The “Hottest” Temperature Game

Climate Deception: How The “Hottest” Temperature Game Is Played To Offset Prediction Failures

Guest essay by Dr. Tim Ball 

Global temperature is not doing what the “official” Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted. Proponents of the claim humans are the cause of warming and the cooperative media react by trying to deflect, divert and perpetuate fear. They exploit people’s lack of knowledge and understanding. A January 2013 ABC News headline said, “2012 Was 9th Warmest Year on Record, Says NASA” is a classic example of how the public are deliberately misled. It is deliberate because it distorts, is out of context, and exploits manipulation of statistics or as Disraeli summarized, “Lies, damn lies and statistics.”

The deception begins with the headline but is expanded in the article. The challenge is to know what is actually being said. Initially, you need a translator, but can develop sufficient propaganda detectors once the methods are identified. There are guidelines that work in most circumstances:

Don’t believe anything you read; Question everything; Be especially suspicious of numbers; Know the source and political bias; If you’re affected by the story get at least three other sources; Remember all government information and data is biased; Be especially wary of stories that cite authorities.

The opening paragraph to the ABC story says,

“The year 2012 was the ninth warmest globally since record keeping began in 1880, said climate scientists today from NASA. NOAA, crunching the numbers slightly differently, said 2012 was the tenth warmest year, and both agencies said a warming pattern has continued since the middle of the 20th century.”

The implied threat is the temperature continues its inexorable trend up. The record is 133 years long and with a general warming trend. When would you expect to find the warmest years? Figure 1 provides a hint.

Figure 1

Why are they drawing attention to this by focussing on the “ninth warmest”? Because for the last 15 years the trend has leveled and declined slightly in contradiction to their forecast. Figure 2 shows what is actually happening.

Figure 2

The IPCC claim with over 90 percent certainty that Figure 2 is not suppose to happen. Here is the actual data;

Figure 3

Notice how the shift caused a change in terminology to divert attention from the fact that CO2 was no longer causing increasing warming. CO2 levels continue to rise, but temperatures don’t follow. It completely contradicts their predictions, which is why they want to divert attention.

How meaningful is the temperature increase? What is the accuracy of the measure? IPCC says there was a “trend of 0.6 [0.4 to 0.8]°C (1901-2000)” , that is for most of the period in the news story. Notice the error range is ±0.2°C or ± 33%. It is a meaningless record.

The story cites NOAA and NASA in the standard appeal to authority. However, it’s offset by the observation that they are “crunching the numbers slightly differently” to explain why they disagree between 9th and 10th on the list. How can that be? Aren’t they using the same data? All agencies produce different average temperatures because they select different stations and “adjust” them differently. NASA GISS consistently produces the higher readings, and were most active politically when James Hansen was in charge. They both use the grossly inadequate surface station data.

Although the article limits its claim by acknowledging it is only the 9th warmest in the official record, most people believe it is the 9th warmest ever. It is a misconception deliberately created by political activists like Al Gore and not openly refuted by governments. It is like Gore’s claim that CO2 levels are the highest ever when they are actually the lowest in 300 million years.

So, how long and complete is the official record? A comprehensive study was produced by D’Aleo and Watts “Surface Temperature Records: Policy-Driven Deception?” detailing what was done. Two graphs from NASA GISS show the general pattern.

Figure 4 (Source NASA GISS)

There are fewer than 1000 stations with records of 100 years and most of them are severely compromised by growth of urban areas. Equally important, is the decline in the number of stations they consider suitable, especially after 1990. This pattern also partly explains why the current readings are high (Figure 5). Temperature increases as the number of stations used are reduced.

Number of stations plotted against temperature.

Figure 5

Number of stations plotted against temperature.

Although they condition the terminology “hottest” with “on record” most people assume it is “ever”. This implication was deliberate. The IPCC rewrote history by eliminating the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) that was warmer than today. Weather agencies, increased the slope of temperature by lowering the old record – New Zealand is a good example (Figure 6).

Figure 6

Global temperatures are not following “official” predictions, so those who used global warming for a political agenda try to defend the indefensible. This proves it is political because scientific method requires you admit your science is wrong, determine why, and if possible make adjustments.

– See more at: http://drtimball.com/2013/climate-deception-how-the-hottest-temperature-game-is-played-to-offset-prediction-failures/#sthash.N7kgUFhU.dpuf

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Fergus Mclean
August 28, 2013 7:29 am

Perhaps a statistically minded reader could run an analysis to see what percentage of the time the statement “the last decade was the warmest in ______ years” has been true. One would expect, in a rising temperature regime, it would be true more often than not.

Steve Keohane
August 28, 2013 7:29 am

Steve from Rockwood says:August 28, 2013 at 5:19 am
Fig. 5 represents a meaningless claim. You would have to show that station location influences the average temperature calculation. Taking unreliable Russian stations (cold) out of the Russian total stations (also cold) should make no difference to the average global temperature (distributed by surface area and not station count). But if you take a group of cold stations out of the total record the “average” temperature based on the “number of stations” will go up. The latter means nothing to me.

Steve, I think this graph showing the physical location decimation came out at the same time as the graph you refer to,and gives an idea of location and density change as well as actual vs. estimated temperatures.
http://i44.tinypic.com/23vjjug.jpg
Also check out E M Smiths site: http://chiefio.wordpress.com/2009/03/06/gistemp-start_here/
he covers the station migration in detail

Jim G
August 28, 2013 7:43 am

lsvalgaard says:
“My point is that Figure 5 is misleading and that it is deliberately so.”
This is something you have absolutely no way of knowing. Deliberate is a state of mind and your comment assigns your opinion as to another person’s motives. Very unscientific. Where is you “data” to back up your assumption?

more soylent green!
August 28, 2013 7:44 am

ferd berple says:
August 27, 2013 at 10:57 pm
9th or 10th warmest on record.out of 133 years of records? Not much of a record. Sounds like temps are going down while CO2 is going up. Otherwise 2012 should have been the number 1 hottest. Watts up with that?

133 years of global temperature data, according to ABC news. What’s the margin of error for the global temperature estimate for 1880? The data is junk. GIGO.

August 28, 2013 7:58 am

“So, how long and complete is the official record? A comprehensive study was produced by D’Aleo and Watts “Surface Temperature Records: Policy-Driven Deception?” detailing what was done. Two graphs from NASA GISS show the general pattern.
Figure 4 (Source NASA GISS)
There are fewer than 1000 stations with records of 100 years and most of them are severely compromised by growth of urban areas. Equally important, is the decline in the number of stations they consider suitable, especially after 1990. This pattern also partly explains why the current readings are high (Figure 5). Temperature increases as the number of stations used are reduced.”
Wrong.
This pattern does not explain what temperature increases.
This has been shown many times in many ways. Let me detail the ways it has been
Shown.
1. Adding back IN the stations that were dropped post 1990. The answer is the same
2. Restricting the entire data to only long records. the answer is the same.
3. Computing the answer with all available data, 40000 stations, the answer is the same
4. Using only rural stations. the answer is the same
5. using random samples of all 40000 stations. the answer is the same.
6. Computing the answer from unadjusted daily data using methods endorsed by skeptics. the answer is the same.
The great thermometer drop out “bias” is a myth. There are other issues that deserve attention, investigation, and skepticism. They are: microsite bias and [estimates of] UHI bias more accurately. But the thermometer drop out is not a valid concern. For people interested in doing science rather than spreading confusion, I’ll suggest that they focus on Anthony’s work.

Jeff Patterson
August 28, 2013 8:02 am

The media focus on records drives me crazy. One need only glance at the Volstok ice core data to see that the earth undergoes cyclical swings in temperature, that we are at present near the peak of one of these perfectly natural cycles and so of course one would expect to break non-proxied records that only go back 150 years. Breaking records says nothing about the trend nor about attribution.

August 28, 2013 8:07 am

@Steele 6:03 am
In short, don’t do this. Don’t do what? Don’t cut off data? That applies to the Y-axis, too.
Re: http://jonova.s3.amazonaws.com/graphs/temperature/number-%20temperature-stations-ghcn-1701-2008.gif
Let’s look at the date range from 1701 to 1840. There are very few changes in the number of thermometers, but relatively large growth rates in the number of thermometers. What is going on at 1740? Did we go from 1 thermometer to 3? Let’s not hide important changes in the number of thermometers when the numbers are small.
I submit, going from 10 to 20 thermometers is just as significant as going from 100 to 200 and 600 to 6000. The number of thermometers needs to be a log scale. What will be come clear is that changes in the mean temperature will correlate with changes in the number of thermometers. That is certainly one form of man-made temperature change, but not what is being peddled.
That Mean Temperature Graph, with Log scale Thermometer count is only good for saying that WHERE we measure the temperature changes Mean. Without doing much research, I will make the hypothesis that the temperature rise of 19th century has more to do with the rise of the British Empire and European colonization of Africa than any rise in world climate.
I confess a befuddlement in the lack of risk of the number of thermometers from 1940 to 1945. Consider the rise in the number of airplanes and airfields during that period. But then somehow there is a rise of 1500 thermometers between 1948 and 1951, where and why?

August 28, 2013 8:27 am

Thanks, Dr. Ball. Your clear words are welcome!

August 28, 2013 8:42 am

@Steven Mosher 7:58 am
<i.1. …The answer is the same
2. … the answer is the same.
3. … the answer is the same
4. … the answer is the same
5. … the answer is the same.
6. … the answer is the same.
Why do you write nonsense like this? Maybe someone can reach similar conclusions, but what ever the “answers” are from these different datasets, they are most certainly NOT “the same.”
Emotion is talking. Bluster is not science.
Links and numbers, please.

Pamela Gray
August 28, 2013 8:52 am

Measurement artifact is a common source of data compromise and should be suspected each and every time data is collected. Leif, you have spent many years on this very issue. That’s why calibration of methods and instruments is important. That’s why maintaining the integrity of the subject pool is important. That’s why maintaining the integrity of the control pool is important. Measurement artifact should ALWAYS be the first thing one examines, tests, and discusses, at considerable length, before drawing any other conclusions.
Any stream of weather sensor data before or after 1950 should first and foremost be considered compromised by measurement artifact. Why? See the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th sentence in the first of my paragraphs here. All three hallmarks of data compromise are present thus we can reasonably suspect the data we have. Measurement artifact is highly suspected.

Jeff Patterson
August 28, 2013 9:00 am

lsvalgaard says:
August 28, 2013 at 6:49 am
the number of stations increased form 1900 to 1950 and temperature did too. My point is that Figure 5 is misleading and that it is deliberately so.
==============
What is striking about figure 5 is not the trend but the step change that is coincident with the step change in the number of stations. I don’t think anyone is claiming that no trend exists, only that the effect is exaggerated by the loss of cold stations in the 90’s.

Pamela Gray
August 28, 2013 9:01 am

Steven, you have not done a complete review of station parameters that could account for a false positive rise (or decrease) in temperature. The data collected from your spread and decline of stations could have been affected by infusing the data with regional bias as well as by changes in latitude, longitude, and altitude of your subject pool. Agriculture research knows this well and they guard against it.

BBould
August 28, 2013 9:02 am

Steven Mosher: I was waiting for your comment, thanks!

Jimmy
August 28, 2013 9:10 am

Anyone know the source of Figure 6?

Pamela Gray
August 28, 2013 9:18 am

Steven: Example of regional bias: La Nina dominant years results in regional precipitation and temperature patterns to change in one part of the country and El Nino dominat years results in regional precipitation and temperature patterns to change in another part of the country. Changes also occur with altitude. As station increase and drop out occurs, you will introduce a bias that is an artifact of the measurement protocol. The country, the world for that matter, is not a flat piece of ground with stations evenly spread across it. Your data pool was not maintained. That you no longer suspect compromise in your data is a testament to your bias, not the thoroughness of your investigation into that matter. So no, I am not buying your assurances that the data is unaffected by the increase or the drop out of stations.
If agriculture products companies developed seed varieties with the same blind eye towards the lack of maintenance of seed plots that from the beginning were unevenly spread across the country, they would have gone bankrupt.

snotrocket
August 28, 2013 9:58 am

Fred: I hope I’m not being too simple here, but in order to test what effect the loss of Siberian stations had, then surely one could run the entire analysis minus the stations in contention?

J. Gary Fox
August 28, 2013 10:01 am

Excellent artice.
Since we always are concerned with accuracy at Wattsupwiththat, there is no written evidence that Disraeli ever said that phrase or anything close to it. While Mark Twain in 1906 popularized the phrase and its exact wording, attributing it to Disraeli, others before him have used some variations of the sequence of lies or fibs, but not the exact quote.
So I believe the exact wording of this popular quote was Twain’s.
Pseudepigraphy, the false use of more famous historical names to make your point or writings more significant, was not uncommon before modern times and the Internet. As, Winston Churchill told me when I had a chance to meet him as a youngster in England: “Gary, never, never give in to the urge, to promote your ideas through other famous men. And you may quote me on that!”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lies,_damned_lies,_and_statistics

eyesonu
August 28, 2013 10:03 am

vukcevic says:
August 28, 2013 at 1:00 am
ferd berple
Alexander Feht
………….
Siberia’s size and temperatures uncertainty may have profound influence on the ‘global temperature’ trends, but far less real relevance.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/69-71.htm
Was divergence of the SST and the Land temperatures during short period of just two years real ?
I am inclined to think that was unlikely.
=======================
Thank you for the link to your graph. Quite interesting as to the temperature divergence in such a short period of time.

Editor
August 28, 2013 10:26 am

In addition to all the Chiefio pages, the full report of “Surface Temperature Records: Policy-Driven Deception?” by D’Aleo and Watts (and thanks to Chiefio) is at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/01/26/new-paper-on-surface-temperature-records/ That is 209 pages long and covers many things.
Figure 5 is in D’Aleo & Watts and comes from Ross McKitrick’s http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/research/nvst.html and that refers to Joe D’Aleo who got the data from the NCDC.

Jay
August 28, 2013 10:55 am

My son bought a book for me at a used book shop. It is called Climate and Man, published by the US government (agriculture dept) in 1943. There are temperature tables for all states. It listed the average and extremes for frost dates in the fall and spring.
In northern Illinois where I live, 60 years later I still cannot plant tomatoes and peppers before Memorial day. Not much change here, no matter what “they” say, no warming to note.

Janice Moore
August 28, 2013 11:00 am

Gary Fox (re: 10:01 am)
LOL, loved your little admonition to us all. Your caution is a valid one, though I disagree to some extent, for, used judiciously, accurate quotes to make a point are a good thing; they aid in promoting truth by persuasion. Overall, NICELY and WITTILY PUT!
My favorite part: “…through other famous men… .”
*********************************************
GREAT DISCUSSION, above, you wonderful WUWT scholars and scientists. This site is SO COOL! (and, in the Northern hemisphere, cooler every month now, heh, heh)

Janice Moore
August 28, 2013 11:06 am

Nifty book find, Jay (10:55am). Now, of course (well, you set this up!) it is: “Climate of Mann.”
Can you still plant your peas on George Washington’s birthday as my great-grandfather did (in NW Washington State, USA) until he died in the 1950’s?

Janice Moore
August 28, 2013 11:08 am

No, Gary Fox. I’m sorry to have to tell you that I had never heard of you before this morning.
#(:))