Dodgy statistics and IPCC Assessment Reports

Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

In the 19th century, British Prime Ministers used to say there were “lies, damned lies, and statistics”. In the 21st century, we may say there are frauds, serious frauds, and IPCC Assessment Reports.

Recall, for instance, the notorious graph in the Fourth Assessment Report that falsely indicated that the rate of global warming is accelerating and we are to blame. Using the same statistical dodge, one can show that a sine-wave has a rising trend.

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In the Fifth Assessment Report, the IPCC still cannot bring itself to behave. My expert review of an earlier draft of that report opened with these words:

“To restore some link between IPCC reports and observed reality, the report must address – but does not at present address – the now-pressing question why the key prediction of warming in earlier IPCC reports have proven to be significant exaggerations. The IPCC’s credibility has already been damaged by its premature adoption and subsequent hasty abandonment of the now-discredited “hockey-stick” graph as its logo; by its rewriting its Second Assessment Report after submission of the scientists’ final draft, to state the opposite of their finding that no discernible human influence on climate is detectable; by its declaration that all Himalayan ice would be gone in 25 years; and by its use of a dishonest statistical technique in 2007 falsely to suggest that the rate of global warming is accelerating. But the central damage to its credibility arises from the absence of anything like the warming it had predicted.”

The IPCC have indeed addressed The Pause. But they have addressed it by using statistical prestidigitation to air-brush it out. As Bob Tisdale has pointed out, the very first graphs the reader of the Summary for Policymakers will see are in Figure SPM.1, which consists of three panels. Each of these panels exploits bogus statistical techniques to vanish the pause.

Here is what They did and how They did it.

The first of the three panels shows the global instrumental surface temperature record since 1850:

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And what is wrong with that? It looks innocuous enough, but a mathematician would take one look at it and sniff. He would see two things obviously wrong with drawing any conclusion about dangerously-rising 20th-century temperatures from this graph.

First, there is the aspect-ratio dodge. For the x axis is in years and the y axis is in Celsius degrees of temperature change. One can choose any aspect ratio one wants. To make 20th-century global warming look worse, just stretch the graph northwards.

Not all climate extremists know that. In a debate with me on Roy Green’s radio show in Canada a few years ago, one of the pointy-heads at TheSmugBlog asked the audience, with that earnest desperation in his voice that is mandatory, “But don’t you see how serious it is that global temperatures are rising at an angle of 45 degrees?”

I had to explain to the poor sap, as gently as I could, that degrees of arc and degrees of temperature change are clean different things.

But it is Dick Lindzen, whose vast experience and profound knowledge allows him to put the climate scare into perspective as no other can, who has best illustrated the insignificance of 20th-century global warming.

His local paper, the Boston Globe, prints the previous month’s temperature movements in the city. He has superimposed on that record an orange band that shows the entire warming of 0.75 Cº over the 20th century.

Even allowing for the fact that a global annual average will change less than a regional monthly one, it is difficult to look at Dick Lindzen’s orange band and draw the conclusion that 20th century global warming was alarmingly beyond the bounds of natural variability.

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The second statistical dodge in the IPCC’s first panel is the error-bars dodge. If you look carefully at the error-bars in the IPCC’s graph, you will see that they are absent. Let us remedy that absence:

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Even today, the combined measurement, coverage, and bias uncertainties in the global terrestrial data are ±0.15 Cº. The uncertainties were far larger in the 19th century. Notice also how much less drastic and exciting the graph looks once the 2 σ uncertainty bounds are plotted.

There is a third dodge that is not directly evident from looking at the graph itself. All around the world the record-keepers have been rewriting the temperatures in the early 20th century to push them downward, so as to make the rate of warming over the century seem a great deal steeper than it was. Here, for instance, is New Zealand:

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And Darwin Airport, Australia:

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And the U.S. Historical Climate Network, before and after adjustment (this example and the next two are thanks to the vigilant Steven Goddard):

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And the GISS record at Reykjavik, Iceland, before (left) and after adjustment (right):

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And Santa Rosa, CA, this time with the trend-line added:

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The effect of all these tamperings is to make it look as though there was more global warming in the 20th century than there was. Fortunately, there is not so much scope for the compilers of the terrestrial temperature records to tamper with what has happened since 1979, because the watching satellites now provide an independent record of global temperature change.

So to the second of the three mendacious panels in Figure SPM.1:

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This graph is an illustration of a meme that has become a favorite with the apologists for Apocalypse: the most recent decade was warmer than earlier decades, so global warming is still getting worse (for the theology of the New Religion, standing common sense on its head, is that warmer weather is worse than cooler).

The priceless advantage of taking decadal averages, if one wants to magic the Pause away, is that it wipes out the entire trend of the most recent decade. One can dock off a further two years if, as here, one uses the decades 1991-2000, 2001-2010 etc. rather than 1993-2002, 2003-2012 etc. Finally, using decades docks off all the months of the current year. So this statistical dodge neatly erases the past 12 years 8 months of the Pause.

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And, by what is perhaps more than a coincidence, the length of the Pause, taken as the longest period exhibiting a zero least-squares linear-regression trend on the mean of the monthly global mean surface temperature anomalies on the three terrestrial datasets, is – er – precisely 12 years 8 months.

There is another and more subtle dodge here. As we saw in the earlier graph of the uncertainties in the HadCRUt4 global temperature dataset, the error bars narrow toward the present. The way the IPCC has presented the decadal blocks on the graph exploits this to make it seem that the blocks in the 1970s, 80s, 90s, and noughties are much further apart than those in the 1910s, 20s, 30s, and 40s, implying without quite saying so that the rate of warming over the four most recent decades on the graph was significantly greater than the warming earlier in the 20th century.

Dick Lindzen, however, uses a graph that shows how little difference there is between the earlier and later periods of warming, even though it was only in the later period that we could have exercised much influence.

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One panel shows the global temperature anomalies from 1895-1946. The other shows the anomalies from 1957-2008. Both cover 52 years. Both are plotted to an identical scale. Dick Lindzen asks his audiences whether they can tell which panel covers which period. It is not at all easy to tell.

Which brings us to the third panel. Here, the dodge is one of the newest in the arsenal of statistical shiftinesses on which the IPCC draws with such disfiguring frequency and relish. It is the use of colors, and bright ones at that, to try to suggest that the mild and beneficial global warming of the 20th century was grievous and alarmingly damaging.

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And here the IPCC will find that it has made a mistake. Previously it has chiefly used bright colors in the red scale to indicate predictions of future planetary overheating. However, most people, on looking about them, will see remarkably little change as a result of 100 years’ warming. The trees are greener; the deserts have shrunk by quite a bit (the Sahara by 300,000 sq. km in 30 years); sea level is 8 inches higher; and that’s it.

Recoloring the graph in neutral tones would have been more scientifically adult:

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Does the Earth really look that much different as a result of 0.7 Cº global warming over 100 years? Not really. Let us end with a God’s-eye view of the planet He has given us. Really, our stewardship has not left it in too much of a mess.

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Yet.

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Jean Parisot
September 17, 2013 4:42 pm

When the adjustments to the historical record are made – where is the meta-data documenting the rationale for the change, who did it, what the raw data was, etc. recorded?

milodonharlani
September 17, 2013 4:42 pm

rgbatduke says:
September 17, 2013 at 1:39 pm
How about making the baseline temperature for the anomaly the median temperature for the Holocene, or at least the past 8200 years since the last glacial melt event, since its supposedly climate that’s of interest, not WX?
Doing so would show how remarkably cool & equable our current interglacial has been, compared to previous ones.

Bill H
September 17, 2013 5:02 pm

SO… Essentially the powers that be have adjusted and manipulated the data sets but with other data available they are now caught in a lie and are using high school statistical math parlor tricks in an effort to gain a “the world is burning” emotional response.
And people wonder why we distrust government and now scientists who work for government…

Latitude
September 17, 2013 5:19 pm

I don’t think I would call it a sine-wave…
…just herky jerky jumps up and down
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/09/hockey-stick-observed-in-noaa-ice-core-data/

R. de Haan
September 17, 2013 5:33 pm

Ron Scubadiver says:
September 17, 2013 at 12:06 pm
So why is the world spending trillions on attempts to reduce CO2 emissions? Why does Obama think regulating CO2 is so important that he will go it alone without Congress while equating CO2 to Arsenic and Lead?”
Read UN Agenda 21 and every chapter of http://green-agenda.com

September 17, 2013 6:21 pm

rgbatduke & Monckton of Brenchley,

The IPCC is a political UN affiliation. Their gross misuse of statistics that you argue (forcefully) they have done is reprehensible, but given the nature of the UN perhaps its not entirely unexpected.
Horrific though is the apparent complicity in the IPCC behavior of virtually every major scientific academy and institute in Europe / US by their open endorsing and praising of the IPCC behavior.
There is a profound avoidance of verification efforts by those scientific academies and institutes. avoidance I cannot see how to avoid that conclusion.
John

Barry Klinger
September 17, 2013 6:22 pm

How about 7.9F, 3.2F, and 3.5F? Those temperature differences also wouldn’t look too significant on a graph of daily Boston temperatures, but they represent the annual avg difference between Charleston SC and Washington DC, Washington and New York City, and NY and Boston, respectively. All cities with noticeably different climates even though their temperature ranges overlap significantly. So maybe, just possibly, small differences in climatological averages are more consequential than in day-to-day variations?
The main argument of this article seems to be that many graphical choices such as aspect ratio and color are arbitrary. Then the article goes on to say that any graphical choice that emphasizes global warming is wrong and any one that de emphasizes is right! Actually for any politically-neutral graph I make at work, I would always boost the aspect ratio and color contrast so that the reader can see the feature I am graphing. This seems rather obvious. We could graph temperature difference between Montreal and Miami on a 0-300 K temperature scale and it would give everyone a headache squinting at it but it wouldn’t be the best way to show the temperature.
[City temperatures are from the city wikipedia entries, avg of avg daily high and avg daily low for each, converted from C to F]

Goldie
September 17, 2013 6:28 pm

For those who still don’t quite get it:
The first graph uses an inappropriate device to suggest that the planet has warmed much more than it actually has. It ignores the fact that this + or minus amount is actually in the region of 1% of the planetary mean temperature and therefore getting close to the margins of error – information is sacrificed to achieve visual impact.
The second graph simply obliterates the pause by using decadal temperatures and then achieves visual impact at the expense of information in the same way that the first graph does.
The third graph has bright red at 1 degree centigrade (no timescale on the graph so I don’t know over what period). No serious commentator has sought to suggest that a warming amount of 1 degree is likely to lead to serious impacts and yet the colour red is always used for danger – unless this is the future plan of the marxists.
To the casual reader these graphs convey a not very subtle implied message, which is difficult to override even when one has scientific training and chooses to take a moment to see what the graph is really saying. What the graph is really saying and the message that the IPCC is seeking to convey appear to be divergent.

Goldie
September 17, 2013 6:36 pm

To follow up on my previous comment looking at graph 3 it is clear that the commentators have sought to may the issue black and white (or blue [cooler] and red [warmer] – there is not specific value judgement in regards to the colour and yet there should be. One might have added a third colour (green) to provide a consideration of what the IPCC considers the normal or natural range of variability. However, this would have lost the impact and perhaps that is why it was omitted.

milodonharlani
September 17, 2013 6:41 pm

Latitude says:
September 17, 2013 at 5:19 pm
I don’t think I would call it a sine-wave…
…just herky jerky jumps up and down
——————-

Follow the Money
September 17, 2013 7:05 pm

” In the 21st century, we may say there are frauds, serious frauds, and IPCC Assessment Reports.
Can I suggest an addition? “In the 21st century, we may say there are frauds, serious frauds, IPCC Assessment Reports, and IPCC Executive Summaries
Arguably the Executive Summaries are just part of the now traditional IPCC B.S., but I think they deserve special separate attention as especially devious takes on the Reports’ own tricks and gimmicks.

milodonharlani
September 17, 2013 7:06 pm

Rexx Vernon Shelton says:
September 17, 2013 at 3:43 pm
Please note that the esteemed on this blog Family Courtney is implicated in Twain’s source for the famous quotation:
Further background on this quote is provided by Stephen Goranson who writes on the Mark Twain Forum in a post dated 31 July 2002: Twain’s Autobiography attribution of a remark about lies and statistics to Disraeli is generally not accepted. Evidence is now available to conclude that the phrase originally appeared in 1895 in an article by Leonard H. Courtney. So Disraeli is not the source, nor any pre-1895 person; merely Courtney. The 1895 article is now available online at: http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/maths/histstat/lies.htm Courtney may have read Carlyle on statistics (also quoted at this site); certainly, misuse of statistics was complained about before 1895.

david eisenstadt
September 17, 2013 7:41 pm

rgbatduke says:
September 17, 2013 at 1:39 pm…….
your students are very lucky.

Grant
September 17, 2013 7:46 pm

I’ve been following this blog a long time but I still don’t know ( please forgive me) but does GISS or Hadcut or whoever explained why early 20th century temps were adjusted downward? Is there a published basis by which they make and justify these adjustments?
An inquiring mind wants to know.

September 17, 2013 7:47 pm

rgbatduke says:
September 17, 2013 at 1:39 pm
(This and a lot more good stuff)
“Dick Lindzen’s graph above already suffices to show, even over the tiny time interval plotted, that late 20th century warming is not “unprecedented” or impossible to explain with natural variation, it almost exactly matches the non-anthropogenic warming of the first half of the 20th century.”
That it almost exactly matches the non-anthropogenic warming of the first half… is a clear falsification of the CAGW theory all by itself. If the rise in CO2 since 1950 has been responsible for the “alarming” late century warming, then the slope of the decline 1950 to ~1979 should be shallower than the late 19th Cent- early 20th Cent. cooling trend and the following warming trend from 1979 should rise more steeply than its counterpart after ~1910 to reflect the anthropo component. It doesn’t.

September 17, 2013 8:03 pm

Moreover, following on the comment above, Even though the record has been jiggered down in its first half and raised somewhat up to about ~2000 (they daren’t go too far with this because the satellites are watching the recent temperatures) the trends of cooling and warming are the same. Shearing the record downward from the early 40s to push 1937 down below 1998 to create a new record should have, in fact, made the the earlier slopes gentler – meaning that, unjiggered, the early warming slope was steeper than the later one.

September 17, 2013 9:20 pm

Among the statistical dodges of the IPCC is one that this agency shares with Mr. Monckton. This is to disregard the non-existence in the various IPCC assessment reports of the events underlying the IPCC climate models. In the absence of these events, there is no such thing as mathematical statistics.

tom0mason
September 17, 2013 9:36 pm

I would still like to know if the UN-IPCC has managed to extract any man-made warming signature from the natural climate variation. If so how? I trust their method can be practically demonstrated and replicated by any competent university. Or have they just played more computer model games?

Richard D
September 17, 2013 9:36 pm

FYI, for anyone wondering, Who is Dick Lindzen?
Lindzen, Richard S: Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, MIT. “Prof. Lindzen is a recipient of the AMS’s Meisinger, and Charney Awards, the AGU’s Macelwane Medal, and the Leo Huss Walin Prize. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters, and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences, the American Geophysical Union and the American Meteorological Society. He is a corresponding member of the NAS Committee on Human Rights, and has been a member of the NRC Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate and the Council of the AMS. He has also been a consultant to the Global Modeling and Simulation Group at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, and a Distinguished Visiting Scientist at California Institute of Technology’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. (Ph.D., ’64, S.M., ’61, A.B., ’60, Harvard University)
http://www-eaps.mit.edu/faculty/lindzen.htm

philincalifornia
September 17, 2013 10:23 pm

david eisenstadt says:
September 17, 2013 at 7:41 pm
rgbatduke says:
September 17, 2013 at 1:39 pm…….
your students are very lucky.
+++++++++++++++++++++++
We’re his students too, and yes we are.

Jordan
September 18, 2013 12:06 am

Thank you very much Werner. Much appreciated.

September 18, 2013 1:42 am

Great stuff! EU policy on climate change is right even if science was wrong, says commissioner.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/climatechange/10313261/EU-policy-on-climate-change-is-right-even-if-science-was-wrong-says-commissioner.html
Connie Hedegaard’s comments come as the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is expected to admit that previous scientific predictions for global warming and the effects of carbon emissions have been proved to be inaccurate.
Bjorn Lomborg, a professor at the Copenhagen business school and the author of Cool it, a book arguing that too much climate change policy is based on scaremongering, accused the commissioner of being “both callous and wrong”.
“EU climate policies have directly increased energy costs and caused more energy poverty – 300,000 households in Germany lost their power last year because they couldn’t pay the bills, and millions are energy poor in the UK. EU climate policies will cost £174 billion annually by 2020, the EU commissioner seems to suggest wasting £174 billion is no problem,” he said.

September 18, 2013 2:11 am

Mr. Oldberg, who whines that there are no events in the climate and that, therefore, there is no such thing as statistics, is – as usual – wasting his breath and everyone else’s time. An event is that which has happened. A predicted event is that which has not yet happened but is forecast. If the predicted event does not happen, then the prediction was incorrect. The IPCC has predicted that global temperature would have risen by now at a rate of 0.35 Celsius/decade (in its 1990 report) and 0.2 Celsius/decade (in its 2007 report), but warming has actually occurred since 1990 at less than 0.12 Celsius/decade. The predicted event, therefore, did not occur and the IPCC was incorrect. It is as simple as that. The vaunted “consensus” (to the extent that it ever existed in the first place) was wrong. Get over it.

Sasha
September 18, 2013 2:22 am

Check this out :
Scientists call for overhaul of UN ‘blockbuster’ climate reports
As the IPCC prepares for its next major assessment, experts and governments propose more targeted and frequent studies
4 September 2013
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/sep/04/scientists-overhaul-un-climate-report-ipcc?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487
I think myself that the IPCC has outgrown its usefulness in the way in which it does things,” said Kevin Trenberth, a climate scientist at the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in Colorado.
Andrew Weaver, a lead IPCC author and a Green party leader who earlier this year was elected to the British Columbia legislature, agreed it was time to shift away from the blockbuster style of reports.
The scientists said the science on the causes of climate change and its global effects was already well-established. Given the rate and extent of climate change, it would be more useful to governments which rely on the IPCC reports to have scientists working on more targeted reports on specific topics, which would be delivered every year or two.
“My own view is that … it would be healthy for the IPCC to focus on regional impacts and to focus on individual phenomena rather than the big global thing. The way to go forward would be to pick an issue and to work together in an interdisciplinary way,” Weaver said.
And of course, as it’s the Guardian
“Comments for this discussion are now closed.”

Snotrocket
September 18, 2013 2:29 am

CM says:

“…the deserts have shrunk by quite a bit (the Sahara by 300,000 sq. km in 30 years).”

Now that is an interesting stat to put against ‘the ice-cap is melting!’ meme.