Global warming beater Justin Gillis of the New York Times had an article yesterday describing a new paper in the current issue of Nature magazine, the point of which seems to be scaring people with alarming global warming statistics.
Gillis’ article “By 2047, Coldest Years May Be Warmer Than Hottest in Past,” describes the results of a class-project-cum-Nature-article headed by Camille Mora from the University of Hawaii at Manoa (please, no puns). The class assignment was to identify the year for each spot on the globe in which all future years were, according to climate model projections, warmer as a result of greenhouse gas emissions than the warmest year simulated by the models during the historical period 1860 to 2005. Mora and students termed this pivotal year the “climate departure.”
This work is significant, according to Gillis, because:
Thousands of scientific papers have been published about the model results, but the students identified one area of analysis that was missing. The results are usually reported as average temperature changes across the planet. But that gives little sense of how the temperature changes in specific places might compare with historical norms. “We wanted to give people a really relatable way to understand climate,” said Abby G. Frazier, a doctoral candidate in geography.
Perhaps Dr. Mora should have injected a little climate-science history in this class.
Looking at the time that a human climate signal will rise above the background noise is not particularly a novel concept. It’s commonplace. We would guess that a signal-to-noise ratio was probably present in the first papers describing the performance and output of the very first climate models.
After all, without such information it is impossible to put absolute changes in perspective. Some measure of the statistical significance of climate change has been present in every climate assessment report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change dating back to 1990.
In our presentation to the Science Policy Conference of the American Geophysical Union this summer, we even included a table listing the number of years into the future it would be before projected changes in precipitation across the U.S. rose above the level of nature variability. We guess we just didn’t give that year a catchy enough name like “climate departure,” because our results didn’t capture the attention of the press (nor were they very frightening).
But Gillis does manage to carve some new, scary Jack-o-Lanterns from the Mora study.
Here is his lead paragraph:
If greenhouse emissions continue their steady escalation, temperatures across most of the earth will rise to levels with no recorded precedent by the middle of this century, researchers said Wednesday.
Uh, correct us if we are wrong, but we already thought that global temperatures were reported to be at unprecedented levels in recorded history. According to the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report:
Each of the last three decades has been successively warmer at the Earth’s surface than any preceding decade since 1850.
So, is this recycled news, or is the new paper saying that we have to wait until 2047 for that to happen? Well, whatever, it sounds B-A-D.
Or how about this one:
“Go back in your life to think about the hottest, most traumatic event you have experienced,” Dr. Mora said in an interview. “What we’re saying is that very soon, that event is going to become the norm.”
Hot Tub Time Machine came immediately to mind, but Gillis provided another scenario:
With the technique the Mora group used, it is possible to specify climate departure dates for individual cities. Under high emissions, climate departure for New York City will come in 2047, the paper found, plus or minus the five-year margin of error.
How scared should you be about passing the date of “climate departure”?
Not at all.
In Figure 1, we show the complete observed (rather than modeled) history of the annual average temperature from New York City’s Central Park, spanning from 1869 through 2012.

Figure 1. Annual average temperature from New York’s Central Park, 1869-2012 (data from the New York City Office of the National Weather Service).
Here are some not-so-scary facts, that by others would be passed off as horrors:
● The average temperature in Central Park for the past 83 years (since 1930) (54.8°F) is greater than the warmest year during the first 39 years of the record (1869-1907) (54.7°F).
● There has only been one year in the last 20 years of the record that was colder (by just 0.2°F) than the warmest year during the first twenty years of record.
So essentially, New York City has already reached its “climate departure” date and no one noticed.
By his own estimation, the older author of this blog post (PJM) has lived through nine environmental ends-of-the-words-as-we-know-it. What’s new here?
Whether the climate departure date in New York was reached as a result of the heat of urbanization, natural climate variability, human-induced global warming, or the likely combination of all three, its passage is of virtually no practical significance. Yes, it is warmer now that it was 150 years ago.
As concerned as readers of the New York Times might be, they are living twice as long as they did back then, and, in Manhattan, are richer than Croesus.
Science/science policy expert Roger Pielke Jr. put the new Mora article in perspective (although not in the Justin Gillis article, but rather at NBCNews.com):
But trying to compel action with a stark warning about a future that is coming regardless of what efforts are taken to curb greenhouse gas emissions may be misguided, according to Roger Pielke Jr., a climate policy analyst at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
“It is better to design policies that have short-term benefits” such as jobs, energy access or less pollution “which can also address the longer-term challenge of accumulating (carbon dioxide) in the atmosphere,” he said. “That is a policy-design problem that we have yet to figure out, and which does not involve trying to scare the public into action.”
But what attention would come to climate change if the researchers, the media, and the government weren’t complicit in trying to scare people into giving up some of their freedoms to try to mitigate it?
Trick or treat? Happy Halloween!
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Global Science Report is a feature from the Center for the Study of Science, where we highlight one or two important new items in the scientific literature or the popular media. For broader and more technical perspectives, consult our monthly “Current Wisdom.”
Kevin M, Brian H:
I think you’ll find that O’Toole’s Corollary is more apposite.
“According to the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report:” “Each of the last three decades has been successively warmer at the Earth’s surface than any preceding decade since 1850.”
Did they really just write that the 1850s are the hottest decade on record?
WOW.
Truly a pathetic article by Gillis which is par for the course for him but Borenstein’s article for AP was even more pathetic, also par for the course. As for the study, three thoughts: They made predictions which can (and should) be verified, second, what would their study show for non-urban sites and lastly, they used models – ’nuff said.
SyFyGate!
Somebody hacked into their computers and stole all the rejected scripts!
Good. We need Fat Boys to make our flesh creep. Without them, how will we know we are doomed?
Dear Tom J,
I’m so glad. It was your wonderfully candid, thoughtful, comment at 11:02am today that inspired me to find something to make you laugh (laughter is the best medicine). I like you (at least, from what I know of you from your WUWT comments). I want you to BE HERE waaay past 2017.
I hope that tomorrow (10/11) is a better day. Take care.
And….
Enjoy! #(:))
lol, Physics Major, this IS on topic — we’re dealing with a real comedy routine with those AGW clowns!
…..who are going the wrong way….
and who would NEVER have had the real scientist ingenuity Bill Cosby demonstrated when he solved this problem… .
LOL — the Fantasy Science Club “scientists” would have run their breakfast model a few times, printed out the results, handed them to their kids and said, “Here. Eat this. The model says it’s good for you.”
HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
(a little early, but, this is a discussion about models, so, like that matters)
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/09/dr-roy-spencers-ill-considered-comments-on-citizen-science/#comment-1442994
I wrote yesterday
“The obvious corruption of these scientific journals, through scientist-activist misbehaviour, is apparent from the ClimateGate emails, the utter screed that had been published on climate science in once-respected journals, and the alarmist nonsense that appears in the IPCC reports, particularly the SPM’s.”
I actually cited Science and Nature in the above sentence before editing it out, thinking I was being too hard on these particular journals, once among the most respected scientific publications in the world.
Then out comes this screed from Hawaii, published in Nature! How the mighty have fallen.
Jesus wept.
More guff from the High Pressure (no pun) sales department then.
No science, just wind.
And, as you recall, no doubt, Allan MacRae (good observation above, thanks for sharing, here), Jesus wept at distress of his grieving friends.
So, too, he likely weeps at the distress of all of us in the side of science truth. It is also probable that he wept at the thought of bringing Lazarus back from paradise into a world where (for there is, truly, “nothing new under the sun”) there were “scientist-activist(s)” daily plotting and promulgating their dirty deeds. Since Lazarus’ resurrection was real data directly threatening their control over the people, from that day on, there was a contract out on him. If Lazarus had gone to Hamburg to make a speech, I’ll bet they’d have done even more than cancel his non-refundable return plane ticket to Australia… .
But, for you and me, Mr. MacRae, there is hope!
“‘Take heart,'” Jesus said, “‘I have overcome the world.'”
All will be well.
Well, they’re university students, if they were any younger I’d consider this child abuse. Unfortunately, universities will continue to churn out the kind of highly educated fools they always have. In my professional life I’ve never yet hired a degreed Computer Science grad that had a clue about anything. They’re so busy concentrating on how much they get paid that they don’t have time to actually be productive or write coherent code. I can’t see climate “science” being any different.
Speaking of climate departures, yesterday evening we had a heavy, slow moving storm come through Calgary. In the city itself it was rainy and several degrees C above freezing However, I went for a drive and practically at city limits the rain turned to snow. Eventually I got to a place on the highway where there was about 6 inches of heavy, wet slush, and people were having difficulty getting up a gentle rise. Several cars were in the ditch. Luckily I just got new tires last week and was able to just drive normally.
It is a bit early for that sort of thing.
A case of cherry picking. I am sure the whole world has experienced “Climate departure” if we compare the last century to the last full Ice Age. All that means is that the planet is not as cold as it once was.
But then one has to ask – what temperature SHOULD it be? I see 2 answers to that question.
#1 – What the “normal” temperature of the planet may be given the averaging of its biological history (say in the last 600 million years)
#2 – What is best for homosapiens
I do not pretend to know the answers to either (nor is the former even discernible to any degree of accuracy currently being thrown about). But before we start jumping off cliffs in Norway in step with their indigenous rodents, I would think we would want to find out.
The warmist priests have learned their 10 year prophesies are too short leading to failure and doubt of their prescience. No doubt they have seen their 100 year projections of catastrophe proven futile in the modern world–too long for the attention span.
Why not try 33 1/3 years? A prediction that won’t be proven totally wrong short term as ALL 10 year scenarios have, and doesn’t suffer from future fatigue as do ALL their “by the year 2100” lies have.
I’m sure our all knowing government will jump at the chance to continue funding this religion keeping their eye on the goal of taxing carbon.
Exactly how many meteorological temperature stations were there in the world between 1860 and 1910? Exactly how many of them were in the Southern Hemisphere?
When you find out you will see that the temperatures at that time were anything but ‘Global’.
Well, I suppose that’s one way to exclude the hot decades of the 30s and 40s since most people (and students) alive today were not back then.
Me, the hottest was was hiking up Mt Greylock, the tallest mountain in Massachusetts, during the 1970s heat wave that brought the all record high for the state, 105°F or something like that. Fortunately it wasn’t too traumatic, as my friends announced it would be stupid the hike the mountain that day. So we started around midnight and watched the hazy sunrise from the top.
The guy who had set up his tent in the middle of the trail wasn’t too appreciative when his dog started barking at us as we went by at 0300.
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I’ve been in Calgary a few times for computer training in Novembers and a March. I’ve always wondered how they got that almost-pea gravel they spread around on the roads out of the storm sewers. Do they have catch basins that they pump out in the spring?
From what I can find, Kingston Jamaica is warming at a rate of 0.1C/decade over the last 20 years. I fail to see how that is going to result in catastrophic warming in the next 20 years or less. I have a feeling that the authors of this paper were so busy looking at their computer models that they failed to look at the actual data.
Hartman’s Law of Prescriptivist Retaliation: “any article or statement about correct grammar, punctuation, or spelling is bound to contain at least one eror”.
(re: Roger Knights at 9:26pm)
Or, “pride cometh before a fall.”
Thanks for sharing that pithy and apropos quot.
Well at least storm Phailin missed Bangladesh this time… It’s a crap shoot where these storms hit…just like Sandy and Katrina…,but it’s Climate Change for the folks where it does hit…
[SNIP a valid email is required to comment here anon@anonymou.se doesn’t cut it. Unless you use a valid email address your comments will not be published per policy – mod]
“Dr. Mora is not a climate scientist; rather he is a specialist in using large sets of data to illuminate environmental issues.”
I have been told by warmist after warmist after warmist that only climate scientists are qualified to speak about the climate. But, of course, now they are latching onto this.
timbrom;
Did you miss the spelling of “Muphry’s”? What could be more apposite?