Monckton asks IPCC for correction to AR4

4 May 2013

IPCC Secretariat, Geneva

Gentlemen,

Request for correction of a serious inaccuracy in the contribution of Working Group 1 to the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report

 

As an Expert Reviewer for the Fifth Assessment Report, 2013, and in accordance with the IPCC Protocol for Addressing Possible Errors in IPCC Assessment Reports, I am writing to report a serious inaccuracy in the contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report, 2007. As a result of the inaccuracy, one of the report’s central conclusions was inappropriately drawn. The inaccuracy could have been avoided in the context of the information available at the time the report was written. It does not reflect new knowledge, scientific information, additional sources or a mere difference of opinion. I request that the inaccuracy be corrected and the correction published in the Errata for Working Group I’s contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report. No such correction currently appears in the Errata.

The error lies in a graph of the HadCRUt global temperature anomalies from 1850-2005, which appears twice in the Fourth Assessment Report. The graph purports to show, but does not show, that the rate of global warming has been accelerating and that the accelerated global warming is anthropogenic.

I understand that the graph as submitted to the IPCC Secretariat in the scientists’ final draft of the Fourth Assessment Report was substantially as it appears below (though axial notations are mine):

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The above graph appears correct. It should be restored in place of the seriously inaccurate version that was substituted for it in at least two places in the Fourth Assessment Report.

The inaccurate version of the graph first appears in Chapter 3, Observations: Surface and Atmospheric Climate Change, of the contribution of Working Group 1 to the Fourth Assessment Report, where it is labelled “Frequently Asked Questions FAQ 3.1, Figure 1”. It is reproduced below:

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The caption (in part) reads as follows:

“… Annual global mean observed temperatures from the HadCRUt3 dataset (black dots) along with simple fits to the data. The left hand axis shows anomalies relative to the 1961 to 1990 average and the right hand axis shows the estimated actual temperature (°C). Linear trend fits to the last 25 (yellow), 50 (orange), 100 (purple) and 150 years (red) are shown, and correspond to 1981-2005, 1956-2005, 1906-2005, and 1856-2005, respectively. Note that for shorter recent periods, the slope is greater, indicating accel­erated warming. The blue curve is a smoothed depiction to capture the decadal variations. To give an idea of whether the fluctuations are meaningful, decadal 5% to 95% (light blue) error ranges about that line are given (accordingly, annual values do exceed those limits). Results from climate models driven by estimated radiative forcings for the 20th century (Chapter 9) suggest that there was little change prior to about 1915, and that a substantial fraction of the early 20th-century change was contributed by naturally oc­curring influences including solar radiation changes, volcanism and natural variability. From about 1940 to 1970 the increasing industrialisation following World War II increased pollution in the Northern Hemisphere, contributing to cooling, and increases in carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases dominate the observed warming after the mid-1970s …”

The text accompanying the defective diagram says, inter alia –

“An increasing rate of warming has taken place over the last 25 years …”

The diagram also appears in the Technical Summary, where the accompanying text says, inter alia –

“The rate of warming averaged over the last 50 years (0.13°C ± 0.03°C per decade) is nearly twice that for the last 100 years.”

My note of a lecture by Dr. Rajendra Pachauri at the University of New South Wales five years ago indicates that he displayed the offending diagram, explained that it showed “surface temperature going back to the beginning of industrialization” [actually only to 1850], and commented as follows –

“… In recent years this graph has become much steeper. If you draw a line through the last 100 years, the slope is a 0.74 C° line. But if you look at the last 50 years, [it is] almost twice as steep as the total 100-year period. So it would be appropriate to conclude that we are now at a stage where warming is taking place much faster … So I’d like to emphasize the fact that we are at a stage where warming is taking place at a much faster rate, and clearly if we don’t bring about some changes we’d have much faster changes in future.

Dr. Pachauri’s citation of and commentary upon the graph indicate that it is at the very heart of the IPCC’s central message that the rate of warming is itself accelerating. By implication, Dr. Pachauri attributes the acceleration to us when he says that we shall have to “bring about some changes” or there will be “much faster changes in future”.

This particular message of the IPCC has been widely reproduced in the news media and, in particular, in the science journals. For instance, the December 2007 edition of Physics Today displays this diagram, and only this diagram, when praising Al Gore and the IPCC for winning the Nobel Peace Prize.

The defective graph has also been relied upon by agencies of government, such as the US Environmental Protection Agency, which displays it prominently in the Technical Support Document accompanying its December 2009 finding, carefully timed to coincide with the Copenhagen climate conference, that CO2 and five other classes of greenhouse gas are an “endangerment” to human health.

The EPA continued to rely upon the graph even after having received the following plainly-worded warning from the South-Eastern Legal Foundation, acting on behalf of clients –

“The graph, like most others in your documentation, was lifted from a document of the IPCC – its 2007 assessment report. The graph purports to demonstrate, but does not in reality demonstrate, that the rate of “global warming” is itself increasing. No reasonable agency of government, acting responsibly and with due scientific competence and impartiality, would have unquestioningly reproduced such a graph. No competent and genuinely independent peer-reviewer would have sanctioned the use of this graph. However, not one of the 11 ‘Federal expert reviewers’ whom you chose informed you that this graph was an instance of a well-known statistical fallacy. One of the ‘expert’ reviewers was the lead author of the IPCC document in which the defective graph first appeared.

“It is instances such as this that underline the lack of wisdom of your repetition of the defective and highly-politicized analyses issued by the IPCC, and of your failure to ensure that genuinely independent scientific reviewers were invited to scrutinize your documentation to prevent you from merely repeating bad scientific errors such as that which the IPCC’s bogus graph represents.”

As the EPA’s Technical Support Document itself admits (though with characteristically self-serving illogicality it ignores its own admission in the remainder of the same sentence) –

“Trends may be sensitive to changes of start date in a time series …”

The EPA refused to remove the defective graph, as it should have done.

Be that as it may, the EPA’s citation of the defective graph illustrates the considerable influence it has had on public policy. Indeed, it has also had an adverse influence on the standing of the IPCC. When I showed the graph to the Republican caucus of the Ways and Means Committee of the US Congress when giving testimony before the Committee some years ago, the then ranking member of the Committee said at once, “They can’t have done that!” He turned to his colleagues and said:

“Gentlemen, we have seen all that we need to see about whether any reliance can be placed on the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.”

That was the moment when the Republican Party in the US decided that it would no longer support the Democrats in their belief that the IPCC’s science could be relied upon and that, therefore, Man was exercising a potentially damaging influence on global climate.

The reasons why the graph as published is defective follow. Much of the analysis may seem trivial, but the aim is to make the argument as accessible as possible to officials of the IPCC and of governments who finalize the IPCC’s reports but may not have a background in elementary statistics.

On any curve of a time-series representing stochastic data (from the Greek στόχос, “a guess”, since stochastic data are inherently volatile and unpredictable, following no discernible pattern), an artful choice of endpoints for a set including more than one least-squares linear-regression trend permits fabrication, at will, of any desired spurious acceleration or deceleration in the trend.

It will now be shown, using the same IPCC technique on the same data but carefully selecting different endpoints, that it is possible to generate opposite results, demonstrating the technique to be defective.

In the diagram below, the slope of the IPCC’s trend-line for 1905-2005 (here shown as an arrowed green line) is half the slope of the trend-line for 1905-1945:

clip_image006

It would be as inappropriate to draw from the carefully-chosen trend-lines on the above graph the conclusion that the rate of global warming has decelerated as it was for the IPCC to draw from its artfully-chosen trend-lines the opposite conclusion that the rate of global warming is accelerating. The example is given to illustrate the falsity of the IPCC’s technique, and to show how easily one may obtain any desired result by a capricious but careful choice of endpoints for multiple trend-lines.

By way of a heuristic to demonstrate why the technique used by the IPCC is an abuse of statistical method, consider a sine-wave, propagated horizontally from left to right ad infinitum. A segment of the wave is shown here. The slope of the curve is by definition zero –

clip_image008

Or is it zero? We take a short segment of the sine-wave terminating at some local minimum (at right, above), and calculate four overlapping least-squares linear-regression trends on the data in that segment, each terminating at that rightward minimum.

The first trend-line in the graph below covers the whole segment that is displayed, but the starting-points of the three remaining trend-lines are carefully chosen, starting successively closer to the endpoint of the displayed segment of the curve:

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Each successively-commencing trend-line – the red, the purple, the orange and the yellow – has a steeper slope than its predecessor, just as in the IPCC’s graph. On this evidence, the curve of the sine-wave seems not merely to be following a falling trend, but a falling trend that is in an accelerated and ever-more-precipitate decline.

Yet it is self-evident that the true long-run trend of a sine-wave is zero by definition. For this reason, the statistical technique is unquestionably false, as may be confirmed by shifting the phase of the sine-wave by half a cycle to right or left:

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If the trend-lines are repositioned, the graph now appears to exhibit not merely a rising trend but an ever-more-rapidly climbing trend, the opposite of the (equally false) result that was obtained previously.

Where, then, lies the truth about the trend in mean global surface temperatures over the past century and a half? Remove most of the trend-lines from the IPCC’s deceptive graph, and replace them with trend-lines marking the periods of the most rapid warming during the period that persisted for more than a decade.

This technique is legitimate: a narrow and straightforward question is being asked about which periods exhibited the fastest supra-decadal warming rate during the instrumental record.

The rate of warming in the 26 years 1975-2001 (during which, at least in theory, humankind’s emissions of CO2 might have been sufficient to exercise some small influence on the global temperature trend) is not unique. During two previous periods – 1860-1880 and 1910-1940 – the warming rate was identical, within the measurement uncertainty shown on the graph, to that from 1975-2001. Yet it is agreed among all parties that we cannot have had any measurable effect on temperature trends in the two earlier periods.

On 23 April, 2009, Lord Leach of Fairfield asked Her Majesty’s Government –

“… whether the rate of increase in global mean surface temperatures between 1975 and 1998 [His Lordship chose that date rather than 2001] was similar to the rates of increase observed between 1860 and 1880 and between 1910 and 1940 …”

Lord Hunt of King’s Heath replied –

“Observations collated at the Met Office Hadley Centre and the University of East Anglia Climate Research Unit indicate that the rate of increase in global average surface temperature between 1975 and 1998 was similar to the rates of increase observed between 1860 and 1880 and between 1910 and 1940 (approximately 0.16 C° per decade).

“This observation has no implications for our policy on anthropogenic warming. Little can be deduced from relatively short trends in the temperature record taken in isolation from the overall picture. …”

Yet the IPCC, in its defective graph, had indeed sought to deduce from a “relatively short trend” in the data – namely, the last 25 years – that the magnitude of the trend was exceptional, when, as Her Majesty’s Government were compelled to admit upon questioning, the trend over that period had two previous precedents occurring at approximately 60-year intervals in the 150-year instrumental record:

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Surely the correct conclusion is that – so far, at any rate – there is no discernible human influence on global temperature: merely a continuation of the recovery of global temperatures from the Little Ice Age (a recovery that began 300 years ago), overlaid by a ~60-year periodicity in global temperature that appears to exhibit some correlation (not necessarily causative) with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation Index.

None of these considerations rule out a gentle (though not yet plainly detectable) influence on global temperature from rising CO2 concentrations. However, examination of the 163-year record of global mean surface temperature anomalies does appear to indicate –

Ø that there has been no acceleration in the warming rate, which, at its supra-decadal maximum from 1976-2001, was no greater than in 1860-1880 or 1910-1940;

Ø that most of the warming from 1950 to date must have been caused not by us but by natural variability in the climate, perhaps including the Pacific Decadal Oscillation; and

Ø that the mean decadal warming rate of 0.38 C°/decade that the IPCC predicts for the next 87 years as its central estimate on the A2 emissions scenario is almost two and a half times the maximum decadal warming rate observed over the past 161 years, which was just 0.16 C°/decade.

The last conclusion raises questions about the reliability of the IPCC’s perhaps excessive central climate-sensitivity estimate. The trend on the arithmetic mean of the RSS and UAH satellite monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomalies from January 2001 to April 2013 shows no acceleration in the rate of warming. Instead, for 12 years the trend has been statistically indistinguishable from zero:

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Dr. Pachauri, the science chairman of the IPCC, admitted in Melbourne early in 2013 that there had been a 17-year “pause” in global warming. I reported the defective IPCC graph in person and in writing to him some time ago, but, though he could not fault my analysis, he has not had the graph corrected.

Bearing in mind the very substantial sums that the IPCC is receiving on the pretext inter alia of its inappropriate conclusion from the defective graph that the rate of warming is accelerating and that we are to blame for the acceleration, the IPCC’s continued reliance upon the defective graph in its Fourth Assessment Report, on its website and in several lectures by its science chairman may constitute fraud.

On the advice of a barrister and also of a judge of the New Zealand Supreme Court, police are shortly to be invited to consider whether the continued use of the IPCC’s defective graph by the Victoria University of Wellington on its public website constitutes fraud. Therefore, I should be grateful if you would let me know if I have misunderstood anything, and, if so, explain why the IPCC considers it justifiable, on the basis of the relative slopes of multiple arbitrarily-chosen trend-lines, to draw the conclusion that the rate of global warming is accelerating and that we are to blame, when the observed data suggest no such acceleration. Otherwise, I should be grateful if you would simply correct the defective graph.

The IPCC cannot be expected to be taken seriously if apparently criminal dishonesties of this magnitude are persisted in and widely cited both by senior IPCC officials and by third parties allied to or supportive of the IPCC even long after the dishonesties have been drawn to its attention.

Copies of this letter go to the Minister for Climate Change in the House of Lords and to the Economic Affairs Committee of the House, which has taken an active interest in the errors of scientific rigour which have arisen because the IPCC is not a scientific body but a political entity whose founding document obliges it to act upon the questionable assumption that Man’s influence on the Earth’s climate will prove catastrophic unless it be radically abated.

Yours faithfully,

Viscount Monckton of Brenchley

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Jeff Alberts
May 4, 2013 11:09 am

I also would like to request a correction.
There is no “global temperature”, therefore any derivative of said non-existent thing (mean, mode, median, anomaly, etc) is an exercise in futility.

jorgekafkazar
May 4, 2013 11:23 am

DougS says: “Hey Kevin Trenberth and Phil Jones. You both are frauds. Why in the world would you stoop to inserting this piece of [mis]information without the benefit of review by the review team? You have condemned your names and scientific reputations to the scrap heap of history. Shame and scorn will follow you into your graves.”
Indeed, it’s a travesty.

Ian W
May 4, 2013 11:38 am

Almost regardless of the science, some people within the IPCC took it upon themselves after final reviews had taken place to put a graph that was incorrect into the AR4 SPM and then use that to persuade policy makers to take ‘urgent action’ against the use of fossil fuels.
Many of us have suffered directly financially due to this. Paying extra taxes, losing jobs, paying extra to travel etc etc. Therefore, there are thousands if not millions of people who can demonstrate direct financial losses due to this fraud. The fact that the figures and graphs have been retained uncorrected despite high level advice that they were incorrect shows culpability. This is NOT an argument about the ‘science’ of AGW it is an argument about the misrepresentation of the research to policy makers resulting in policies directly harmful to large numbers of people.
Surely, this is grounds not for just a small legal action in New Zealand but for a class action lawsuit against those organizations and individuals who persist in promulgating falsehoods to the detriment of millions. I realize that the IPCC as a UN organization would immediately claim some kind of diplomatic immunity – but that in itself is an admission of guilt and they should be forced into that defense. However, the Team and for that matter the EPA are not in such a protected position especially if they used these fraudulent graphs and claims outside the auspices of the UN.
Is there not a lawyer that wishes to take this on?

May 4, 2013 12:50 pm

richardscourtney:
To call on one’s opponent to withdraw is not a logically legitimate approach to winning a debate. To complain that one’s opponent has not defined a mathematical term is not a logically legitimate approach to winning. To win, one must refute one’s opponent’s argument. This, you have not accomplished.
Your “population” lacks an essential property of a population. This property is an ability to be sampled.
One cannot sample the temperatures along a trend-line because their existence lies in the past. For example, one cannot sample temperatures in February 1865 because their existence lies in the past. In the circumstance that the temperatures cannot be sampled, it is scientifically illegitimate to claim that the population mean varies linearly with the time. That the population mean varies linearly with the time, though, is a requirement for the existence of a trend-line. A trend-line, then, does not exist as a scientific concept.

Ed Barbar
May 4, 2013 12:53 pm

I’ll bet it burns people at the IPCC to get notes like this. Why won’t Monckton go away, so we can play?

richardscourtney
May 4, 2013 1:10 pm

Terry Oldberg:
re your twaddle at May 4, 2013 at 12:50 pm.
You say

One cannot sample the temperatures along a trend-line because their existence lies in the past

Every measurement result “lies in the past” as soon as it is obtained.
Data in a time series is no different to any other data in this respect.
Data from a data set can be sampled as sub-sets which can be compared to any other sub-set sampled from the data set.
Data in a time series is no different than data of any other data set in this respect.
The accuracy, precision and reliability need to be assessed for any datum.
Data of a time series is no different than any other data in this respect.
I refer you to my post to you at May 4, 2013 at 9:50 am
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/05/04/monckton-asks-ipcc-for-correction-to-ar4/#comment-1297125
And I repeat, don’t disrupt this thread with another of your interminable ‘discussions’ of a “sample population” which you cannot define. END OF.
Richard

Reply to  richardscourtney
May 4, 2013 2:39 pm

richardscourtney:
As you state, every measurement result lies in the past. A consequence is for it to be impossible to test the hypothesis that sample means lying in the past vary linearly with respect to the time. This is a fact and it destroys your argument.

Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 1:21 pm

Well, he’s right in saying that cherry-picking starting dates isn’t exactly kosher. It’s easy enough, though, to see whether there really has been an acceleration, isn’t it? Just take the derivative of the graph, or (more or less equivalently) chart the slopes between every adjacent data point. Might be good to make it a trend of the running decadal average, actually, so as to cancel out ENSO and schtuff of that nature. If there’s no acceleration in rise, the graph should be flat. If acceleration has been negative, there should be a negative slope, and if positive, we should get a positive slope. So, using HadCru’s global temperature records, we get… https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B9drDXIilFv5elRGbFdiZThuc3M/edit?usp=sharing
Looky thar. Faster rise in recent years than in the past.

Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 1:24 pm

…On an unrelated note, Terry, I’m not sure that what you’re saying makes sense. That is, if we assume a priori that an objective reality exists. If we’re dabbling in solipsism, though, it’s perfectly valid, I guess.

Reply to  Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 2:41 pm

Sam Yates:
I don’t follow you. Can you expand upon your theme?

Mycroft
May 4, 2013 1:36 pm

I think a FOIA request is in order to find out who put the graph into AR4 after reviews had been done!

richardscourtney
May 4, 2013 1:38 pm

Sam Yates:
This subject must have touched a nerve with its attraction for trolls. At least you provide a name so I suppose you are not posting anonymously.
But your post at May 4, 2013 at 1:21 pm is pure trolling.
It attempts to divert the thread onto a ‘red herring’.
Your graph is worthy of being refuted (which makes it a clever ‘red herring’) but is not relevant to the subject.
This thread is about the IPCC avoiding its own procedures to replace a peer reviewed graph with another – n.b. not peer reviewed – graph which uses an improper statistical trick to provide an untrue indication. You have presented another graph which has no relevance of any kind to the subject of this thread.
My response to your post is to advise everybody; Don’t feed the troll.
Richard

May 4, 2013 1:59 pm

The graph purports to show, but does not show, that the rate of global warming has been accelerating
Things have now changed. See:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1996.9/plot/rss/from:1996.9/trend/plot/rss/from:1996.9/to:2005/trend/plot/rss/from:2005/trend/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1997.33/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1997.33/trend/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:1997.33/to:2005/trend/plot/hadcrut3gl/from:2005/trend/plot/hadsst2gl/from:1997.1/plot/hadsst2gl/from:1997.1/trend/plot/hadsst2gl/from:1997.1/to:2004/trend/plot/hadsst2gl/from:2004/trend
The graphs above show different things for three data sets where there has been no warming for at least 16 years. WFT only allows us to draw straight lines between two points, however climate does not go in straight lines. Often, temperatures vary in a sinusoidal fashion which cannot be shown using WFT. However we can do the next best thing and show what is happening over the first half of the 16 years and what is happening over the last half. As shown, the first half shows a small rise and the last half shows a small decline. Note that neither the rise in the first half nor the drop in the last half is statistically significant. However the lines do suggest that we are now just continuing a 60 year sine wave that was started in 1880 according to the following graphic:
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/akasofu_ipcc.jpg

May 4, 2013 2:26 pm

The trend on the arithmetic mean of the RSS and UAH satellite monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomalies from January 2001 to April 2013 shows no acceleration in the rate of warming. Instead, for 12 years the trend has been statistically indistinguishable from zero:
The combined RSS and UAH almost gives a slope of 0 since December 1997. This is 15 years and 5 months going to April. See:
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1997.9/plot/rss/from:1997.9/trend/plot/uah/from:1997.9/plot/uah/from:1997.9/trend
UAH slope = 0.00549541 per year
RSS slope = -0.00459907 per year
The difference of these two numbers is 0.00089634. Since each data set contributes to half of any net slope, then if the two would be plotted together, the net slope would be 4.48 x 10^-4/year. So while it is not negative, it is extremely small and not significant. (The April values are not shown on WFT, but UAH went down in April from 0.183 to 0.103. While RSS is not out yet for April, I do not expect a large departure from UAH.)

May 4, 2013 2:31 pm

Werner See my comment above. The declines since 2004 are likely the start of the combined downslopes of the solar 60 and 1000 year cycles.see
http://climatesense-norpag.blogspot.com.
“Global Cooling- Methods and Testable Decadal Predictions.”
What has happened over the last 2000 years and what will happen over the next decades and likely the next several hundred years has now become obvious.The mechanisms are still fairly obscure – but it is not necessary to fully understand the mechanisms to predict the future – one merely has to correctly identify the past quasi -cyclic patterns and project them forwards.

Plain Richard
May 4, 2013 2:31 pm

Richardscourtney, I am not sure why you consider Sam a troll and why you try to ‘police’ this thread by determining what is relevant or not. A) Sam says the ipcc depiction of an increasing trend may not be ‘kosher’ thus agreeing. B) He asks whether the conclusion drawn by the not kosher method is in fact true or not. Why is that not relevant? If the conclusion is right then the ipcc has only used a bad method to illustrate a correct conclusion. If false, they have used a bad method to show something that has not in fact happened. This distinction seems relevant to me.
Also I think a lot of readers could be interested if the temperature increase has been accelerating (up until the the year of the ipcc report as well as up until now). I agree with Sam that it should be easy enough. See if a quadratic trend fits better to the data than a linear trend, see if there is a significant quadratic trend in addition to the linear trend, or whatever else one might use (I do not have the data nor a statistics program available at the moment).
It’s not up to you to determine what’s relevant or not, that is not how the Internet works! See the post below yours from Werner, is he trolling as well?
Regards, R

May 4, 2013 2:31 pm

The Viscount of Benchley called Mockton
Unveiled the IPCC’s error and defrocked em’
Their trend lines sublime
Had slopes that did climb
But depended on where you start em”

X Anomaly
May 4, 2013 2:45 pm

The trend-lines should be 37.5, 75, 112.5, and 150 years. That would be objective enough, would still show acceleration?, and its credibility determined by future trends. A correction indeed.

Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 2:52 pm

Hey now, no call to assume I’m intent on destroying all civil conversation just because I happen to disagree with you. You make a valid point; my post did sidestep the issue of the graph’s appearance in order to try to figure out if the basic statement, that warming has accelerated, was correct, which is (to me) more interesting.
But Fine, I’ll grant quite happily that if one gives oneself leeway to choose the start and endpoint of a trendline (although from appearances, the IPCC only gave themselves one degree of freedom), one can get all sorts of different conclusions. The information provided by the graph itself–as one draws nearer to the present, the trend in global temperature change grows steeper and steeper–is MATHEMATICALLY true, of course, just as the statement that there’s no statistically significant atmospheric warming over the last ten years or so is mathematically true, or that a given temperature series can be decomposed into a small number of summed sine waves is mathematically true. Those mathematical truths are, of course, utterly useless for future extrapolation unless one defends them with some plausible physical argument. If the IPCC were relying on this graph for claims of future warming…well, yeah. It’d be garbage.
So, I suppose, the acceptability of the modifications made to the graph (and note, none of the data points themselves were altered; the information itself is still all there) depends on whether you think the IPCC is trying to use it to prove a point, in which case it’s quite clearly inadequate, or to illustrate a point that is held by climatologists in general to be valid based on other data, in which case it’s unremarkable. I, as you might guess, cleave to the former position, and I’m happy to offer papers backing that up if you want ’em.
…Oh, and as a footnote to which you are under no obligation to respond if you feel it’s veering too far off the beaten path, I’m well aware that the graph I slapped together isn’t ironclad; one could quibble with my choice of temporal interval (in putting it together, I only looked at changes from year to year, average change over five years, and average change over ten years, and eventually settled on the ten year figure because it had the least spread of the data, which I took to mean that it more or less successfully smoothed out weather variations. All of the series had positive trendlines, by the by, they just got more significant as I smoothed out the weather variations), or quite rightly look askance at that not-too-impressive R^2 value of 0.13. All fair and valid criticisms, and I don’t personally know enough about statistics to be able to tackle the thing in the way it ought to be tackled–that is, with the rigor and care that would go into an actual research paper. I just wanted to show that there were more and higher positive changes in temperatures in recent years than in the past, and to do so in a way that avoided the issues attendant in starting this trendline here or that trendline there. And, well, the increases in temperature are more numerous recently, and they are higher. That’s all I was going for.

Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 3:00 pm

Terry: Eh…That’s probably for the best, really; I’m afraid I was being kind of rude. My apologies. I suppose I was struck by what (to me) seemed the nonsensicality of stating that the change in a mean value with time could not be determined. Cannot one, say, take a running mean over some interval (heck, like I did in my first post in this thread), and then watch how it alters as one shifts forward in years?
…Of course, the apparent nonsensicality of your idea probably means that I just don’t understand it, which is often enough the case when something seems illogical to me. Would you mind expanding on the idea?

Reply to  Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 3:58 pm

Sam Yates:
I’ll try to discover a proof that you’ll find acceptable. I’ll need you speak up if anything sounds fishy.
A “trend-line” is a sequence of points. Each point has a pair of coordinates. One of these coordinates is the time. The other is the population mean. That a trend-line is straight implies that the population mean varies linearly with respect to the time. The issue under debate is whether the implied linearity can be tested. If it cannot be tested then the existence of a trend-line is scientifically untenable.
If keepers of weather stations around the world had measured the temperature and the time at infinitesimally separated intervals in time and kept the data, we would be in a position to test the implied linearity. However, this is not what they did. At some weather stations, for example, they measured the daily high and daily low and didn’t record the times at which these temperatures were attained because they didn’t know them.
To test the implied linearity, one would have to travel backward in time to make and record the missing measurements. However, to travel backward in time is impossible. Thus, the implied linearity is untestable and the existence of a trend-line is scientifically untenable.

Plain Richard
May 4, 2013 3:14 pm

Sam Yates said:
#So, I suppose, the acceptability of the modifications made to the graph (and note, none of the data points themselves were altered; the information itself is still all there) depends on whether you think the IPCC is trying to use it to prove a point, in which case it’s quite clearly inadequate, or to illustrate a point that is held by climatologists in general to be valid based on other data, in which case it’s unremarkable.#
Exactly my point above, imagine the difference in headlines!
GLOBAL WARMING ACCELERATING! IPCC USED FLAWED METHOD TO SHOW IT!
Vs
GLOBAL WARMING NOT ACCELERATING! IPCC’S METHODS WRONG!
(I am sure there are more talented people than me in making up headlines)

Editor
May 4, 2013 3:26 pm

An excellent analysis, Lord Monckton. Not that you aren’t saying what others have said for years, but you put it very clearly and with the extra fillip given by celebrity. Science should not need celebrity on its side, but right now it needs every ally it can find. In a sane world not only would your analysis have been sufficient, it would not even have been needed. Regrettably, in our world today, it is not enough. We have reached the stage where only successful criminal prosecutions can bring us back to sanity.

Louis
May 4, 2013 3:31 pm

“..explain why the IPCC considers it justifiable, on the basis of the relative slopes of multiple arbitrarily-chosen trend-lines, to draw the conclusion that the rate of global warming is accelerating and that we are to blame, when the observed data suggest no such acceleration.”

Al Gore gave his answer to this question in a recent speech in Beverly Hills: “This is for real. It is not made up. The scientists are not in a conspiracy to lie to us”
The IPCC’s answer will most likely be silence. The second most likely answer will be, “What difference at this point does it make?”

Sam Yates
May 4, 2013 3:31 pm

And don’t forget the other possible variants:
GLOBAL WARMING ACCELERATING! IPCC BASES STATEMENT ON WELL-SUPPORTED PHYSICAL MODELS, USES GRAPH TO SHOW ACCELERATION ALSO OCCURRED IN RECENT PAST!
GLOBAL WARMING NOT ACCELERATING! IPCC WRONG, USES LOAD OF HOOEY TO SUPPORT STATEMENT, ALSO MADE GRAPH SHOWING THAT ACCELERATION OCCURRED IN PAST!
and finally
WRITER VICIOUSLY ASSAULTED BY UPS WORKER RESPONSIBLE FOR DELIVERING INK TO NEWSPAPER OFFICE! SUPERVISOR MAKES POINTED COMMENTS ABOUT CAPS-LOCK, HURTS WRITER’S FEELINGS!
…Yeowch. No doubt there are folks who could top you, Richard, when it comes to composing headlines, but I think you’ve still got me beat.

Plain Richard
May 4, 2013 3:35 pm

No Sam! Too long to be headlines! I’ll surrender to “hooey” though, would never have thought of that word myself!

richardscourtney
May 4, 2013 4:01 pm

Plain Richard and Sam Yates:
You are a good double act doing a good job of deflecting the thread from its subject.
I make a suggestion. Go over to SkS and misbehave there. Or have you come from there.
Incidentally, and to trample your sidetrack into the dust:
1.
There has been no global warming or cooling discernible at 95% confidence for at least the last 16 years according to all available data sets. acceleration does NOT consist of stasis.
2.
According to the IPCC AR4 which is the subject of this thread the stasis was not possible because of committed warming. The explanation for this is in IPCC AR4 (2007) Chapter 10.7 which can be read at
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch10s10-7.html
Richard