disentangle the anthropogenic from the natural contributions to warming. Spencer 5, Nuccitelli 0.

On to the biggest scare of them all: sea-level rise. Here, Roy Spencer concedes that “Sea levels have indeed increased, which probably is a sign of warming.” However, he goes on to say, “It is difficult to attribute the current rate of rise to humans when we don’t know how much of the rise is natural.”

Nuccitelli’s answer to this unexceptionable and temperately-expressed statement is that sea level rises chiefly through thermal expansion and melting land ice, so it is all our fault. However, it ought to have been obvious even to Nuccitelli thermal expansion and land-ice melt happen whether Man or nature is the cause.

Also, as Peltier (2009) points out, the GRACE gravitational-anomaly record indicates that sea level has actually fallen in recent years. The raw data from the Envisat satellite from 2004-2012 show sea level rising at a rate equivalent to an unalarming 3.2 cm/century:

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Professor Niklas Mörner, who was told in 2004 by a sea-level specialist at the University of Colorado that the data from the TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason satellites were tilted to create an artificial impression of a rate of sea-level rise that is not in fact occurring, says his central estimate is that sea level will rise this century by 5 ± 15cm, or 2 ± 6 inches. Spencer 6, Nuccitelli 0.

Next, Nuccitelli takes Roy Spencer to task for daring to suggest that there has been very little research into the natural causes of climate change. Anyone who has seen the video of the Fellows of the Royal Society baying and howling with rent-seeking fury when Dr. Henrik Svensmark gently explained his cosmic-ray displacement theory of cloud nucleation to them will swiftly realize that an overwhelming and undue emphasis in climate research and funding over recent decades has been on anthropogenic and not natural influences. Spencer 7, Nuccitelli 0.

Nuccitelli blows it altogether when he says Roy Spencer’s closing remark that “The warming has been only 50% of what the consensus of climate models says it should be” is “just flat-out ridiculously wrong.”

Well, here are the facts. The IPCC said in 1990, at page xii, “Under the IPCC business-as-usual (Scenario A) emissions of greenhouse gases, the average rate of increase of global mean temperature during the next century is estimated to be about 0.2-0.5 Cº/decade.” The observed warming rate from 1990-2013, according to HadCRUt, is about half that.

Nuccitelli may like to look at the second-order draft of the IPCC’s 2013 Fifth Assessment Report, to which I have added the trend-line through the real-world observed temperature change since 1990:

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All four of the IPCC’s Assessment Reports have flagrantly 0ver-predicted the rate of global warming that should have occurred by now. On this central question, the “consensus” has been wrong not once, not twice, not thrice, but four times out of four, and is about to be wrong a fifth time. Nuccitelli’s blind faith in the IPCC’s capacity to predict temperature change seems misplaced. Spencer 8, Nuccitelli 0.

Nuccitelli ends by saying, “Overall, Spencer made very few factually correct statements in this interview.” On any other subject but this, where true-believers such as Nuccitelli now routinely get away with outrageous falsehoods that smear the reputations of any scientists bold enough to raise even the mildest questions about the New Religion, that remark would have led to a libel suit.

Here is why. Below I have enumerated the 60 factually correct statements in Roy Spencer’s interview. There are no factually incorrect statements.

1: Roy Spencer has a PhD in meteorology. 2: Roy Spencer has been doing climate research for over 20 years. 3: His research has been mostly under contract to NASA, NOAA, and DOE. 4: He has testified in Congress several times on the general subject of climate change. 5: He has published two popular books on the global warming issue.

6: He has have an amateur interest in basic economics. 7: He has self-published a small book which is now used in a college economics cours. 8: His research has always been supported 100% by the US Government. 9: No one knows whether it is currently warming. 10: Warming seems to have stopped about 15 years ago.

11: There is some evidence that the deep ocean has continued to warm by hundredths of a degree. 12: The world has warmed for 50-100 years. 13: We started satellite monitoring of sea ice in 1979 after an extended cold period in the Arctic. 14: It is possible that sea-ice melt now is no worse than in the 1920s-1930s. 15: Humans could not have been responsible for warming in the 1920s-1930s.

16: We cannot know the extent to which we are responsible for Arctic sea-ice melt. 17: Since 1979, Antarctic sea ice has increased. 18: There has been no increase in superstorms or tornadoes. 19: Sandy-class storms occur every year. 20: Sandy-class storms do not usually hit high-density urban areas. 20: Sea levels have increased.

21: The increase in sea level is probably an indication of warming. 22: Sea levels were rising well before 1900. 23: We could not have been to blame for sea level rise before 1900. 24: The rate of sea-level rise is slow. 25: It is difficult to attribute the current rate of rise to us.

26: We do not know how much of the sea-level rise is natural. 27: It is possible that the ocean is absorbing more heat than was expected. 28: The oceans are big enough to absorb all of the warming caused by increasing CO2 with a temperature rise of just 0.1 Cº. 29: We have no means of knowing whether the oceans are absorbing all of the warming caused by us. 30: We have no means of knowing whether the oceans will continue to absorb all of the warming caused by us.

31: The CO2-induced reduction in the Earth’s capacity to cool to space has fallen by only 1%. 32: The CO2-induced reduction in the Earth’s cooling capacity is a very weak forcing of the climate system. 33: The deep ocean has warmed by only 0.2% since the 1950s. 34: The warming of the deep ocean has been very small. 35: Current solar and wind technologies are expensive.

36: Wind and solar are unreliable. 37: They can only replace a small fraction of our energy need. 38: Today’s economy runs on inexpensive energy. 39: To grow the economy we will need to use fossil fuels to generate extra wealth. 40: We will need to burn more fossil fuels to find replacements for fossil fuels.

41: The consensus is only that humans are contributing to warming. 42: Roy Spencer agrees with that consensus. 43: Only a small number of scientists know enough about climate sensitivity to have an informed opinion. 44: Only a few of us work on the question how sensitive is the climate system. 45: Only a few of us know how much uncertainty there is.

46: Most climate researchers simply assume recent warming is manmade. 47: Human causation is only one possible explanation out of several. 48: It is theoretically possible that Al Gore is correct. 49: The subject of global warming has become politicized. 50: There are financial winners and losers from policy outcomes.

51: Climate science has become hopelessly corrupted. 52: Roy Spencer and others have told Congress we need a “red team”, where a small fraction of climate research funding is put towards studying natural causes of climate change. 53: There is very little research into natural causes of climate change.

54: Roy Spencer has been wrong many times. 55: In research, we are usually wrong with our initial opinions. 55: It is much easier to be wrong than right.

56: There are many potential explanations for what we see in nature. 57: Roy Spencer usually determines in a matter of days, weeks, or months that he was wrong. 58: He has seen nothing to change my view that we have no way of knowing how much of our current warmth is human-caused. 59: Even if it is 100% human-caused, the warming has been only 50% of what the consensus of climate models says it should be. 60: If the consensus changes to reflect real-world outcomes, we shall have twice as much time to solve the climate problem. Spencer 60, Nuccitelli 0

Above all, there is a striking contrast between the careful, measured, balanced tone of Roy Spencer’s facts, which I have summarized above, and the intemperate, hate-filled Gish gallop of cherry-picked citations, half-truths, and outright falsehoods of which Nuccitelli is – yet again – guilty.

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May 1, 2013 9:15 pm

Only 60-0?
It should be 100% Spencer to 0% Nuccitelli
I gave up on him and Cook a while ago because they are not going to be honest or rational.

William Martin in NZ
May 1, 2013 9:24 pm

Sir,I had the very great privilege to meet and talk to you in New Plymouth NZ on your recent tour.A really fantastic night.Thank you.

Janice Moore
May 1, 2013 9:50 pm

Excellent defense!
And no Warrior for Truth is more deserving than Dr. Spencer of the championing of as stellar an advocate as you are, Christopher Monckton.
Roy Spencer shines out so brilliantly in the universe of scientists, that it’s like opening the curtains and letting in the mid-day sun into a room lit only by a 40 watt bulb when one compares him with Nuccatelli the Dim.
*********************
Nice cartoon, Josh! “RRRRrrrrrrrrrrRRRRRRRRmmmm,… put, put, putta,…RRRRRrrrrrrrrrRRRmm!
Nuccatelli pretending his cycle is real.

jorgekafkazar
May 1, 2013 9:50 pm

I believe the reference is to Nils-Axel Mörner.

Admin
May 1, 2013 9:53 pm

I think Dana got knocked off his scooter

MJ
May 1, 2013 10:04 pm

A 60-0 score demands that we bring out the second, third, fourth, fifth string teams, water boys, cheerleaders, and the nuns onto the field so that Cook’s team can get a point. The problem is, I don’t think they will even be able to since the best they put out there probably are in locker room and done for the game. Oh well.

stan stendera
May 1, 2013 10:11 pm

And you Anthony object to me calling a spade a spade!

May 1, 2013 10:14 pm

Take the bones out of that then Nutty.

May 1, 2013 10:20 pm

“Guess Who Holds Patent for Carbon-trading Plan”….the title of a World Net Daily article by Dr Jerome Corsi, June 18, 2010. None other than “former Clinton and Obama budget adviser Franklin Raines….developed as CEO of the government sponsored mortgage giant Fannie Mae….an Enron-like accounting scandal enabled Rains to earn $90 million in his five years as Fannie Mae CEO, from 1999 to 2004”.
We now know that the derivative mortgage fraud, with Fannie Mae direction, cost taxpayers trillions in TARP 1 & 2, and that these were structured bankruptcies, just like the half trillion S & L crisis and the Resolution Trust Corporation bailout of the eighties. This same reckless speculation has continued in every market available. When the Wall Street traders (traitors) ran out of legitimate commodities to sell, they hit on the idea to create NEW commodities. Carbon climate forcing was created to FORCE Carbon commodity markets. While two-wheeled Nutty might not yet see the big picture, other left wing echo chambers have caught on to the monopoly money scam. This weeks Rolling Stone article, “Everything is Rigged, the Biggest Financial Scandal Yet” projects the total derivative market debt at 780 trillion dollars.
Seventeen years of NON warming is enough to shelve any further discussion of rising CO2 relationship to temperature. We should suspend ALL FUNDING of any Carbon forcing research. Since the start of the Holocene, polar ice caps that were miles thick have melted, oceans have risen 440 feet and Earth has warmed 27F….all with no human or CO2 related causes. There’s a chance that the $100 billion wasted on Carbon endangerment findings might have produced some useful benefit if spent on cold fusion, Thorium reactors, super conductors, or even better water treatment methods. It is obvious that feeding the “Wall Street Vampire Squid” has not benefitted humanity. Nice that Nutty wears a helmet on his scooter, but really….if he can’t think past the AGW scam….what can that helmet protect ?

pat
May 1, 2013 10:38 pm

given rear-view-mirror is in the post, this might fit here!
1 May: Yahoo Finance: Electric car maker Coda files for bankruptcy
Green car startup Coda Holdings Inc filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday after selling just 100 of its all-electric sedans, another example of battery-powered vehicles’ failure to break into the mass market…
Just three years ago Coda was one of an emerging crop of California startups including Fisker Automotive and Tesla Motors Inc (TSLA.O) seeking to build emission-free electric cars to appeal to mass-market consumers.
Investors poured money into the sector, and Coda raised $300 million in equity from backers including Aeris Capital, Limited Brands Chief Executive Les Wexner, and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. The company, however, in 2012 withdrew its request for $334 million in federal loans like the ones Fisker and Tesla received.
As the allure of EVs faded, Coda struggled to secure new private funding. Last year, Coda sought to raise $150 million but clinched just $22 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission…
Tesla has put thousands of cars on the road, but Fisker is considering a bankruptcy filing. Fisker’s lithium-ion battery maker, A123 Systems Inc, filed for bankruptcy late last year.
General Motors (GM.N) and Nissan Motor Co also invested heavily in electric vehicles, but sales have lagged hopes.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/electric-car-maker-coda-files-071841713.html

jc
May 1, 2013 10:45 pm

This Nuccitelli seems to function entirely as a propagandist.
Or perhaps, insofar as it is possible to be considered a propagandist – being a completely one-sided advocate on behalf of an agenda calculated to impose the will of one group on another – as being honest in both conviction and declarations, something more than that.
It seems from the above that not only does he have no regard at all to maintain any relationship with truth in his own statements, his position and function is to actively and knowingly suppress truth altogether. That is, he is in effect, a declared enemy of truth.
He cannot fail to be aware of the implications of policy actions relating to this issue. That is, destruction and deaths that have already occurred, and the certainty that these must continue to occur if the agenda he advocates and seeks to advance by suppressing the truth prevails.
This makes him, and those like him directly complicit.

May 1, 2013 10:47 pm

On this central question, the “consensus” has been wrong not once, not twice, not thrice, but four times out of four, and is about to be wrong a fifth time.
==================
the odds of this being coincidental are 3^5 = 243 to 1.

John F. Hultquist
May 1, 2013 11:00 pm

Sir Christopher,
You could have finished with: “But bless his little heart.”
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=bless+your+heart
1. This is a term used by the people of the southern United States particularly near the Gulf of Mexico to express to someone that they are an idiot without saying such harsh words.

Franz Dullaart
May 1, 2013 11:03 pm

Nuccitelli ~ Nutticelli, a new kind of silly hockeystick shaped pasta?

May 1, 2013 11:29 pm

Warming?! Not here, it’s official from the BBC agriculture report: spring in the UK this year is 4-5 weeks late, as confirmed by the CET daily max temperatures
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/CET-Dmax.htm

Larry Logan
May 1, 2013 11:48 pm

jorgekafkazar, it is indeed Nils-Axel (“Niklas”) Mörner, and his emails are signed ‘Niklas.’ Owing to familiarity, Christopher’s reference as Niklas.

May 1, 2013 11:58 pm

Sadly Dana gets to reproduce this sillyness in The Guardian..
his and John Abraham’s new blog.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2013/may/01/roy-spencer-wrong-fossil-fuels-expensive

David Jones
May 2, 2013 12:06 am

vukcevic says:
May 1, 2013 at 11:29 pm
“Warming?! Not here, it’s official from the BBC agriculture report: spring in the UK this year is 4-5 weeks late, as confirmed by the CET daily max temperatures
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/CET-Dmax.htm
Where I live in SE England, 40 miles NW of London, we currently have Blackthorn (Prunus Spinosa) in flower. It is a plant that flowers on bare wood before leaf-break. It normally flowers here in late February – early March. It is a full TWO MONTHS later than “normal.”

dalyplanet
May 2, 2013 12:10 am

SkS is in a world of worry over the reality of Dr Spencer’s comments looking at their post.
Thank you for this interesting post Lord Monkton.

May 2, 2013 12:15 am

Nuccitelli is just troll-bait for the Guardian.
The title of his column is “the 97%”. Why choose such a dubious name except to cause disgust and responses? Either people know it refers to a junk survey using junk statistics or they think the column is telling them what they already know – well 97% of people already know.
The Guardian needs hits and comments to boost ad sales. That is Nuccitelli’s function. He generates heat rather than light and stirs up lots of responses.
If Nuccitelli was competent people would be reluctant to go up against him. That would defeat the point.
In showbiz terms, he is a clown.

Man Bearpig
May 2, 2013 12:21 am

But they will still cling on to their belief like scarab beetles do to camel dung.

Stephen Richards
May 2, 2013 1:29 am

Roy Spencer was right to say we cannot easily disentangle the anthropogenic from the natural contributions to warming.
In which case he cannot logically state that anthropogenic warming is real. He is merely guessing. Natural warming exists and AGW may well be real but it remains an educated guess until someone finds a method of separating their signals..

Stephen Richards
May 2, 2013 1:34 am

pat says:
May 1, 2013 at 10:38 pm
given rear-view-mirror is in the post, this might fit here!
Pat, if you can get UK TV, BBC SW spotlight, a local news program, have been driving a tiny electric car across the sw of UK. Started last night and had to recharge once at a house and second time in a parking spot (wasn’t clear where or cost etc deliberately I suspect). They are due to finish the slot this evening. Should be interesting to see haw the BBC report this one.

Editor
May 2, 2013 1:41 am

Thanks, Christopher. As always, this was a pleasure to read.
Regards

thingodonta
May 2, 2013 1:47 am

Agree.
I tried to find one of the 8 Nuccitelli points you mention that I agreed with, and couldn’t.
I then tried to find one of the 60 points from Roy Spencer you mentioned that I disagreed with, and couldn’t, (but I pushed one or two).
Nuccitelli’s own statements show that not only does he not understand the field of global warming all that well, they also show that he isn’t very intelligent in the first place, and totally out of his depth. This kind of thing-substandard logic- will come back to haunt the climate science community in future, regardless of how the models turn out. (One can see such things more easily if one is on the outside, which includes from hindsight).
The truism of “No one knows whether it is currently warming, because we only see warming in the rear-view mirror, after it has occurred’ is a good example-it’s too subtle for the average climate researcher to understand, which isn’t saying much. (I also think that trends and rates are two things that are amongst the most misunderstood and misused in all of human knowledge).

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