Guest essay by Professor Philip Lloyd
People have the nasty habit of giving their opponents names. Those who are convinced that humans are wrecking the world by burning fossil fuels call those who don’t believe them “denialists.” It implies that they are close to the Holocaust deniers, and so are clearly beyond the pale.
I have come to the conclusion that they are wrong. The true denialists are those who believe in global warming, and who will go to any lengths to deny the evidence against that position.
For instance, the final draft of the Fifth Assessment Report of IPCC’s Working Group 1 concerns itself with observations of the climate and how it might change in future. Within minutes of it being released, skeptics had noted that a key figure, which compared predicted temperatures to measurements, had been drastically altered after the second draft had been approved.
In the second draft, the observations lay below the lowest range in the predictions, and seemed to be getting further from the predictions as time went by. In the final version, the measurements had been pushed up and the predictions had been pushed sideways and Voila! the revised measurements now fell within the range of the changed predictions. Really! Grown men did this! Consciously! And honestly thought that no-one would notice.
That’s the trouble with calling people names. Before you know where you are, you have convinced yourself that they are stupid, too.
And there were lots of similar examples. In the Summary for Policy Makers, the scientists had said “It is extremely likely that more than half of the observed increase in global average surface temperature from 1951 to 2010 was caused by the anthropogenic increase in greenhouse gas concentrations and other anthropogenic forcings together.” The politicians did not like this, so they added a juicy version “It is extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century.” Suddenly “more than half” had morphed into “dominant cause.” That way, no one might be left with the idea that the scientists had actually said there was a reasonable chance that quite a lot of the warming was entirely natural.
My own contribution concerned the warming of the upper troposphere. In the previous Assessment Report, the IPCC had said “Upper-tropospheric warming reaches a maximum in the tropics and is seen even in the early-century time period. The pattern is very similar over the three periods, consistent with the rapid adjustment of the atmosphere to the forcing. These changes are simulated with good consistency among the models.” They even had a figure (WG1 Figure 10.7) to show just what they meant:
These are sections through the atmosphere, from the South Pole on the left to the North Pole on the right. Instead of altitude they give the pressure in ‘hectoPascals” which is sort of unfamiliar to most people, but 400 is around 8km up and 200 around 12km. “Good consistency” is shown by the stippling – Stippling denotes regions where the multi-model ensemble mean divided by the multi-model standard deviation exceeds 1.0 (in magnitude) reads the caption.
You can clearly see the flattened ‘bubble’ getting hotter as the century goes by. The models predict that, in that region, the atmosphere should warm at about 0.6 degrees Centigrade per decade, far faster than on the surface of the Earth.
Weather balloons have flown into that region for 60 years. Airliners have carried commuters at those altitudes for 40. The temperature can be inferred from satellite measurements. None of these methods have managed to find any evidence of warming at anything like 0.6 degrees Centigrade per decade. The thermometers suggest slight cooling; the satellites slight warming.
This huge discrepancy between model and measurement has been the subject of intense discussion since the 2007 Assessment. When I reviewed the first draft of the latest report, I said “Heh! You haven’t mentioned the problem!” Along came the second draft – same difficulty. This time I read out to the IPCC the actual papers from the peer-reviewed literature that they should have been using: –
Allen, Robert J. and Sherwood, Steven C. (2008) Warming maximum in the tropical upper troposphere deduced from thermal winds. Nature Geosci 1 (6), 399- 403, http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ngeo208;
Lanzante, John R., Melissa Free, 2008: Comparison of Radiosonde and GCM Vertical Temperature Trend Profiles: Effects of Dataset Choice and Data Homogenization. J. Climate, 21, 5417–5435. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/2008JCLI2287.1;
Singer, S Fred, (2011). Lack of Consistency Between Modeled and Observed Temperature Trends Energy & Environment, 22, 375-406 DOI – 10.1260/0958-305X.22.4.375 ;
Douglass, D. H., Christy, J. R., Pearson, B. D. and Singer, S. F. (2008), A comparison of tropical temperature trends with model predictions. Int. J. Climatol., 28: 1693–1701. doi: 10.1002/joc.1651
Titchner, Holly A., P. W. Thorne, M. P. McCarthy, S. F. B. Tett, L. Haimberger, D. E. Parker, 2009: Critically Reassessing Tropospheric Temperature Trends from Radiosondes Using Realistic Validation Experiments. J. Climate, 22, 465–485. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/2008JCLI2419.1
(I mean, how pedantic do you have to be?)
I concluded my review saying “not even the satellite data comes near the predictions that were made in AR4 – the discrepancy between ALL the data and the models is wide. This debate MUST be reflected in the text.” So the IPCC had been told where to look – it is their job to review the peer-reviewed literature – and had been told that there was a debate because the measurements disagreed with the models. What did they do?
Nothing! Absolutely nothing (apart from quoting Titchner in a different context). The Summary for Policy Makers says:
“It is virtually certain that globally the troposphere has warmed since the mid-20th century. More complete observations allow greater confidence in estimates of tropospheric temperature changes in the extratropical Northern Hemisphere than elsewhere. There is medium confidence in the rate of warming and its vertical structure in the Northern Hemisphere extra-tropical troposphere and low confidence elsewhere.”
Section 2.4.4 says:
“In summary, assessment of the large body of studies comparing various long-term radiosonde and MSU products since AR4 is hampered by dataset version changes, and inherent data uncertainties. These factors substantially limit the ability to draw robust and consistent inferences from such studies about the true longterm trends or the value of different data products.”
So the data were apparently wrong!
There is a Table 2.8 headed:
“Trend estimates and 90% confidence intervals (Box 2.2) for radiosonde and MSU dataset global average values over the radiosonde (1958–2012) and satellite periods (1979–2012). LT indicates Lower Troposphere, MT indicates Mid Troposphere and LS indicates Lower Stratosphere”
Notice that? No Upper Troposphere – none, silence! Likewise, there is a Figure 2.24 which shows some Lower Troposphere trends, but is equally silent on the Upper Troposphere.
And that is the full extent of the discussion of the problem in the latest Report. The previous Assessment made a great song and dance about warming in the intratropical upper troposphere, the present Assessment completely avoids the issue.
Now you could well ask “So what?” The significance is that this goes to the heart of the physics on which all the models used to make predictions are based. If you have watched “The Great Global Warming Swindle,” you will have seen the critic, Richard Lindzen of MIT, speaking about how the Upper Troposphere should be warming. The physics of the atmosphere, as generally understood by all scientists of whatever global warming persuasion, require it should be warming faster than the surface of the earth. There is consensus – but the data show the consensus to be wrong.
Therefore the models are wrong. It only takes one clearcut observation to destroy the integrity of a scientific thesis. The physics underlying all the models is wrong – and we don’t know why. Moreover, the IPCC is demonstrably skirting the issue, telling us that “the observations substantially limit the ability to draw robust and consistent inferences.” What utter nonsense!
By any measure, the IPCC and its supporters are the true denialists, but it would be wrong of me to use such a word to describe them. So let’s just say they are attempting to deceive, and have done with it.
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Professor Philip Lloyd is from the Energy Institute, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town S.A.
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joeldshore argues
(1) that the adjustment to the IPCC SOD Figure 1.4 was made because “the temperature in 1990 was about 0.07 C above the trendline. So, if one wants to align the models and the data correctly, one does need to shift the models and data relative to each other so that the models are about 0.07 C higher than the data for that one year.” Fine, except that if the models had been moved higher, the discrepancy between the models and measurements would have been greater, not less as actually occurred. Is he claiming that the IPCC accidentally moved the models the wrong way?
(2) that the observations of warming in the intratropical upper troposphere “are far from clearcut in this case. That a better understanding of the discrepancy between models and data would be useful is undoubtedly true. That this shows the models to be wrong on this particular issue is not true.” The models, whose outputs are shown in FAR WG1 Figure 10.7, consistently predicted a warming of the order of 0.6 deg C per decade. Thus, in the 60-odd years of radiosonde data, there should have been a warming of about 3.6 deg C in total. Instead, there appears to have been a slight cooling. I would contend that a gap of this magnitude is unlikely to arise from experimental errors, particularly when the independent measurements from satellite data confirm the gap in most respects.
I did not employ “warmists” – indeed, the closing words of my contribution were carefully chosen to make it clear that I avoid labels as far as possible. It was necessary to use “denialists” in developing my argument, but that was because many of those who subscribe to the AGW thesis characterize me and other skeptics as “denialists”
_Jim said @ur momisugly November 10, 2013 at 11:14 am
I would not classify Gail’s posting that there are things she doesn’t know as a “hair-on-fire”-type posting. Rather the reverse. The Git knows, for example that he does not know how to fly a helicopter. Hence he is vanishingly unlikely to climb into one and attempt to fly it.
As for typos, some of the biggest are the hardest to spot. Like a headline in one inch type including “BMI” rather than “IBM”. Small ones can also be devastating, like an unfortunate hyphenation leading to the trashing of an entire print-run of a popular magazine.
In the instance of blog comments, we should all exercise The Principle of Charity. And yes, I overreact from time to time also.
Professor Lloyd:
You repeatedly state that the IPCC climate models make predictions. However, a “prediction” is an extrapolation to the outcome of an event and as no such events underlie these models there can be no predictions from them.
Worse than Hair On Fire…
On the use of the english language and the linguistic cesspits thereof.
The classic WW2 headline in an English regional rag.
“Eighth Army push bottles up Germans”
ROM,
The Brits aren’t the only ones who write bad headlines. From U.S. newspapers:
Include Your Children when Baking Cookies
Something Went Wrong in Jet Crash, Expert Says
Police Begin Campaign to Run Down Jaywalkers
Iraqi Head Seeks Arms
Prostitutes Appeal to Pope
Panda Mating Fails; Vetrinarian Takes Over
Teacher Strikes Idle Kids
Obama Wins on Budget, But More Lies Ahead
Plane too Close to Ground, Crash Probe Told
Miners Refuse to Work After Death
Two Sisters Reunited After 18 Years in Checkout Counter
If Strike Isn’t Settled Quickly, It May Last a While
Kids Make Nutritious Snacks
Chef Throws His Heart Into Helping Feed Needy
Local School Dropouts Cut in Half
☺
@dbstealey – when I had time, I use to run a weekly feature of headlines like that. My favorite (and one of the most frequent) was “_____ Greater than thought”, which I always found amusing – who is measuring thought?
Philip Lloyd says:
Sorry, I said “higher than the data” but meant “lower than the data”. Clearly, if the trendline lies below that one data point, the models have to be shifted lower in order to start on the trendline.
Your numbers sound too large here. I don’t think the models would have predicted 0.6 C per decade of warming over 60-years. There are, however, known to be some rather large artifacts in the radiosonde data due to changes in how they shield the thermometers over time, as I recall (better shielding leading to an artificial cooling artifact). The two different satellite data analyses still don’t even agree with each other very well for the tropics, let alone with the radiosondes. The disagreement was even worse until some errors were corrected a few years ago in the UAH analysis.
The corrections that have had to be made in the UAH analysis over the years is in fact evidence of how the data for the long term trends is subject to a multitude of errors and uncertainties. Note, however, that the temperature fluctuations over timescales of months to a couple of years are not subject to large errors…and these fluctuations show the expected tropical tropospheric amplification (i.e., the temperature fluctuations at altitude are larger than at the surface).
So, in other words, theory and data agree where the data is known to be reliable and only disagree in the multidecadal trends that are known to be subject to various artifacts. This is another reason why there is the belief that the data still has some remaining problems.
Glad to hear that you are consistent in your avoidance of labeling, but you might notice that others around here are not so.
OT, but having been at UCT and having taught a course in Marine Geology at the University of the Western Cape in the eighties, I’m intrigued. Is the Cape Peninsula University of Technology any relation?
joeldshore says “I said “higher than the data” but meant “lower than the data”. ” I’m glad he made that mistake, and not the IPCC. I still cannot follow the need to make any shift, however – let alone the need to cover such an important diagram with a mess of spaghetti.
He also said “Your numbers sound too large here.” Please just study the referenced Figure, which I reproduced in my essay. There is a scale at the bottom. 2011-2030 gives the hotspot at 1.5 to 2 deg C, 2080-2099 gives the hotspot at 4.5 to 5 deg C – and the hotspot is larger. 69 year gap means a difference of about 3 deg C. Do you really want me to believe that hundreds of measurements over 60 years with a thermometer really cannot detect a change of this magnitude. I may be a skeptic, but I also have some faith in actual measurements – particularly when confirmed by an indirect method.
For Keith’s benefit, the Cape Peninsula University of Technology grew out of the old Cape Technikon by the amalgamation of five separate campuses and is now the largest tertiary educational institution in the Western Cape.
Will the term ‘Deceivists’ ever be commonly used to describe these political scientists? Probably not…. It sounds just horrible in speech. What is better? Alarmists and Warmists doesn’t quite capture the deception and dishonesty they conceal.
Philip Lloyd,
Pay no attention to joelshore, who says:
“Glad to hear that you are consistent in your avoidance of labeling, but you might notice that others around here are not so.”
…this, from the guy who constantly labels those he disagrees with as “ideologues”.
The true Climate Change Deniers are the ones who deny that climate is always changing.
They point to a degree temperature increase since the Little Ice Age as something unusual and therefore man-made.
They see some tiny warming and slightly less extent of NH sea-ice since the cold 1960’s and 1970’s as unusual and therefore man-made.
They see the multi-kiloyear decreasing sea-levels finally slowing down and declare it unusual and therefore man-made.
Everything around them is seen as an anomaly because they believe we live on a static Earth, a veritable unchanging Garden of Eden that can only be spoiled by man. It is their religion. Eveything they see is evidence that their green world is under attack from man.
And all it takes to spread such a religion is a prophet like Mann sandpapering away the historical record of warm and cold periods and smoothing the past into a hockey stick for the true-believers to begin clamoring for Witch-dunkings and human sacrifices. All of the legendary excesses of the dark ages make perfect sense now, no more thumbing our noses at those uncivilized barbarians. We have the very same barbarians at our gate, right here, right now.
For them to turn the phrase “denier” around onto us is one of the greatest tricks the devil has yet accomplished.
@ur momisugly philjourdan
As a philosopher, I can think of nothing greater than thought 🙂
Philip Lloyd says:
Okay, let me give you an example: Suppose I told you that the climate models if used to predict the seasonal cycle here in Rochester predict that the temperature on July 15 will be on average about 25 C higher than on January 15. Suppose you try to use that information to see what the models predict the average temperature for July 15. However, suppose you use data for January 15, 1990 and it just so happens that January 15, 1990 was an unusually balmy day in Rochester where the temperature averaged about 13 C (rather than the more usual, say, -3 C. So, if you aligned the models starting on that day in 1990, you would incorrectly say that the models forecast an average July temperature in Rochester of 38 C…which would make Rochester summers hotter than the tropics.
The point is that we should not align the models to one particular day. We should align them to an average day in January if we want to see what they predict in July.
That’s the future. You can’t just extrapolate the future back into the past assuming that temperatures would expected to have risen as much in the last 69 years as they are expected to rise in the next 69 years! In fact, you can look in the IPCC AR4 report to get a REAL estimate of what the models predict for the rise in the upper tropospheric tropics temperatures for the 109 year period from 1890 to 1999 (http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/figure-9-1.html)…and the value looks to be somewhere between 0.8 and 1.0 C per century, or roughly 1 C for that whole 109 year period. This is a far cry from your estimate of 3.6 C over the last 69 years.
Joel
There are flaws in both your arguments. You have not explained why a key graph, that went unchanged through three scientific reviews, was changed at the last moment in the final draft that was not subjected to review.
The IPCC did the extrapolation into the future, not me. Then, as we know, the impact of CO2 drops off logarithmically with concentration, and the concentration has risen rapidly over the past 60 years. It follows that predictions of the future 60 years are likely to provide a conservative picture of what happened in the past 60.
All you have succeeded in doing in pointing to Fig 9.1 is to show that the IPCC models are completely inconsistent. Moreover, you quote the past 109 years, overlooking the fact that the growth of CO2 in the atmosphere has been highly non-linear, so we can essentially neglect any impact pre 1950. Then your estimate for the upper atmosphere warming is so close to the surface warming, that you have effectively demonstrated that the thesis, that the upper intratropical troposphere should be warming much faster than the surface, is indeed wrong. I think my classical education would indicate I should say QED at this point.
No, it does not follow at all. The CO2 concentration has been rising (and under the scenerios in question continues to rise) exponentially from the pre-industrial concentration. Under such a situation, it is absolutely not correct to claim that the predictions of the future 60 years provide a conservative picture of what happened in the last 60. Not even close. [Note that some people have claimed that an exponential rise in concentration and a logarithmic dependence on temperature rise on concentration means that the dependence of temperature rise on time should be linear because log and exp are inverse functions. However, that exponential rise is really of the form C = C_0 + C_1*exp(A*t) where C_0 is the preindustrial concentration and that baseline means that in fact the dependence of temperature on time will be considerably faster than linear, only approaching linearity when the CO2 concentration is much (e.g., several times) greater than the preindustrial concentration.]
Irrelevant. Even if you assume all of that ~1 C temperature increase in the upper troposphere should have occurred after 1950, it is still WAY smaller than the 3.6 C that you claimed.
Speaking of inconsistent arguments, we are talking here of the warming predicted by the models and you are the one that is claiming that the models predict much more warming at altitude than at the surface and that this is inconsistent with observations that show otherwise. So, in fact, if it turns out that the models do not predict the intratropical troposphere to be increasing much faster than the surface, then there is no inconsistency with those observations.
Just to be help things along, I’ll help explain this apparent paradox: The models predict a significant difference between the temperature rise at the surface and at altitude in the tropics. However, they also predict that the surface temperatures warm less in the tropics than outside of the tropics. So, if you compare the GLOBAL surface temperature rise to the temperature rise at altitude just in the tropics, the difference between them is not so great.
Waving your hands around widely and raising irrelevant objections does not demonstrate anything except that you would rather engage in this sort of argumentation instead of just simply admitting that your claim that the models say the tropical tropospheric temperatures should have risen by 3.6 C is nowhere even close to accurate.