Earth to Lovejoy: 0.9 C° in a century is not 'huge'

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Pseudo-science by press release has become the norm among the Forces of Darkness. With as much fanfare as McGill University could muster, the recent paper by Professor Lovejoy was promoted via a typically head-banging instance of the genre.

The gushingly flatulent halation of the university PR-wallahs is typical of the verbal diarrhea habitual among practitioners of the Dark Arts. The ipsissima verba of Lovejoy himself in the press release are of particular interest.

Here is what he is quoted as saying:

“We’ve had a fluctuation in average temperature that’s just huge since 1880 – on the order of about 0.9 degrees Celsius. This study shows that the odds of that being caused by natural fluctuations are less than one in a hundred and are likely to be less than one in a thousand.

“While the statistical rejection of a hypothesis can’t generally be used to conclude the truth of any specific alternative, in many cases – including this one – the rejection of one greatly enhances the credibility of the other.”

Is the post-1880 variability in global temperatures “huge”? The most direct method to test this proposition is to examine the available temperature record since 1500, the starting date of Lovejoy’s analysis.

However, there is no direct global thermometer record going back that far. Accordingly, Lovejoy uses a ragbag of politically-correct reconstructions over various periods since then, inevitably including the long-discredited “hockey-stick” graph. Not only that, but an unpublished version of Richard Muller’s Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature record is dragged in as well.

There is one curious and significant omission on Lovejoy’s list of references. There is no mention of the Central England Temperature Record. Now, CET is the longest continuous regional temperature record we have. Despite its name, it covers most of England roughly from Lancashire in the north to Devon in the south. And it has been maintained since 1659.

No one doing a genuinely study of temperature change since 1500 would make ignore CET altogether. It has been maintained in a nation on which Fortune has smiled, so that there have been no interruptions owing to riot or revolution. It is on the right latitude to be – at least potentially – a respectable proxy for global temperature change over the period of study.

The most straightforward way to determine whether any proxy measurement – here, the part for the whole – provides a reasonable indication of how the Earth may have warmed and cooled over the period of record is to make a comparison between the proxy and the global record during the period of overlap.

First, let us apply this test to the “hockey stick” graph that Professor Lovejoy used. To establish that such a test is valuable, we go to no less authoritative a source than the World Meteorological Organization, one of the profiteering cheer-leaders of the panic pandemic.

Here, taken directly from the front cover of the WMO’s “Status of the Global Climate” for 1999, is a graph showing that three distinct series of tree-ring data faithfully replicate the sharp increase in global temperature over the 20th century.

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Here is the “smoking gun” that proves how exceptional the growth in 20th-century was. There had been nothing like it in a millennium.

Just one problem with that. The original tree-ring data for the period 1960-1999 did not show temperature soaring. But the global temperature record for 1960-1999 did. So the tree-ring graphs, all three of them, were tampered with to truncate all three records in 1960 and to bolt on the real-world temperatures.

For the inconvenient truth was that the Jones and Mann data showed no increase in temperature after 1960 and the Briffa data showed a precipitate decline.

To “hide the decline”, the graph published on the WMO’s front cover in 1999 had had the real tree-ring data airbrushed out. All three tree-ring series were then falsely made to track the sharp increase in global temperature from 1960-1999.

Look closely at the WMO graph and it is clear that all three colors, one for each record, are shown as reaching all the way to the top right-hand corner of the graph.

Here, screen-capped from YouTube, is a slide from a presentation by Richard Muller showing what the data looked like before they were tampered with. The true graph show the tree-ring data as diverging markedly from global temperatures since 1960, indicating that dendrochronology is unable reliably to detect sharp increases in global temperature and should not have been used in Professor Lovejoy’s analysis.

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There is no statement in the WMO report that the graph prominently displayed on its front cover had thus been altered. The WMO’s publication of the graph was, therefore, a criminal offense. It was fraud by misrepresentation and by breach of a position of trust, calculated profitably to deceive readers into thinking that the tree-ring data were reliable proxies for global temperature change and, therefore, that the inconvenient Medieval Warm Period had not been warmer than the present.

However, the WMO is one of the plethora of supranational organizations that are not subject to any jurisdiction. No one will go to jail for fraud by misrepresentation and breach of a position of trust, even though climatology now looks less like science than organized crime.

A similar overlap comparison test will now be applied to the Central England Temperature Record. We shall take two full 60-year cycles of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, so as to cancel any distorting influence of the 30-year positive or warming phases and the 30-year negative or cooling phases (we are in the middle of a negative phase at the moment).

The analysis will cover the 120 calendar years January 1894 to December 2013. Calendar years are used so as to avoid any distortion of the trend on the Central England record caused by the fact that it is regional rather than global and is accordingly subject to seasonal variation.

The mean of the monthly anomalies for the combined GISS, HadCRUT4, and NCDC global-temperature datasets over the period shows warming 0f 0.89 Cº. The CET monthly anomalies over the same period show warming of 0.90 Cº. Therefore we shall not need to tamper with the data to fit a preconceived result: the Central England series, over a sufficiently long period, is a not unreasonable proxy for global temperature change.

Having calibrated the CET dataset against the global instrumental datasets, we look back through the record to find the greatest centennial rate of warming before the Industrial Revolution. Here is the graph from January 1663-December 1762:

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The rate of warming was 0.9 Cº, and that rate occurred over 100 years rather than the 124 years 1880-2013 covered by Lovejoy’s statement that 0.9 Cº was a “huge” temperature increase. And it was entirely natural warming. As Professor Lovejoy might put it, it is 99.9% certain that we were not to blame.

In passing, it is worth noting how small a “huge” 0.9 Cº temperature trend is when compared with the seasonal variability of regional surface temperatures. This variability is concealed by the usual suspects’ habit of showing global temperature changes only, so that any trend – however small – looks more drastic than it is.

There is a further simple test that can be done, this time using the mean of the three global terrestrial datasets. In this test, we shall compare the 60-year period before we could have had any measurable influence on global temperature with the most recent 60-year period after it.

From January 1894-December 1953, the warming trend was 0.44 Cº, very nearly all of which must have been natural. From January 1954-December 2013, it was 0.77 Cº, some of which may have been anthropogenic. But the fact that there was almost half a Celsius degree of global warming in the early 20th century, before we could have had anything much to do with it, does cast further doubt on Professor Lovejoy’s conclusion.

A final test is to take the mean of all five global-temperature datasets and see how far back one can go before encountering even the most insignificant warming trend. The dataset of datasets shows a zero global warming trend for 13 years 2 months, or well over a sixth of a century.

Now, long periods without global warming do happen. On the HadCRUT4 data, there was a zero trend from 1850-1900, a remarkable period of 51 years.

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However, the failure of global temperature to change at all in this millennium since January 2001 is also remarkable, for two reasons. First, this is the longest sustained period without global warming since we might first have influenced temperatures in 1950.

Secondly, CO2 concentration is rising at record rates, yet temperature is not responding at all, suggesting, at the very least, that CO2’s influence on temperature is so small that it is easily canceled by natural factors that might otherwise have produced cooling.

Thirdly, the wretched computer models did not predict the Pause. Oh boy, did they not predict the Pause. Here are their very latest predictions, each model run shown separately in a spaghetti graph from the IPCC’s 2013 Assessment Report. I have updated the real-world trend to bring the record up to the present.

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Now, the computers are programmed to assume, just as Professor Lovejoy assumed, that it is our influence on global temperatures that has caused the global warming of recent decades. That, and that alone, is why the spaghetti graph of model-predicted near-term global warming soars at a rate equivalent to 2.33 [1.33, 3.33] Cº/century.

And the real-world trend since 1950? Well, it’s equivalent to less than 1.2 Cº/century, below the lower bound of the IPCC’s current predictions. Another five years without global warming and the Sixth Assessment Report (if there is one) will look even more like a costly and sick practical joke than its predecessors.

Based on these simple tests using real-world data rather than mere models, the notion that the odds of 0.9 Cº global warming having been caused by natural variability are “less than 1 in 100 and are likely to be less than 1 in 1000” is, to say the least, questionable.

It was not we who caused the 0.9 Cº warming in Central England and, inferentially, worldwide from 1663-1762. It may not have been we who caused the 0.9 Cº global warming since 1880 either.

For this reason among many others, Professor Lovejoy errs in contending that he has “rejected” the hypothesis that much of the 0.9 Cº global warming since 1880 is natural. At the very least, we know that the half of it that occurred before 1950 had very little to do with us.

In the McGill press release, Professor Lovejoy concludes:

“This study will be a blow to any remaining climate-change deniers. Their two most convincing arguments – that the warming is natural in origin, and that the computer models are wrong – are either directly contradicted by this analysis, or simply do not apply to it.”

Nice try, but No. As will be evident from the temperature graphs above, the climate does change. We do not deny it. Some element in the global warming since 1950 may well have been caused by us. We do not deny that either. Long-established theory and experiment have confirmed that there is such a thing as a greenhouse effect and that by enriching the atmosphere with CO2 we may – to some extent yet to be determined – be enhancing it.

What we do deny is that aprioristic modeling elaborately contrived at taxpayers’ great expense to achieve a preconceived result manifestly at odds with observation and measurement but congenial and profitable to the classe politique has anything whatsoever to do with true science.

But then, Lovejoy was not intending to do science. Note the last two bullet points from a November 2013 presentation by him (hat-tip to Willie Soon):

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Greg
April 13, 2014 12:19 pm

bonanzapilot says: “Not a scientist, just a taxpayer who doesn’t understand why “settled science” requires continued funding.”
Because the data keeps unsettling the settled science and it needs highly skilled operatives to come up with new ways to massage the data in order to keep the scam rolling.
Not just anyone can do that, you need trained people, and that costs money.
Otherwise things may become “unsettled”.

J Martin
April 13, 2014 12:25 pm

McGill University. Never heard of it. Employing Mr Lovejoy seems unlikely to succeed in raising their profile. Either Lovejoy knew and ignored that that tempertures in previous cennturies had risen as quickly, or he didn’t know. In either case the University should not employ him.

ren
April 13, 2014 12:31 pm

Crispin w Waterloo
The temperature at Waterloo (Ontario) within 24 hours will fall by 20 degrees C.

NikFromNYC
April 13, 2014 12:50 pm

vukcevik:
Antonio Stradivari’s (1644-1737) example of fine instruments overlaps with the former CET swing that has been blamed on bad thermometers. Climate “scientists” would themselves rather use old trees than old thermometers, it seems, even though they run backwards today. Though the absolute value calibration of a nice glass thermometer may have lacked a very accurate calibration before the Fahrenheit scale of 1724, the accuracy of temperature *change* records would be much more reliable since any error in absolute calibration is divided into about a hundred degree marks, so even a full degree error in the top or bottom absolute scale marks merely represents a hundredth of a degree difference in the spacing between individual degree marks.

April 13, 2014 12:53 pm

for anyone who missed the ‘hide the decline vid’. an eloquent 5mins that should be shown to all policy makers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BQpciw8suk

Werner Brozek
April 13, 2014 12:54 pm

Excellent as usual!
However a minor slip up occurred.
The dataset of datasets shows a zero global warming trend for 13 years 2 months, or well over a sixth of a century.
That should be well over an eighth of a century. But on the other hand, the time for statistically significant warming at the 95% level may well be over a sixth of a century or 16 years and 8 months.

April 13, 2014 1:13 pm

also the vids of Climategate ‘hide the decline’ in depth explanation by Stephen McIntyre

Bob Grise
April 13, 2014 1:24 pm

The late John Daly observed that rural weather stations show no warming at all. And that is the case in central MN where I live. The past 25 years were about a tenth degree colder than 1901 – 1925.

Phil Clarke
April 13, 2014 1:56 pm

” It (The Hadley Central England Temperature series) has been maintained in a nation on which Fortune has smiled, so that there have been no interruptions owing to riot or revolution.”
Well, for the period 1707 to 1722 the series was actually compiled using data from Utrecht. A charming city but not in Central England, last time I checked, and for the next few decades measurements were taken in unheated rooms rather than outdoors, and with a variety of instrument types.
ISTR Something about Lovejoy and measurement uncertainty? 😉 Couldn’t have been better that +- 1C until reliable observations become available from Hoy in London from 1770…

HAS
April 13, 2014 2:01 pm

Perhaps not directly relevant to the case in hand, but I’m always amused by the fact that GCMs actually model quite different absolute global temperatures – only converting to anomalies brings them into line. Thus for AR4 runs as I recall the absolute global temperatures produced for around 2000 from the hindcasts across the various models ranged from 13 – 15 degrees.
Puts the 0.9 degrees into context.
How much of a problem? Well those that work in the field worry about it – among other things the atmosphere is after all generally regarded as a non-linear system.

April 13, 2014 2:18 pm

Thanks, Christopher, Lord Monckton.
You rightly wrote:
“CO2 concentration is rising at record rates, yet temperature is not responding at all, suggesting, at the very least, that CO2’s influence on temperature is so small that it is easily canceled by natural factors that might otherwise have produced cooling.”
This has been going on since at least 13 years, since 2001 or very possibly more.
The Global Circulation Models have been failing since the very first run, showing that the “feedbacks” they so intricately calculate are not there.
The Anthropogenic Global Warming hypothesis is dead.

Nigel S
April 13, 2014 2:22 pm

CET
This royal throne of kings, this scepter’d isle,
This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
This other Eden, demi-paradise,
This fortress built by Nature for herself
Against infection and the hand of war,
This happy breed of men, this little world,
This precious stone set in the silver sea,

April 13, 2014 2:44 pm

I think there is a serious problem with Lovejoy’s analysis which, unless I missed it, isn’t discussed here. For details see:
http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/2014/04/two-problems-with-1-claim.html

Mark Bofill
April 13, 2014 3:00 pm

Thank you, Lord Monckton.

ferd berple
April 13, 2014 3:17 pm

Look at the spaghetti graph. 50 years in the future the models are predicting 2C between the lowest and highest estimate. This can only be due to natural variability, because the models are all predicting the same set of facts.
So, the IPCC models are telling us that climate can vary naturally as much as 2C over 50 years. And this is from the IPCC.

April 13, 2014 3:59 pm

The debate IS over. AGW is not supported by the evidence.
Time to move on and let the truth seep into public consciousness.
All you need to do when some professes to believe in AGW is stifle a titter, look sympathetic and murmur “that’s so last year, darling” and pat them on the head.

ferd berple
April 13, 2014 4:04 pm

Lovejoy makes the statistical mistake of comparing proxies with thermometer records. He then concludes that since the proxies don’t behave statistically like thermometers, CO2 must be the cause.
You average sixth grader could spot the error in Lovejoy’s logic. Of course proxies and thermometers will not behave the same statistically. Why should they? Why use CO2 as the explanation? Occam’s Razor tells us they will not behave the same because they are not the same, without any need to involve CO2.
Lovejoy’s first error is in assuming that temperature proxies are thermometers. He then compounds this amazing feat of nonsense by assuming that nothing else in the world can affect thermometers or proxies except CO2.

BoyfromTottenham
April 13, 2014 4:11 pm

Hi from Oz. Great article, Christopher. When will these wankers give up producing this low grade rubbish?
BTW – Minor typo in para 7?: “…since 1500 would make ignore CET altogether.”

Dave B
April 13, 2014 5:05 pm

I have a simple question, or rather observation. Over the years, they have adjusted the official temperatures of the past to offset a variety of issues. So, if the temps are not very accurate then how can you say there is any increase at all? It sounds to me like the measurement uncertainty of late 1800’s and early 1900’s is much greater than 0.9.
Just an observation

April 13, 2014 6:00 pm

Phil Clarke says:
“…Couldn’t have been better that +- 1C until reliable observations become available from Hoy in London from 1770”
Apparently Phil missed the title of this article.

April 13, 2014 6:07 pm

Thank you, Mr. Friedman.
I commend the blog post (http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/2014/04/two-problems-with-1-claim.html) on your site to all and sundry–and note that Prof. Lovejoy left a comment there.

April 13, 2014 6:47 pm

«We’ve had a fluctuation in average temperature that’s just huge since 1880 – on the order of about 0.9 degrees Celsius. »
0.9 degrees Celsius is “HUGE”?
Imagine a weather person forecasting, “Today’s temperature of 23°C will be followed by a *HUGE* drop to 22.1°C tonight!!!!”
An emergency room doctor blurting out, “The patients body temperature made a *HUGE* jump from the 37°C (98.6°F) to 37.9°C (100°F) !!!!!!!”
Because of my heat/AC settings, on any given day my living room temperature is anywhere between 21°C (70°F) and 24°C (75°F). Woah! More than THREE TIMES the *HUGE* change of 0.9°C.
Who would even notice a 0.9°C change of temperature in our bath water?
Perspective.

RoHa
April 13, 2014 6:57 pm

@Nigel S
…This happy breed of men, this little world,
This precious stone set in the silver sea,
Which serves it in the office of a wall,
Or as a moat defensive to a house, 50
Against the envy of less happier lands,
This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,
This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,
Fear’d by their breed and famous by their birth,
Renowned for their deeds as far from home,— 55
For Christian service and true chivalry,—
As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry
Of the world’s ransom, blessed Mary’s Son:
This land of such dear souls, this dear, dear land,
Dear for her reputation through the world, 60
Is now leas’d out,—I die pronouncing it,—
Like to a tenement, or pelting farm:
England, bound in with the triumphant sea,
Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame, 65
With inky blots, and rotten parchment bonds:
That England, that was wont to conquer others,
Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.

April 13, 2014 6:58 pm

Reblogged this on Illuminutti and commented:
«We’ve had a fluctuation in average temperature that’s just huge since 1880 – on the order of about 0.9 degrees Celsius. »
0.9 degrees Celsius is “HUGE”?
Imagine a weather person forecasting, “Today’s temperature of 23°C will be followed by a *HUGE* drop to 22.1°C tonight!!!!”
An emergency room doctor blurting out, “The patients body temperature made a *HUGE* jump from the 37°C (98.6°F) to 37.9°C (100°F) !!!!!!!”
Because of my heat/AC settings, on any given day my living room temperature is anywhere between 21°C (70°F) and 24°C (75°F). Woah! More than THREE TIMES the *HUGE* change of 0.9°C.
Who would even notice a 0.9°C change of temperature in our bath water?
Perspective.

RoHa
April 13, 2014 7:07 pm

And again, for those whose acquaintance with English is only marginal.
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com