Environmental Research Letters strikes back at: 'Scientists in cover-up of ‘damaging’ climate view'

Environmental Research Letters has published a statement on the growing Bengtsson Climate McCarthyism scandal, now a front page issue in The Times, claiming their innocence over the accusation that it rejected Bengtsson’s paper because of his connection to climate scepticism. Here’s the part of the reviewers report that is at issue: 

Summarising, the simplistic comparison of ranges from AR4, AR5, and Otto et al, combined with the statement they are inconsistent is less then helpful, actually it is harmful as it opens the door for oversimplified claims of “errors” and worse from the climate sceptics media side.

Now that Bengtsson has been put on “double-secret probabtion” in the peer review world, and the ERL peer review has become the center of the maelstrom, of course ERL would issue a statement essentially saying “nothing to see here, move along”.

Here is the statement:

============================================================

Statement from IOP Publishing on story in The Times

16 May 2014Bristol, UK

Dr. Nicola Gulley, Editorial Director at IOP Publishing, says, “The draft journal paper by Lennart Bengtsson that Environmental Research Letters declined to publish, which was the subject of this morning’s front page story of The Times, contained errors, in our view did not provide a significant advancement in the field, and therefore could not be published in the journal.”

“The decision not to publish had absolutely nothing to do with any ‘activism’ on the part of the reviewers or the journal, as suggested in The Times’ article; the rejection was solely based on the content of the paper not meeting the journal’s high editorial standards, ” she continues.

“The referees selected to review this paper were of the highest calibre and are respected members of the international science community. The comments taken from the referee reports were taken out of context and therefore, in the interests of transparency, we have worked with the reviewers to make the full reports available.”

The full quote actually said “Summarising, the simplistic comparison of ranges from AR4, AR5, and Otto et al, combined with the statement they are inconsistent is less then helpful, actually it is harmful as it opens the door for oversimplified claims of “errors” and worse from the climate sceptics media side.”

“As the referees report state, ‘The overall innovation of the manuscript is very low.’ This means that the study does not meet ERL’s requirement for papers to significantly advance knowledge of the field.”

“Far from denying the validity of Bengtsson’s questions, the referees encouraged the authors to provide more innovative ways of undertaking the research to create a useful advance.”

“As the report reads, ‘A careful, constructive, and comprehensive analysis of what these ranges mean, and how they come to be different, and what underlying problems these comparisons bring would indeed be a valuable contribution to the debate.”

“Far from hounding ‘dissenting’ views from the field, Environmental Research Letters positively encourages genuine scientific innovation that can shed light on complicated climate science.”

“The journal Environmental Research Letters is respected by the scientific community because it plays a valuable role in the advancement of environmental science – for unabashedly not publishing oversimplified claims about environmental science, and encouraging scientific debate.”

“With current debate around the dangers of providing a false sense of ‘balance’ on a topic as societally important as climate change, we’re quite astonished that The Times has taken the decision to put such a non-story on its front page.”

Please find the reviewer report below quoted in The Times, exactly as sent to Lennart Bengttsson.

We are getting permission from the other referees for this paper to make their reports available as soon as possible.

REFEREE REPORT(S):

COMMENTS TO THE AUTHOR(S)

The manuscript uses a simple energy budget equation (as employed e.g. by Gregory et al 2004, 2008, Otto et al 2013) to test the consistency between three recent “assessments” of radiative forcing and climate sensitivity (not really equilibrium climate sensitivity in the case of observational studies).

The study finds significant differences between the three assessments and also finds that the independent assessments of forcing and climate sensitivity within AR5 are not consistent if one assumes the simple energy balance model to be a perfect description of reality.

The overall innovation of the manuscript is very low, as the calculations made to compare the three studies are already available within each of the sources, most directly in Otto et al.

The finding of differences between the three “assessments” and within the assessments (AR5), when assuming the energy balance model to be right, and compared to the CMIP5 models are reported as apparent inconsistencies.

The paper does not make any significant attempt at explaining or understanding the differences, it rather puts out a very simplistic negative message giving at least the implicit impression of “errors” being made within and between these assessments, e.g. by emphasising the overlap of authors on two of the three studies.

What a paper with this message should have done instead is recognising and explaining a series of “reasons” and “causes” for the differences.

– The comparison between observation based estimates of ECS and TCR (which would have been far more interesting and less impacted by the large uncertainty about the heat content change relative to the 19th century) and model based estimates is comparing apples and pears, as the models are calculating true global means, whereas the observations have limited coverage. This difference has been emphasised in a recent contribution by Kevin Cowtan, 2013.

– The differences in the forcing estimates used e.g. between Otto et al 2013 and AR5 are not some “unexplainable change of mind of the same group of authors” but are following different tow different logics, and also two different (if only slightly) methods of compiling aggregate uncertainties relative to the reference period, i.e. the Otto et al forcing is deliberately “adjusted” to represent more closely recent observations, whereas AR5 has not put so much weight on these satellite observations, due to still persisting potential problems with this new technology

– The IPCC process itself explains potential inconsistencies under the strict requirement of a simplistic energy balance: The different estimates for temperature, heat uptake, forcing, and ECS and TCR are made within different working groups, at slightly different points in time, and with potentially different emphasis on different data sources. The IPCC estimates of different quantities are not based on single data sources, nor on a fixed set of models, but by construction are expert based assessments based on a multitude of sources. Hence the expectation that all expert estimates are completely consistent within a simple energy balance model is unfunded from the beginning.

– Even more so, as the very application of the Kappa model (the simple energy balance model employed in this work, in Otto et al, and Gregory 2004) comes with a note of caution, as it is well known (and stated in all these studies) to underestimate ECS, compared to a model with more time-scales and potential non-linearities (hence again no wonder that CMIP5 doesn’t fit the same ranges)

Summarising, the simplistic comparison of ranges from AR4, AR5, and Otto et al, combined with the statement they they are inconsistent is less then helpful, actually it is harmful as it opens the door for oversimplified claims of “errors” and worse from the climate sceptics media side.

One cannot and should not simply interpret the IPCCs ranges for AR4 or 5 as confidence intervals or pdfs and hence they are not directly comparable to observation based intervals (as e.g. in Otto et al).

In the same way that one cannot expect a nice fit between observational studies and the CMIP5 models.

A careful, constructive, and comprehensive analysis of what these ranges mean, and how they come to be different, and what underlying problems these comparisons bring would indeed be a valuable contribution to the debate.

I have rated the potential impact in the field as high, but I have to emphasise that this would be a strongly negative impact, as it does not clarify anything but puts up the (false) claim of some big inconsistency, where no consistency was to be expected in the first place.

And I can’t see an honest attempt of constructive explanation in the manuscript.

Thus I would strongly advise rejecting the manuscript in its current form.

==============================================================

Source: http://ioppublishing.org/newsDetails/statement-from-iop-publishing-on-story-in-the-times

Bishop Hill notes this about the reports:

==============================================================

Regarding the scientific issues, the journal says it is trying to get permission to publish the referees’ reports and indeed the first of these appears at the bottom of the statement. As far as we can ascertain from this, Bengtsson’s paper focused on similar ground to the Lewis/Crok GWPF report, namely the stark difference between GCM estimates of climate sensitivity and those derived from the observational record and energy budgets. The referee quoted seems to object to this approach because of claimed inadequacies in the nergy budget approach. He says in essence that you wouldn’t expect consistency because the energy budget approach is flawed.

People closer to the climate sensitivity debate need to look at the full review, but  noted something rather interesting among the list of objections to energy budget models. This is the paragraph that caught my attention:

Even more so, as the very application of the Kappa model (the simple energy balance model employed in this work, in Otto et al, and Gregory 2004) comes with a note of caution, as it is well known (and stated in all these studies) to underestimate ECS, compared to a model with more time-scales and potential non-linearities (hence again no wonder that CMIP5 doesn’t fit the same ranges).

==============================================================

It seems to me that Climate Science is reaching a tipping point. After Climategate, we were told that all of those nasty emails were taken out of context, and that “real climate scientists” don’t really act like that, and it is shameful for climate skeptics to label these instances as indicative of systemic problems that are endemic to climate science and the peer review process.

And now, here we are, right back where we started at Climategate.

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Stephen
May 16, 2014 12:57 pm

I’ve seen papers published with less new material.
The biggest problem, I think, with the review-critique is that some well-founded suspicions as to the cause of the difference are really unpublishable. An expansion of the paper, done properly in the direction suggested by the reviewers, would only lead to lawsuits. Also, calculations of the same physical number are supposed to be consistent, regardless of the data-source.

Walt The Physicist
May 16, 2014 1:03 pm

Matthew R Marler says:
May 16, 2014 at 11:39 am
You should make adjustments as academics express themselves always in very non-straightforward manner. This reviewer meant that the “false” claims of submitted paper will have very high negative impact on progress of almost flawless climate science as deniers will use these “false” claims to attack. Does it make any sense as scientific critique though…

Jordan
May 16, 2014 1:29 pm

“One cannot and should not simply interpret the IPCCs ranges for AR4 or 5 as confidence intervals or pdfs and hence they are not directly comparable to observation based intervals”
IPCC ranges are not comparable to observation.
Yup, my thoughts exactly.

May 16, 2014 1:49 pm

John Whitman says:
May 16, 2014 at 11:02 am
Uncloak the gatekeepers.
When I argued precisely that a few posts back, I caught a fair amount of shit thrown my way on this very blog. Perhaps there are different rules for different people…

Matthew R Marler
May 16, 2014 2:19 pm

Walt the Physicist: This reviewer meant that the “false” claims of submitted paper will have very high negative impact on progress of almost flawless climate science as deniers will use these “false” claims to attack.
I think I understand you, but the reviewer did not identify any “false” claims in the paper: everyone else, up til this reviewer, including the IPCC, has understood these different lines of evidence to be comparable. That is what supported using “expert” priors in the Bayesian methodology.

May 16, 2014 2:56 pm

lsvalgaard on May 16, 2014 at 1:49 pm

John Whitman says:
May 16, 2014 at 11:02 am
Uncloak the gatekeepers.

When I argued precisely that a few posts back, I caught a fair amount of shit thrown my way on this very blog. Perhaps there are different rules for different people…

– – – – – – – – –
lsvalgaard,
Leif,
It is a compliment to you, in my view, that virtually everyone here almost always reads carefully everything you say here and a compliment to you that you have accomplished a situation here where such a large number of commenters feel they can talk to you openly whether agreeing or disagreeing.
Of course the reaction here to my comments isn’t in the same universe as reactions to yours. : )
NOTE: I remember clearly some of your past comments critical of anonymity in the phases of journal review processes. I remember agreeing with you enthusiastically in my comments. It is even plausible that deep down in my subconscious you may have inspired the idea of my “uncloak the gatekeepers” phrase in this thread. Thank you.
: )
John

May 16, 2014 3:18 pm

Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.
Winston Churchill

May 16, 2014 3:31 pm

If these journal “standards” where equally enforced, the journal would be nearly empty. The journal is being selective because it’s making a lot of money….

clipe
May 16, 2014 3:49 pm

Perhaps the degree of vituperation is related to the fact that alarmist reports, such as the recent voluminous U.S. National Climate Assessment Report, NCAR, now tend to be ignored. This is not analogous to the boy who cried wolf. The wolf turned up. This is more like the boy who cried unicorn.

http://business.financialpost.com/2014/05/15/eminent-swedish-scientist-latest-victim-of-climate-mccarthyism/

Walt The Physicist
May 16, 2014 5:59 pm

lsvalgaard says:
May 16, 2014 at 1:49 pm
2John Whitman says:
May 16, 2014 at 11:02 am
i am joining you, Gentlemen. And I would suggest to go further. Peer review became inadequate these days. Peers (especially anonymous; however, also uncloaked – as in academic promotion) will never let someone above them to pass through. The number of people involved in scientific research became too large and competition for the funding resources too tough resulting in complete and utter corruption of selection system. It must be changed asap.

May 16, 2014 7:13 pm

The first reviewer is Steven Sherwood.
1) Because it’s attached. He is on the Advisory Board at ERL, so permission is instant. http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/page/Editorial%20Board
2) He has recently published on this topic, this gives him priority to review paper at issue. (http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/12/31/climate-craziness-of-the-week-only-the-cooler-models-are-wrong-the-rest-say-4oc-of-warming-by-2100/)
here he stated: “Climate sceptics like to criticize climate models for getting things wrong….”
3) Add here too (http://www.theguardian.com/environment/planet-oz/2014/mar/06/lord-lawson-climate-sceptic-thinktank) he gives expert advice
So now we know who it is. This is the guy who claimed it should not be published because of political statement “and worse from the climate sceptics media side.”
Haha.

Oracle
May 16, 2014 7:38 pm

ossqss says:
This type of behavior would not be tolerated anywhere else in society. Why has it been acceptable in the climate community? Why?

Technocratic Control-freak Marxist/Communist/etc types will unashamedly say/do *anything* to achieve their goals – and how dare anyone question them or their propaganda ‘science’. What makes it worse is that many of them aren’t really anywhere near as smart as they like to believe of themselves.
They (the elites planning this scam) ideally (for them) want a multi-tiered society – a Worldwide UN Technocratic ‘Scientific’ Dictatorship ruling-over near-everyone else who must live in subservience in heavily controlled communist/marxist style agrarian subsistence enclaves… How nice [vomit].
They intend to achieve this by manipulating us and our society, including by lying to us.
When it’s discussed in the open it is put in to words that make it sound necessary or desirable, and those who disagree are usually put-down (verbally, so far… their intolerance for dissent against their views is oft thinly veiled).
Luckily there are competing interests (slowing them down) who all want their own lot to be in charge – bureaucrats, scientists, Marxists/Leninists/Communists/Socialists, Corporates, and don’t forget super-wealthy UN donors who are involved in orchestrating the UN circus/freakshow.
Some interesting reading:
http://www.aibs.org/bioscience-editorials/editorial_2013_03.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20130228072323/http://www.aibs.org/bioscience-press-releases/resources/Kinzig%20et%20al.pdf
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/09/08/years-setbacks-looks-world-leader/
http://www.foxnews.com/projects/pdf/austria_retreat_papers.pdf
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1958703/posts
UN Blueprint: Dismantle Middle Class, Build World Government
^Some interesting links to follow inside!
http://green-agenda.com/ backup: http://web.archive.org/web/20140513130548/http://green-agenda.com/
^Read the Quotes!
Some somewhat related reading (just to upset the eco-fascists lurking here):
http://www.amazon.com/Watermelons-Green-Movements-True-Colors-ebook/dp/B005BE0S02/
http://www.amazon.com/Watermelons-Environmentalists-Destroying-Stealing-Childrens-ebook/dp/B00766I0QW/
http://www.amazon.com/The-Little-Green-Book-Eco-Fascism-ebook/dp/B00E258LMS/

May 16, 2014 7:56 pm

“xanonymousblog says: May 16, 2014 at 7:13 pm
The first reviewer is Steven Sherwood.”
Great catch xanonymousblog!

Pamela Gray
May 16, 2014 8:05 pm

Give me a fricken break. Been there done that. Sent my article to one journal and they said the same thing. No new information. Sent it to another and they said, “Wow! You have something new here!” I won’t go into the whys of that polarity but it matches this: Getting published through the dog eat dog, back slapping review process is a disgusting vomit inducing spirit killing drone making process I decided I wanted no more of. The content of the IOP rebuttal letter is the very essence and odor of polishing a turd.

May 16, 2014 8:06 pm

“lsvalgaard says: May 16, 2014 at 1:49 pm

Uncloak the gatekeepers.
When I argued precisely that a few posts back, I caught a fair amount of shit thrown my way on this very blog. Perhaps there are different rules for different people…”
Isvalgaard:
I’ve long suspected that you have your own troll groupies. They only visit when you post and it’s just to disagree and nitpick with anything you say; attempt to rake you though the mud When one is devastatingly put down, they log back in with a different screen name.
Take it as a supreme compliment. Your ideas are great, your science is solid and your attention to detail magnificent.
Ignore the gnats and swat the peskier mosquitos.

May 16, 2014 8:10 pm

ATheoK ,
anytime.
ps, while we might not ever know with absolute certainty that the activist reviewer is Steven Sherwood, Science is never about “proof”, its about probability, and given the evidence, it is extremely likely (>greater than 95% probability) that the reviewer is Steven Sherwood.

Chad Wozniak
May 16, 2014 8:25 pm

Eliza – let’s hope you’re right, but folks, let’s also get the word out to everyone as best we can! A major chink in the AGW armor, methinks.

Pamela Gray
May 16, 2014 8:58 pm

Leif, I’ve had it stomped into my cowboy hat and have seen it turn my black boots green, it has turned love into accusation, and stained two stellar careers, and have even had it grow legs and follow me. Why? Cuz like you, data is more important than beliefs or somebody else’s precious little toes. Oh well. Fishing season starts next weekend and rainbow trout are calling my name.

lee
May 17, 2014 1:05 am

‘ i.e. the Otto et al forcing is deliberately “adjusted” to represent more closely recent observations, whereas AR5 has not put so much weight on these satellite observations,’
There you have it – the models are not wrong, it is the satellites. Those ev1l sats are producing duff data. That’s why we have to continually adjust.

Non Nomen
May 17, 2014 1:31 am

xanonymousblog says:
May 16, 2014 at 8:10 pm
ATheoK ,
anytime.
ps, while we might not ever know with absolute certainty that the activist reviewer is Steven Sherwood, Science is never about “proof”, its about probability, and given the evidence, it is extremely likely (>greater than 95% probability) that the reviewer is Steven Sherwood.
======================
But all can see that Gleick and Rahmstorf are in the chain of command. That comes close to summary execution for dissenters.

Fred
May 17, 2014 2:55 am

This has one interesting feature.
Dr Nicola Gulley was been at IOP for a long time.
I can remember her as the operational editor for a paper I was reviewing.
Some of the calculations were complete nonsence, as in there was a
major breakdown in the reliability of the calculations. Basically, some
of the results were complete nonsense and I recommended rejection,
one reason being I could do the same calculations myself and knew
the correct answer.
I was over-ruled.by Nicola Gulley. So, I wrote a comment on the article.
Lucky for me, the author had integrity. I suspect, they realized there
was a major oops when they saw my results. They redid calculations
with numerical issues fixed and we were all in agreement. This was
fortunate because I suspect that the comment would have been rejected
(some of the likely referees from England actively dislike me). So comment
and rejoinder (the authors published corrected results).
Anyway, after that episode I ceased refereeing for the IOP.
I really do not think it is not appropriate to publicly reveal referee reports,
unless the name of the referee is also published.

phlogiston
May 17, 2014 3:59 am

Gulley directly contradicts herself in these statements within her written response:

“The decision not to publish had absolutely nothing to do with any ‘activism’ on the part of the reviewers or the journal, as suggested in The Times’ article; the rejection was solely based on the content of the paper not meeting the journal’s high editorial standards, ” she continues.

“Far from hounding ‘dissenting’ views from the field,Environmental Research Letters positively encourages genuine scientific innovation that can shed light on complicated climate science.”

and

“With current debate around the dangers of providing a false sense of ‘balance’ on a topic as societally important as climate change, we’re quite astonished that The Times has taken the decision to put such a non-story on its front page.”

So at the same time they are “far from hounding fissenting views” and “encouraging innovative contributions to difficult climate science” – but also belive that balance in the climate debate is “false and damaging” and societally irresponsible.
So which is it Nicola?
Either she just doesn’t notice the contradiction, or is so well trained and indoctrinated in Orwellian double-speak that she couldn’t communicate in any other way.

May 17, 2014 9:02 am

“Non Nomen says: May 17, 2014 at 1:31 am

xanonymousblog says:
May 16, 2014 at 8:10 pm
ATheoK ,
anytime.
ps, while we might not ever know with absolute certainty that the activist reviewer is Steven Sherwood, Science is never about “proof”, its about probability, and given the evidence, it is extremely likely (>greater than 95% probability) that the reviewer is Steven Sherwood.
======================

But all can see that Gleick and Rahmstorf are in the chain of command. That comes close to summary execution for dissenters.”

Resounding agreement! Couple them with Fred’s interaction example with Nicola and IOP and it’s definitely a place where people leave their morals and integrity outside, probably under a rock that is always damp.

May 17, 2014 9:04 am

xanonymousblog:
You might post your suggestion at Bishop Hill’s site .

Chuck Nolan
May 17, 2014 1:35 pm

“As the referees report state, ‘The overall innovation of the manuscript is very low.’ This means that the study does not meet ERL’s requirement for papers to significantly advance knowledge of the field.”
“Far from denying the validity of Bengtsson’s questions, the referees encouraged the authors to provide more innovative ways of undertaking the research to create a useful advance.”
“As the report reads, ‘A careful, constructive, and comprehensive analysis of what these ranges mean, and how they come to be different, and what underlying problems these comparisons bring would indeed be a valuable contribution to the debate.”
“Far from hounding ‘dissenting’ views from the field, Environmental Research Letters positively encourages genuine scientific innovation that can shed light on complicated climate science.”
————————————————-
Is ERL looking to turn honest?
Maybe someone should take them up on their offer and write that paper.
See if they publish it or would it “not significantly advance knowledge of the field.”
Interesting times, alright.
cn