How data revisionism hypes global warming

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

I have now had the opportunity to study SteveF’s remarkable essay at Lucia’s Blackboard, to which Anthony kindly draws attention in his footnote to my earlier posting on the absence of statistically-significant global warming for 17 years 4 months.

SteveF’s conclusion is that once allowance has been made for three naturally-occurring influences – volcanic aerosols, the ~11-year solar cycle and the el Niño/la Niña cycles – the HadCRUt4 warming rate from 1979-1996 was six times faster than from 1997-2012. In the abstract, to allow for uncertainties, he cautiously reduces this to three times faster.

Even if one were to take the unadjusted HadCRUt4 data, the rate of warming from 1979-1996 was more than twice as fast as the rate from 1997-2012.

I decided to look not only at HadCRUt4, as SteveF did, but also at the two satellite datasets, RSS and UAH. RSS showed warming at 0.7 Cº/century from 1979-1996 and cooling at almost 0.1 Cº/century from 1997-2012.

UAH, however, in contrast to both HadCRUt4 and RSS, showed warming in the later period, 1997-2012, that was thrice as fast as the warming of the earlier period, 1979-1996.

SteveF’s essay takes no account of the most substantial medium-term natural cycle that seems to influence global temperatures: the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. The cycles of that great Oscillation tend to exercise a warming influence for about 30 years followed by a cooling influence for about 30 years. This cyclical influence is visible throughout the HadCRUt4 global temperature record since 1850.

There was a remarkably sharp transition from the “cooling” to the “warming” phase of the PDO at the beginning of 1976 and a transition back to “cooling” late in 2001.

The HadCRUt4 warming rate from 1976-2001 was equivalent to almost 1.8 Cº/century (compared with warming at just 1.1 Cº/century from 1979-1996), but from 2002 to the present HadCRUt4 shows cooling at a rate equivalent to almost 0.5 Cº/century (compared with warming at almost 0.5 Cº/century from 1997-2012).

Much of the fall in the warming rate identified by SteveF, therefore, appears to be attributable to the PDO. It would be interesting to adjust the global instrumental temperature anomaly record not only for volcanic aerosols, solar cycles and el Niños but also for the cycles of the PDO, but that is above my present pay-grade.

What is far from clear is the influence, if any, from CO2. Its influence must be very small, for it seems easily overwhelmed by natural influences such as the PDO and the three phenomena studied by SteveF.

During the three “warming” phases of the PDO that are visible in the HadCRUt4 instrumental record since 1850, the warming rates were as follows: 1860-1880 less than 1.0 Cº/century; 1910-1940 1.4 Cº/century; and 1976-2001 1.8 Cº/century.

Superficially, there appears to be an inexorable and strikingly near-linear increase in the warming rates during successive “warming” phases of the PDO. Might this increase be attributable to the monotonic increase in CO2 over recent decades?

If the increase in warming rates were to continue, perhaps as a result of the growing warming influence from CO2, the warming from about 2040-2070 might be equivalent to 2.2 Cº/century; and from 2100-2130 2.6 Cº/century.

It would not be until around 2160-2190 that the warming rate would reach the IPCC’s currently-projected central estimate of 3.0 Cº/century. And, even then, the mean centennial rate after allowing for the “cooling” phases of the PDO would be considerably less.

However, the apparently tidy 1.0 to 1.4 to 1.8 Cº/century-equivalent increase in the rates of global warming during the “warming” phases of the PDO may not be attributable to CO2 at all. The true cause may be another and more sinister man-made phenomenon: Orwellian data revisionism.

Late in 2009, after the first Climategate emails had been sprung on a naively unsuspecting world, Roger Harrabin of the BBC, an acquiescent true-believer in the global-warming Party Line, was told by his superiors that for the sake of what little is left of the BBC’s reputation he should – just for once – ask Professor Jones of the University of East Anglia some critical questions about the temperature record.

Harrabin had never before stopped to think about whether the Party Line was true. That is the trouble with the Party Line: as Orwell points out in 1984, it is intended as a substitute for independent thought – or for any thought.

So he did not know what questions to ask. He asked me for help in framing suitable critical questions.

I told him to ask Jones whether there had been any statistically-significant global warming over the previous 15 years. He thought that was an absurd question. The Party Line said warming was occurring at a rate unprecedented in human history.

I told him to ask the question anyway. To his astonishment, Jones – albeit testily – admitted there had been no warming statistically distinguishable from zero for 15 years.

I also told Harrabin to ask Jones whether the rates of warming during the three “warming” phases of the PDO in the instrumental record since 1850 were statistically distinguishable from one another.

Harrabin got a further surprise when Jones told him that the three rates could not be distinguished from one another, statistically speaking. On the then HadCRUt3 version of the global dataset, the rates of warming were equivalent to 1.0, 1.6 and 1.7 Cº/century respectively. The uncertainties in the data during the first of the three periods, 1860-1880, were so large that the rate could not be distinguished from that of the later two periods.

Our CO2 emissions could not have influenced the second period of PDO-driven warming, but we could in theory have influenced the third. Yet in the HadCRUt3 dataset the two periods showed warming within 0.1 Cº/century of one another: far too little an increase to be statistically significant.

At a climate conference in Cambridge a few years ago, I asked Jones whether, given that the global warming rates in the three “warming” phases of the PDO could not be distinguished from one another statistically speaking, any anthropogenic influence was yet discernible in the temperature record. He said there was a discernible influence, but did not say where or how large it was.

Not long afterwards, and perhaps not coincidentally, he produced HadCRUt4. Suddenly the rates of warming during the second and third PDO “warming” phases were changed from 1.6 and 1.7 Cº/century respectively to 1.4 and 1.8 Cº/century respectively.

As with other such instances of data revisionism in the terrestrial datasets, the later period was changed very little because the satellites were watching and prevented cheating. But the record in the earlier period was pushed downwards, artificially steepening the apparent warming over the 20th century. It is as though we knew better than those who took the earlier measurements what measurements they ought to have recorded, all over the world.

Disentangling the true contribution of CO2 to warming from not only the numerous natural influences but also from the effects of data revisionism is near impossible. We shall have to wait and see. The one fact that is already clear, however, is that the warming rate predicted by the models on whose output the climate scare is founded is proving to be a hefty exaggeration.

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Editor
June 16, 2013 6:46 am

Christopher Monckton writes: “SteveF’s essay takes no account of the most substantial medium-term natural cycle that seems to influence global temperatures: the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. The cycles of that great Oscillation tend to exercise a warming influence for about 30 years followed by a cooling influence for about 30 years.” And you mentioned the PDO a number of times afterwards.
If you’re referring to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation as the multidecadal variations of ENSO and the resulting multidecadal variations in the sea surface temperatures of the Pacific Ocean as a whole, then I will be more than happy to agree with you. But I would request that in the future you use the terms Pacific Decadal Variability or Pacific Multidecadal Variability to express that to avoid confusion with the PDO as represented by the JISAO PDO index.
If you’re referring to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation as represented by the JISAO PDO index, then I can’t agree with you. The PDO is a statistically determined index derived from of the spatial patterns of the sea surface temperature anomalies of the North Pacific north of 20N. It is as abstract representation of the sea surface temperature of the North Pacific. When you think of the PDO index, think Picasso. The PDO does not represent the sea surface temperature of the North Pacific, where it’s derived. It does not represent the sea surface temperatures of the Pacific as a whole. In other words, it doesn’t represent sea surface temperature. The PDO is, in fact, inversely related to the sea surface temperatures of the North Pacific, north of 20N. The sea surface temperatures of the North Pacific are dominated by the sea surface temperatures of the mid-latitudes east of Japan, an area known as the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension (KOE). The sea surface temperatures of the KOE are inversely related to the PDO.
For those new to the PDO, see the posts here:
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2011/06/30/yet-even-more-discussions-about-the-pacific-decadal-oscillation-pdo/
And here:
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2010/09/14/an-inverse-relationship-between-the-pdo-and-north-pacific-sst-anomaly-residuals/
And here:
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2010/09/03/an-introduction-to-enso-amo-and-pdo-part-3/

June 16, 2013 6:53 am

James Allison says:
June 16, 2013 at 2:24 am
Steven Mosher says:
June 15, 2013 at 10:40 pm
show your work
===============
Presumably directed at the Had Crew.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
You may be right, but I would never presume to try to interpupt one of his crypto-hit-and-run comments.

mogamboguru
June 16, 2013 6:54 am

If we wouldn’t calculate the alleged average “warming” or “cooling” of the Globe’s atmosphere during the past 100 years in degrees Celsius or Farenheit, but in degrees Kelvin, ANY of te alledged vaiations in warming and cooling would instantly become indiscernible from a straight, flat line.

Latitude
June 16, 2013 6:55 am

Jimbo says:
June 16, 2013 at 6:33 am
================================
Kasuha says:
June 15, 2013 at 10:32 pm
I don’t consider myself a conspiration theorist, therefore I refuse to believe that there is conspiration to adjust past temperature records in a way favorable to global warming alarmism.
………………………….But I’m not aware of any evidence for that.
==========================
visual aid:
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/data-tampering-at-ushcngiss/

Mindert Eiting
June 16, 2013 7:03 am

Dear Sir Monckton, regarding revisionism there is something much more devastating than downward and upward corrections. Temperature time series should be longitudinal. Repeated measurements are needed with the same instruments on the same places. Take as an example a study into reading ability of children. In the course of time repeated assessments are needed for the same children. Suppose, the researcher sends each year a number of children home and invites some new children into his class room. This goes on year after year. We need a good bookkeeping of drop-out and inclusion, not just the total number. Suppose next that drop-out and inclusion are far from random: the researcher selects the children for drop-out and inclusion. Suppose also that after a number of years group size is reduced by eighty percent and that the group of children is almost completely changed. Suppose finally that the researcher reports an enormous increment of reading ability. He assures that we should trust him because he has all kind of trick to make the data pseudo-longitudinal. No relevant journal would publish his results. Make a bookkeeping account of surface stations from year to year since 1970, containing both drop-out and inclusion numbers. If drop-out and inclusion were random, how can it be that time series of drop-outs correlate lower with their regional time series than non-drop-outs? I have found 20 sigma differences, so significance does not matter any more. The great dying of the thermometers was not just a random reduction of surface station number but an almost complete non-random change. The surface station record seems to be hopelessly compromised.

jbird
June 16, 2013 7:24 am

@Ronald Voisin
“It’s not just an obvious exaggeration, it’s just plain wrong.”
It’s not just plain wrong. It’s a lie.

wws
June 16, 2013 7:26 am

“I think Nicks paid job yes paid I say is to go to sites like these and fight for AGW. The more I see his comments the more I am convinced of this.”
Wow, then his employers sure aren’t getting very much for their money, are they?

June 16, 2013 7:34 am

Lord Monckton is more sober or prudent than many of the commenters here. He says:
“Disentangling the true contribution of CO2 to warming from not only the numerous natural influences but also from the effects of data revisionism is near impossible. We shall have to wait and see. The one fact that is already clear, however, is that the warming rate predicted by the models on whose output the climate scare is founded is proving to be a hefty exaggeration.”
It’s fairly clear that there has been no warming on a scale that our decision-makers need to be concerned about, and that CO2 may or may not have made a significant contribution to the warming, when it has occurred. A great deal remains to be discovered.

Dr. Deanster
June 16, 2013 7:35 am

I would like to ask the community a favor. Regarding temperature, it has often been noted that Maximum Temps have not warmed, but that Minimum Temps have, thus the Average Temp rises due to lower limit rising. I’ve never seen a graph with these data!
Do any of you have any reference that shows a graph dating back to 1880, that shows Maximum Temperature, and MInimum Temperature graphed separately, or even better, on the same graph??
If such an animal exists … I would like to ask Anthony to add it to his temperature reference page.

davidmhoffer
June 16, 2013 7:40 am

Nick Stokes says:
June 15, 2013 at 10:46 pm
GHG forcing just goes on and on
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Well sure. Of course one must ignore that the effect is logarithmic, that the cooling response is exponential, and assume that a limit approaching zero is significant even when we can’t measure the difference between it and zero, to come to that conclusion. So much bad physics in a single sentence.

June 16, 2013 7:42 am

Nick Stokes says:
June 16, 2013 at 2:44 am
There are causes for variation – we know about them and can account for them, at least partly.
=============
the “accounting” is spurious. the result of applying linear regression to non-stationary data. a failure to allow for autocorrelation.
look at the temperature data. the mark 1 eyeball can see autocorrelation with a period of roughly 60 years. you can’t do linear regression until after you difference the data to remove the autocorrelation. when you do, you find that you must difference the data 1 time for solar influences, and 2 times for CO2 influences. which leads to the inescapable conclusion that CO2 is a transitory forcing. while solar forcings do accumulate, the climate system adjusts to eliminate the effects of increasing or decreasing CO2 over time. GHG has negative feedback, something not considered in any of the climate models.

Patrick
June 16, 2013 7:45 am

“davidmhoffer says:
June 16, 2013 at 7:40 am
Nick Stokes says:
June 15, 2013 at 10:46 pm
GHG forcing just goes on and on
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Well sure. Of course one must ignore that the effect is logarithmic, that the cooling response is exponential, and assume that a limit approaching zero is significant even when we can’t measure the difference between it and zero, to come to that conclusion. So much bad physics in a single sentence.”
Indeed! Ditto…

JohnWho
June 16, 2013 7:49 am

wws says:
June 16, 2013 at 7:26 am
“I think Nicks paid job yes paid I say is to go to sites like these and fight for AGW. The more I see his comments the more I am convinced of this.”
Wow, then his employers sure aren’t getting very much for their money, are they?

Court Jesters are paid, are they not?

Pamela Gray
June 16, 2013 7:57 am

Ah. A commenter nails it about the lack of variable control were they applied to educational studies. The result? Validity and reliability are destroyed. The entire temperature data set is based on the worst case of lack of subject control known in published research. Seed plots would be likewise useless were such plots subjected to the same degree of selective exclusion from trials.

RoyFOMR
June 16, 2013 8:10 am

He who controls 97% of the present by rewriting the past is probably a very naughty boy.

Pamela Gray
June 16, 2013 8:11 am

Re: excluding natural drivers of land temperatures. Not all forms of natural variation drivers were excluded. Oceans collect heat from the Sun especially around the equatorial belt. But only if clouds allow that to happen. And because of the depth of that warming, oceans hold onto that heat (we are talking direct shorter wave heat penetration, not insigificant surface LW re-radiation penetration). To have properly excluded the SW source of heat, these climate wannabe researchers should have studied how oceans overturn that heat, move it around, release it here and there and hold onto to it here and there, all the while getting psuedo-randomly recharged with more or less heat. That natural “heating and cooling” noise may eventually cancel itself out but only have a very long period of time. The rush to judgment is written all over the AGW articles we have panned here.

June 16, 2013 8:16 am

I once tried my hand at Fourier to extract the periodic component that shows up in HadCRUT3.
My results: Period of 64 years with peaks in 1877, 1941, and 2005. Amplitude of .207 degree C peak-to-peak, assuming the periodic component is a sinusoid. This was the cosine component for 2 periods from 1877 to 2005.
As for increasing rate of the linear trend: I looked at smoothed HadCRUT3 and found the rise from 1909-1941 was .493 C and the rise from 1973 to 2005 was .523 C. However, I should follow this up with linear trend figures for those 2 periods. That is because the 1909-1941 period has a spikier dip at its beginning and a spikier peak at its end than 1973-2005. I am expecting the linear trend to be close to .41 C/32 years for 1909-1941 and .52 C/32 years for 1973-2005
(eyeball estimates at this moment), indicating a warming rate increase around .0034 degree/decade.
Something else notable is that the periodic component was stronger in the 1877-1941 period than in the 1941-2005 period. This means that the warming rate increased by more than
~.0034 degree/decade.

Richard M
June 16, 2013 8:17 am

I wonder if we will ever have a decent global temperature history. It would be interesting if someone could extend the GHCN v1 data set to the present. Revive all those dead thermometers and see what they would say.
I think the bottom line is the amount of warming would decease substantially. In addition, if the proper UHI adjustments were put in place (hopefully the new Watts et all will help in this regard), what warming was left over might completely disappear (a least statistically).
I believe the data is available, it would just take an unbiased study to document it.
Speaking of bias, it is well know in the medical research field that bias is important. There have been literally hundreds of papers written on the subject. How many papers have been written on possible bias in climate research? I’ve heard of none. While some like to believe in conspiracies I think it gets down to one simple fact. The researchers all “believed” we should be warming and as they made changes to the temperature history that belief affected their work. In fact, if you read about medical research that statement is almost guaranteed to be true. It is simple human nature.

Richard M
June 16, 2013 8:26 am

I think ending the PDO warm mode in 2001 is wrong. Yes, one could pick almost any date between 1998 and 2006 but I think 2005 is the best date. If you eyeball the slope it crosses the zero line around 2005. Remember that ENSO events impact the PDO index.
Is the reason for ending it in 2001 is to show a longer period of cooling? Don’t know, but it also does 2 other things. It increases the warming rate prior to the switch and it decreases the cooling rate after the switch. Since Moncton computed both those numbers I believe those numbers are questionable.
Also keep in mind that historic measurements of the PDO have much larger errors.

Ivan
June 16, 2013 8:50 am

But, the thing is that even the more recent data are significantly altered by cooling the past and warming the present:
Hadcrut3 , warming rate 2001-2013 – 0.07
Hadcrut4, warming rate 2001- 2013 – 0.03
Hadcrut3 warming rate 1997-2013 + 0.007
Hadcrut4 warming rate 1997 – 2013 + 0.08

u.k.(us)
June 16, 2013 8:50 am

Peter Miller says:
June 16, 2013 at 1:49 am
============
Very nice comment.
This caught my attention:
“……..which deliberately ignores the effects of natural climate cycles and our variable star, the Sun.”
———–
What causes the variations anyway ?, must be something ?

cwon14
June 16, 2013 8:55 am

Margaret Hardman says:
June 15, 2013 at 11:24 pm
You have little or no quantitative evidence to support AGW, it’s an inductive argument at best but clearly motivated by politics. The conspiracy label is a ad hominem approach. I’ve addressed the tactic up the thread.
Try reading Delingpole for a time.

Richard M
June 16, 2013 9:05 am

u.k.(us) says:
June 16, 2013 at 8:50 am
Peter Miller says:
June 16, 2013 at 1:49 am
============
Very nice comment.
This caught my attention:
“……..which deliberately ignores the effects of natural climate cycles and our variable star, the Sun.”
———–
What causes the variations anyway ?, must be something ?

The bottom line is, of course, the amount of solar radiation absorbed by our planets various systems (atmosphere, oceans, land, biosphere, etc.). I think most of the current small variations in what we call “climate” are generally due to how that energy is released into the atmosphere. These ocean cycles lead to variable insertions of solar energy into the atmosphere. In and of themselves they do not add or subtract from the longer term energy budget. That is controlled by albedo and incoming solar energy. The rest of it just keeps us busy.

cwon14
June 16, 2013 9:18 am

M Courtney says:
June 16, 2013 at 6:08 am
The skeptic community is clearly more politically diverse than the core AGW leadership and MSM arms. Then again that creates a problem of political candor inside such a diverse community. The technician skeptic community clearly downplay political motivations under the “it’s about science” meme. A land of Purple Unicorns and good intentions of all. They also don’t want to be easy smearing targets for a much larger propaganda force at the disposal of AGW advocates. Trying to be a harder target by being politically ambivalent. Practical dishonesty under totalitarian political correctness pressures.
Such orthodox customs can’t accept the truth of the AGW culture war. Skeptic denial (or conscious minimization) of the political MO of the broad AGW movement or hanging around the margin or “above” politics deserve rebuke. The debate would end faster if all acknowledged the political truth which privately many do and understand in many forms but remain silent for numerous reasons. The gap between public and private acknowledgement in AGW politics is very high.

cwon14
June 16, 2013 9:24 am

DrJohnGalan says:
June 16, 2013 at 3:18 am
Margaret Hardman says:
June 15, 2013 at 11:24 pm
… Bias watch: lifelong Conservative voter, Daily Telegraph reader.
In that case, can you explain to me how global warming scepticism can be squared with being against policies whose outcomes (rather than intentions) make the rich richer and the poor poorer?
//////////
The same can be said of the cousin of AGW doctrine, Global Keynesian monetary policy. You can scarcely find a leftist who isn’t condemning “the rich” who isn’t supporting a leveraged fiat money system that only the wealthy can survive in. Ironic isn’t it?