
Rebuttal to Åström et al. Attributing mortality from extreme temperatures to climate change in Stockholm, Sweden., published in Nature Climate Change by Paul C. “Chip” Knappenberger, Patrick J. Michaels, and Anthony Watts
Last fall, the press pounced on the results of a new study that found that global climate change was leading to an increasing frequency of heat waves and resulting in greater heat-related mortality. Finally a scientific study showing that global warming is killing us after all! See all you climate change optimists have been wrong all along, human-caused global warming is a threat to our health and welfare.
Not so fast.
Upon closer inspection, it turns out that the authors of that study—which examined heat-related mortality in Stockholm, Sweden—failed to include the impacts of adaptation in their analysis as well as the possibility that some of the temperature rise which has taken place in Stockholm is not from “global” climate change but rather local and regional processes not related to human greenhouse gas emissions.
What the researchers Daniel Oustin Åström and colleagues left out of their original analysis, we (Chip Knappenberger, Pat Michaels, and Anthony Watts) factored in. And when we did so, we arrived at the distinct possibility that global warming led to a reduction in the rate of heat-related mortality in Stockholm.
Our findings have just been published (paywalled) in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change as a Comment on the original Oustin Åström paper (which was published in the same journal).
We were immediately skeptical because the original Oustin Åström results run contrary to a solid body of scientific evidence (including our own) that shows that heat-related mortality and the population’s sensitivity to heat waves was been declining in major cities across America and Europe as people take adaptive measures to protect themselves from the rising heat.
Contrarily, Oudin Åström reported that as a result of an increase in the number of heat waves occurring in Stockholm, more people died from extreme heat during the latter portion of the 20th century than would have had the climate of Stockholm been similar to what it was in the early part of the 20th century—a time during which fewer heat waves were recorded. The implication was that global warming from increasing human greenhouse gas emissions was killing people from increased heat.
But the variability in the climate of Stockholm is a product of much more than human greenhouse gas emissions. Variations in the natural patterns of regional-scale atmospheric circulation, such as the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO), as well as local impacts associated with urbanization and environmental changes in the direct vicinity of the thermometer are reflected in the city’s temperature history, and the original Oudin Åström et al. publication did not take this into account. This effect is potentially significant as Stockholm is one of Europe’s fastest growing cities.
But regardless of the cause, rising temperatures spur adaptation. Expanded use of air conditioning, biophysical changes, behavior modification, and community awareness programs are all examples of actions which take place to make us better protected from the dangers associated with heat waves. Additionally, better medical practices, building practices, etc. have further reduced heat-related stress and mortality over the years.
The net result is that as result of the combination of all the adaptive measures that have taken place over the course of the 20th century in Stockholm, on average people currently die in heat waves at a rate four times less than they did during the beginning of the 20th century. The effect of adaptation overwhelms the effect of an increase in the number of heat waves.
In fact, it is not a stretch to say that much of the adaptation has likely occurred because of an increased frequency of heat waves. As heat waves become more common, the better adapted to them the population becomes.
Our analysis highlights one of the often overlooked intricacies of the human response to climate change—the fact that the response to a changing climate can actually improve public health and welfare.
Which, by the way, is a completely different view than the one taken by the current Administration.
References:
Knappenberger, P., Michaels, P., and A. Watts, 2014. Adaptation to extreme heat in Stockholm County, Sweden. Nature Climate Change, 4, 302-303.
Oudin Åström, D., Forsberg, B., Ebi, K. L. & Rocklöv, J., 2013. Attributing mortality from extreme temperatures to climate change in Stockholm, Sweden. Nature Climate Change, 3, 1050–1054.
The paper:
Adaptation to extreme heat in Stockholm County, Sweden
Online at: http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v4/n5/full/nclimate2201.html
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Further detail by Anthony:
It should be noted that Nature Climate Change, which tends to be a fast track journal, took months to publish our correspondence, going through a longer than normal review process for such a short correspondence, and only did so along with a reply from Åström et al. Despite this uphill slog, we persevered.
Personally, I think the response from Åström et al. is ludicrous, especially this part:
“Our data indicate that there is no adaptation to heat extremes on a decadal basis or to the number of heat extremes occurring each year. “
Basically what they are saying is the people of Stockholm are too stupid to use an air conditioner or electric fan when it gets hot, and are incapable of any adaptation.
The other part of their response:
Our method of comparing the climate during two 30-year periods is valid for any two periods.
Well no, not really, and it is this flaw in their method that was a central point of our paper.
Variations in the natural patterns of regional-scale atmospheric circulation, such as the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) as well as local impacts associated with urbanization and environmental changes in the direct vicinity of the thermometer are reflected in the city of Stockholm temperature history, and the original Åström et al. publication did not take this into account. By not looking at these factors, and by just taking the Stockholm temperature data at face value, assuming all of the heat extremes in it were “climate change” induced instead of being partially influenced by other effects, including the AMO and the city itself, allowed Åström et al. to become victims of their own confirmation bias.
For example, look at the GISTEMP record from Stockholm (which ends before 2000, not my fault). Note the 1900-1929 period.
Åström et al. compared two periods of Stockholm temperature data: 1900–1929 and 1980–2009, and used them as the basis for their entire paper. Here is their method from the abstract posted on the NIH website:
Methods: We collected daily temperature data for the period 1900-2009 and daily mortality data for the period 1980–2009 in Stockholm, Sweden. The relationship between extreme temperatures and all-cause mortality was investigated through time series modelling, adjusting for time trends. Attribution of mortality to climate change was calculated using the relative risks and baseline mortality during 1980-2009 and the number of excess extreme temperature events occurring in the last 30 years as compared to our baseline period 1900-1929. Results: Mortality from heat extremes doubled due to warming associated with climate change. The number of deaths attributable to climate change over the last 30 years due to excess heat extremes in Stockholm was estimated to be 323 (95% CI: 184, 465) compared with a reduction of 82 (95% CI: 43, 122) lives saved due to fewer cold extremes.
Only one problem, a big one, note that right after 1929 there was a big shift in the AMO data – what happens to the AMO in 1930 is essentially a “sea change”.
After 1930, the AMO was positive (warm phase) for over 30 years, went negative (cold phase) again around 1963-64, and stayed negative until a big uptick around 1998.
The AMO was primarily in its cold phase during the 1900–1929 period, and primarily in its warm phase during the 1980–2009 period — a difference likely to be responsible for some portion of the increase in extreme-heat events identified by Åström et al. and inappropriately attributed to global climate change. See Sutton and Dong 2012 for an explanation as to why the AMO affects the temperature record of Europe.
Then there were the changes/growth in the city itself, some movements and encroachments on the Stockholm observatory station, plus the fact that the mortality numbers they cited didn’t make sense when compared to other studies of trends in heat-related mortality across the United States and Europe which have reported declines in both total mortality and the sensitivity of urban populations to extreme heat,despite an increasing frequency of extreme-heat events.
Despite the long review, to the credit of Nature Climate Change, they recognized that we had a valid argument that mostly nullified the Åström et al. paper. Otherwise we’d never have gotten this published. Unfortunately, we can’t counter all the media hype from the original publication, but I hope readers will cite our rebuttal when appropriate.
Knappenberger_Michaels_Watts_Correspondence_original (PDF)
– Anthony


The Astrom et. al. paper to me is just another example of the burgeoning pile of paper dung purported to support the human caused climate change extreme weather hoax.
A “heat wave” at 19.6 deg C and less than 1 deg C rise in temperature since 1850 – what nonsense.
Oops!! Edit needed on my comment John Whitman @ur momisugly April 30, 2014 at 12:19 pm.
Edit:
!! New
SepticSkeptic Publication: Knappenberger, Michaels,Watts (NatCliChange 2014) !!Although, certain IPCC subservient researchers might think septic is accurate wrt your publication. : )
John
kim says:
April 30, 2014 at 12:27 pm
I suspect the Swede’s adaptation to cooling will not involve windmills and solar arrays. But I could be wrong.
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Don’t flame The_Swede!
He’s the only one in here who is posting 1st hand information and its insightful!
Heh, JayMac, “the Swedes'” struck me just as I posted. Preview, and review, are for the stung at heart.
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I adapt to climate change at home by opening the windows and using a fan, all this talk of air-conditioning is a Swedish red herring.
A little pickled herring is good for a heat wave. Or try some with jalapenos for a cold spell. A dual threat aperitif. Mean school, Dean’s school, all the awkward flickers scroll. Oops, if this is Woden’sDay, I thought we were supposed to be going to Sweden.
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kim says:
hmmmm, a little pickled this evening?
Since the original paper was a epidemiological study. Why wasn´t published in a medicinal journal?
My guess is because no medicinal journal would have admitted calling a heat wave something below 20 degrees celsius.
It would be interesting to compare the reviews made by a MD to the reviews received at Nature climate change.
@Kim
It’s actually fun, I find your muse and amusement in this let’s do the data dance floor-play great fun.
Please be carful with the jalapenos!
Gazpacho is taken around here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazpacho
lsvalgaard says:
April 30, 2014 at 10:29 am
Chip Knappenberger says:
April 30, 2014 at 10:07 am
I suppose that agreeing to have them publish the paper was implicit acceptance of the publication policies.
A bit far from ‘I had to sign’ wouldn’t you agree?
Anyway, my plea for transparency has [sadly, but predictably] been thwarted. One last attempt: clearly your response to the reviewers cannot be said to be confidential in any shape or form. Perhaps you could post that?
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etc. etc. ….
me thinks lsvalgaard has prior knowledge of the review comments. 😉
Chip Knappenberger says:
April 30, 2014 at 9:26 am
“My interpretation is in agreement with RickA’s.”
Why not ask Nature for their interpretation or even for their permission? You never know how someone else will answer a question until you ask them. Early in my career I was told “don’t put yourself in jail; make them come and get you.” Just my respectful opinion.
With Respect Greg,
Lay off the Tolkien and find some factual basis…
Chip Knappenberger says:
April 30, 2014 at 10:07 am
. . .In our case, the lengthy review process just described the length of time from submission to acceptance, rather than any undue hardships imposed upon us by the reviewers. Apparently, at least one reviewer was tardy with their initial review.
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In case there are folks who don’t know, nearly every area of science has its orthodoxies that control access to journals, grants and jobs. Try to publish something unorthodox and it is very common to have the review drag on and on and on without any substantive criticism returned to the authors. It is also common to get recommendations against publication without any accompanying valid criticism. The peer review process has been broken for a long time. The present system only works well with good, honest, conscientious editors; something not every journal possesses.
lsvalgaard …. a response from the skeptic side is successful made and published, a rare occurrence. Interesting or not, the Nature rules seem clear to me. I see little value in risking these guys hard fought win in getting a skeptic response published by challenging those rules.
If the authors are willing to ask for permission great … otherwise – to me at least – it seems unwise to risk the gains over “interpretation” of the journal’s rules.
“That’s it! Now, complete the device! Do it!”.
😀
Fans of BO2 will recognize this.
Ha ha
I live in a suburb 13 km north of downtown Stockholm and I have lived in Stockholm in more than 70 years. Last time when I found that the temperature here reached 86 F was two days in the summer of 2010. People here usually go to Thailand or some other warmer places in order to enjoy a more decent weather.
I appreciate your rebuttal, which disproves the negative effects of heat on mortality. Surely this summer’s El Nino will be the hot topic for the CAGW-ers, and mortalities from heat will be examined. So, before we’ve entirely forgotten last winter’s cold, I think that the converse argument needs to be employed. Warmists should be forced to re-examine the devastating effects of the winter of 2014 on mortality in the U.S.
My instincts tell me that the numbers of cold-related deaths are going to be higher than heat-related, notwithstanding the difficulty of finding recent data.
Some of the finer details of what constitutes a cold-related death might be hair-splitting (e.g., it wasn’t the cold that killed her – it was that hypothermia; or, must have been the alcohol, flu, heart, etc.) But every extenuating circumstance the warmists use to calculate heat-related deaths is implicit in determining deaths from cold. In the end, I suspect, there will be a larger numbers of cold-related deaths.
The Northeast and Midwest regions just endured one of their harshest winters, and if city and state governments there keep any kinds of data, they ought to be able to tell if the numbers seemed higher than normal – and how high.
Finding homeless death statistics might be one way to go about this, but I have a hunch that this data may be closely-kept among city governments since it reflects badly on the administration’s ability to care for its people, not to mention its anti-warming “message”. I requested data from one homeless shelter administrator in Chicago (which suffered a record-long cold spell this winter), and was advised to file a foi request to the city morgues. “We used to do this,” she told me, “but it was difficult getting data and being sure it was correct.”
Meanwhile, records of last winter’s devastation have not yet been expunged from search engines where the sad accounts continue to haunt the headlines, as this one from last month:
Man’s death is 29th cold-related death in Cook County
March 21, 2014
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2014-03-21/news/chi-mans-death-is-29th-coldrelated-death-in-cook-county-20140321_1_cold-exposure-death-cook-county
Anthony’s orig response to the Stockholm paper:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/24/claim-climate-change-caused-more-deaths-in-stockholm/
Lots of good commentary back then – in particular RomanM points out another paper by same principal author on the subject with somewhat differing results:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/24/claim-climate-change-caused-more-deaths-in-stockholm/#comment-1457013
Another comment from that thread:
A handful of days in the low 80’s – with nights in upper 40’s to upper 50’s.
While they may well have found some evidence of increased mortality – causation is not correlation. With average day time temps around 70 deg F (or lower) and peak daytime temps in low 80’s F – it simply is not credible that these moderate temps were the cause of increased deaths.
kim says:
April 30, 2014 at 12:27 pm
I suspect the Swede’s adaptation to cooling will not involve windmills and solar arrays. But I could be wrong.
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Actually windmills produce approx 5% of the power here.
nuclear power and hydro power approx 40% each . we are to far north for solar power to
play a major role. remain 15% are a mixture of many types of furnaces that heat water to steam to drive turbines. Things like waste from sawmills are burned. household waste too. And some Oil ofcourse.
Re publishing the reviews: Nature’s rules are crystal-clear and forbid publishing the reviews without explicit consent by the editors, at any stage.
If the authors themselves state that there were no unreasonable or unanswerable requests made by the reviewers, then I don’t see why that would not be good enough for us. Honestly, that is more than I can say about many of the reviews I receive, and I work in a far less politicized field.
I’m not convinced that making the review process more “transparent” will do that much good. I have reviewed for some journals that encouraged you to reveal your identity to the authors of the manuscript. I never saw the point of that and never did, and I don’t want to know for sure (although I can very often guess) who is reviewing my papers. If people want to be a-holes, I want them to feel no inhibition and be open and blatant a-holes, rather than uptight and sneaky ones because of “transparency”.
Living in Australia, with local summer temperatures between 18-32 deg C every single day, I can relate to the fear that Swedish people must feel when their weather bureau warns them of extreme temperatures over 20 deg C in coming days!! This paper also makes me marvel at the suicidal stupidity of the Scandinavian backpackers on working holidays, picking fruit in the blazing sun of an Australian summer, with shade temperatures of 30-40 deg C. In Astrom’s view of the world, dozens should drop dead every day, leaving their families back home in the frozen north bereft.
“Experts warn of a growing fragility as coal-fired plants are shut down, nuclear power is reduced and consumers switch to renewable energy.”
Note where natural gas in storage has been drained to from a record(as in the most ever in history) used for residential heating this past Winter season:
http://ir.eia.gov/ngs/ngs.html
So that we are better prepared for this kind of extreme cold in Winter that Obama’s climate change expert, Dr. John Holdren, says will be more likely from global warming and also the increase in heat waves from global warming that they insist are coming………….they are shutting down coal fired power plants that generate electricity.
The political solution is to spend massive amounts of money in a fight against CO2 that involves making the problem MUCH worse.
This would be like a person, who has been weakened already by slow internal bleeding, going to their doctor. Instead of getting a needed transfusion to increase vital blood supply in their body so it can function better, they have blood let out because the doctor diagnoses them with iron poisoning.
If we need more heat in the Winter and more cooling in the Summer why is the solution to take out a part of the source we use to generate it(coal)?
When the temperature here hits 19C I put on long trousers, socks and a fleece!
I’ve been on the road today, and made a stop to make some edits in the last couple of paragraphs for clarity/grammar. Thanks to everyone for all the comments. I’m off again.