Bloomberg's made-up climate widget

Guest essay by David Burton

Bloomberg’s Eric Roston and Blacki Migliozzi are just regurgitating made-up, model-generated nonsense, in place of real data. You want proof? Look at their graph of “greenhouse gases.”

I saved a copy on my web site, here (with four X-axis markers spliced together from four screenshots). Here’s a shrunken version:

bloomberg_GHGs[1]

Click image for the full-size version:

Here’s a close-up of the key part of the full-size version of their graph, showing the period for which we have Mauna Loa CO2 measurement data (March 1958 to present):

bloomberg_GHGs_cropped[1]

Compare that to a graph of actual measured CO2 levels since 1958:

co2_data_mlo[1]

Reality doesn’t look very much like the Bloomberg graph, does it?

For one thing, Roston & Migliozzi ended their graph with 2005, because GISS gave them old data. That’s convenient, considering the widening divergence between models and reality:

spencer-73-cmip5-model-fail[1]

For another, if you read the “methodology” section of the Bloomberg piece, you’ll discover why Roston & Migliozzi showed no separate scale for their GHG levels. It’s because, despite the “greenhouse gases” label on their graph, they did not actually graph greenhouse gas levels.

That’s right. even though the graph’s caption says, “It Really Is Greenhouse Gases,” they really did not graph greenhouse gases.

Instead, they graphed what GISS’s favorite computer model apparently calculated that temperatures ought to have been, in an alternate reality in which GHG levels increased as they really did, but all other possible causes for climate change remained constant. (That’s the sort of thing they call an “experiment” these days, at NASA GISS. The scientists who made NASA great must be spinning in their graves.)

In other words, their graph just illustrates the assumptions in their own model.

Even so, it’s still obviously very wrong, and here’s why:

First: look at all those zig-zags, up and down, in their graph of GHG levels. Out of the 47 years they graphed since 1958, they show downward-zags in GHG levels for about a dozen of those years.

But there are no downward-zags in the real GHG data. CO2 levels have been monotonically rising at least since 1958 (and almost certainly well before that), and we have excellent, precise measurements since March, 1958.

Likewise, as far as is known, the (distant) second-most-important GHG, CH4 (methane), has not seen any decreases in levels over that time period (though good measurements don’t go back as far as for CO2). CH4 levels plateaued for a while, but they have never dropped, since measurements began.

Supposedly they actually graphed the temperatures which GISS’s ModelE2 model calculated would be caused by GHG forcings alone. But those model-calculated temperatures obviously could not driven solely by GHG levels, because, if they were, they could not decline as GHG levels were continuously increasing. So, at the very least, GISS clearly had other factors in their model driving temperatures, which were conflated with GHGs, which did not remain constant, and which also affected the reported calculated temperatures. If nothing else, they’re were at least driven by pseudo-random number generators (“fake noise”).

In fact, if you examine the source code, that model has lots of pseudo-random number generator calls! ModelE2 consists of about a half-million lines of moldy Fortran code, which it is safe to assume nobody actually understands. They’ve got so many fudge factors, “knobs” and pseudo-random number generator calls in there that they can make it do just about anything at all, but It doesn’t in any sense represent an understanding of the Earth’s climate system.

That means their so-called “experiments” with varying climate inputs are just about useless. Their “experiments” don’t really test anything except their ability to write Fortran code which models their own assumptions.

“With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk.”

– attributed to John von Neumann

Second, look at the slope of that green line. Roston & Migliozzi show an essentially constant upward slope in “greenhouse gases” (GHG-derived modelE2-predicted temperatures) for the entire Mauna Loa CO2 record period. But that’s just plain wrong. There was actually a large, sustained acceleration in the rate of CO2 level rise in the 1960s through 1980s.

It would be instructive to compare the first ten years of that record (1959-1969) with the last ten, but since GISS / Roston & Migliozzi ended their graph with 2005 we’ll have to compare to the last ten which they graphed, instead: 1995-2005.

From 1959 (the first full year of Mauna Loa data) to 1969, the annually averaged CO2 level at Mauna Loa increased from 315.98 to 324.63, an average increase of only 0.865 ppmv per year. But from 1995 to 2005 (the last ten years of Bloomberg’s graph), CO2 went from 360.88 to 379.67, an average increase of 1.879 ppmv per year, or more than twice the 1959-1969 rate of rise.

The rate of CO2 rise more than doubled, which is a hefty acceleration, but that acceleration is missing from Bloomberg’s graph.

In fact, they actually show a slightly larger increase for the 1959-1969 period than for the 1995-2005 period. I used WebPlotDigitizer to digitize points from the green (“greenhouse gases”) line of Bloomberg’s graph, for 1959, 1969, 1995 & 2005. The increase from 1959 to 1969 is actually 12% greater than the increase from 1995 to 2005. (I digitized those points before I realized that they hadn’t actually graphed greenhouse gas levels. So, assuming that 1959 represented 315.98 ppmv CO2 and 2005 represented 379.67 ppmv CO2, from the measured graph points I calculated 1969’s CO2 level as 331.70 (compared to the actual level of 324.63), and 1995’s level as 365.54 (compared to the actual level of 360.88). In other words, if that had actually been a graph of greenhouse gas levels, then it would show a 1959-1969 ten year increase of 15.72 ppmv CO2 [compared to the actual increase of only 8.65 ppmv], verses a 1995-2005 ten year increase of only 14.14 ppmv CO2 [compared to the actual 18.79 ppmv]. That made me think of Jeff Foxworthy: If you think GHG levels increased by less from 1995 to 2005 than they did from 1959 to 1969, you might be a Bloomberg subscriber.)

 

They didn’t really graph GHG levels, they graphed the supposed effect on temperature of GHG levels, but even that wasn’t realistic. The warming effect of CO2 diminishes logarithmically as levels go up, so it is true that an increase in CO2 levels starting from 316 ppmv causes less warming that an increase by the same amount starting from 361 ppmv. But the warming effect is not reduced by nearly as much as the Bloomberg graph indicates.

You can calculate it (very closely) like this: (18.79 / 365.5) / (8.65 / 316) = 1.88 In other words, the 18.79 ppmv ten-year increase in CO2 from 365.5 starting in 1995 should have caused 188% of the warming which was caused by the 8.65 ppmv ten-year increase from 316 ppmv starting in 1959. But the GISS / Bloomberg ModelE2 graph shows only 90% (rather than 188%) of the warming effect from CO2 for the 1995-2005 period, compared to the 1959-1969 period.

There’s obviously something very wrong with their model. (My guess is that they’ve been “tweaking the knobs” to try to minimize the model’s divergence from reality without dialing back climate sensitivity or the importance of CO2, either of which would amount to admitting they were wrong, and anthropogenic CO2 isn’t a catastrophe.)

Third, and most obvious: look at Bloomberg’s supposed “95% confidence interval” for “greenhouse gases.” Do you see it? They have just as much “confidence” for 1880 as they do for 2015!

What nonsense! The truth is that we know almost exactly what all the GHG levels are for recent decades, and we have only very rough estimates for the 1800s and the first half of the 20th century. It is ridiculous to ignore the confidence interval of the supposed driver, when calculating the confidence interval of the supposed effect. But that’s exactly what they obviously did.

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June 27, 2015 12:06 pm

“… In other words, their graph just illustrates the assumptions in their own model.
Even so, it’s still obviously very wrong, and here’s why:”
Amazing! Thanks for the post and the information.
It seems every time I look at the graphs, charts, or output from the alarmist side it is full of chicanery. Always.

Reply to  markstoval
June 27, 2015 12:32 pm

Mark, could not have put it better myself. I have said before that the whole scenario is ALWAYS doom and gloom. They never, for instance, mention increased crop yields, beneficial effects of increased temperature (although they probably haven’t mentioned that latter because there has been no increase in temperature).
Their predictions without exemption art all totally wrong!

PiperPaul
Reply to  andrewmharding
June 27, 2015 12:57 pm

1. Create crisis.
2. Never let a crisis go to waste.
3. Profit.

ICU
Reply to  andrewmharding
June 29, 2015 12:35 am

The data plotted for CO2 isn’t actual CO2 but temperature response to CO2, as are all the other factors, see:
http://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2015-whats-warming-the-world/data/forcings.csv
The confidence intervals are for the AOGCM simulations and are not for the observational SAT time series.
The random numbers are all used based on the uncertainties of the underlying estimates, those random numbers are all fixed prior to the actual run.
If you have any further questions, you should directly contact either Kate Marvel or Gavin Schmidt.

Ftm
Reply to  andrewmharding
June 29, 2015 1:17 pm

From ICU:
If you have any further questions, you should directly contact either Kate Marvel or Gavin Schmidt.
Yes, listed at the end, and apparently overlooked. The stuff is basically a retelling of a 2014 CMIP paper co-authored by Schmidt.
“Atmospheric CO2 levels are 40% higher than they were in 1750. The green line show the influence of greenhouse gas emissions. It is no contest.”
That’s dodgy IMO. First sentence alleges a measurable fact. The second line does not clearly state that a model is plotted. The words “It’s no contest” implies a contest between stated CO2 levels and the GISS temp history. I believe the intent is probably more to confuse than to be clear, and certainly totally the avoids the issue whether the relationship is logarithmic or not. If not, this is totally outside of “consensus” science and Bloomberg should have the duty to have the proponents of this data explain their new theory on sensitivity.

Benno
Reply to  andrewmharding
June 30, 2015 8:06 pm

I am living on the west coast close to Seattle and it is the hottest summer that we have recorded in history. The temperature has risen to over a hundred degrees on a few days, and yes there has been a huge change in the temperature. Yesterday it was 106 degrees F and that’s not normal here. People in Pakastan are dying from heatstroke and you’re over here hopping around and farting, saying “Oh it’s just a hoax. I know everything I am so educated and I have an associates degree in cash registering.” It doesn’t take a genius to understand how climate change works. It doesn’t even take an educated person to undrestand it. If you’re going to believe politicians over scientists, then you probably don’t care much for you kids’ and grandkids’ generations. Politicians are trying to make you deny climate change because if you believe it coal burning energy companies will lose a lot of money. So if you value future genorations, why don’t you just spread the word about it and eventually if everyone beleives it, we will start to take action and hopefully we will bring climate change to a halt. And also, energy will be much more affordable and less commercial.

catweazle666
Reply to  Benno
July 1, 2015 6:31 pm

Benno: “Yesterday it was 106 degrees F and that’s not normal here.”
No, it was nothing of the sort.
Why do you alarmist buffoons lie all the time?

cnxtim
Reply to  markstoval
June 27, 2015 1:23 pm

The CAGW disciples need their Constantine.
Sorry Bloomberg it ain’t gonna be you. , Poorly constructed plagiarism won’t cut the mustard.
And it isn’t you either little “o” – you cant even get close to those high notes. – At least C produced a convincing argument for his time and occupied (by force of arms) some nifty buildings.
Whoever, it will have to be someone who can offer up something akin to the ‘loaves and fishes’ gig, lot’s of luck.

cnxtim
Reply to  markstoval
June 27, 2015 1:26 pm

Hey Bloomberg, have you considered how this ludicrous rehash will impact on your core business?

higley7
June 27, 2015 12:26 pm

I like the subheading in the top graph. They claim CO2 is 40$ higher than in 1750, but they neglect to add that it is currently 25% less than in the 1940s and was higher than now during tow other periods in the 1800s. (Ernst Beck’s paper on direct CO2 chemical bottle data over 200 years)

Frank
Reply to  higley7
June 27, 2015 1:35 pm

Higley7: Even if the measurements were accurate, Beck’s record don’t constitute a record of GLOBAL atmospheric CO2. The amount of CO2 in the air isn’t constant everywhere – it is perturbed by local sources of CO2 and sinks for CO2. (Allegedly, the amount of CO2 in the air between spears of grass in a lawn on a still day is much lower than a few meters above, because photosynthesis has depleted the CO2.) Mauna Loa was the first experiment that attempted to make a proper long-term record of CO2 with fixed reliable methodology at a single site as far away from sources and sinks as possible: 4 km above the Pacific Ocean where there are steady winds and at night when the air being sampled subsides from far above the mountain top and becomes off-shore breezes.
Then we have numerous ice cores, which all say that the level of CO2 in two different polar regions (also far from sinks and sources) was stable for 100 centuries before the Industrial Revolution, but dropped during ice ages and began to rise gradually after the Industrial Revolution began. It is possible that more diffusion takes place in these cores than scientists expect, but the data is difficult to reconcile with the large random changes in Beck’s record.
The record of consumption of fossil fuel, ice cores and Mauna Loa combined create a consistent picture of how GLOBAL levels of CO2 in the atmosphere have changed with time. Beck’s compilation is incompatible with this picture. All experimental data isn’t equally reliable, and the experiments compiled by Beck weren’t performed under conditions that create a meaningful challenge (IMO) to this picture.

CodeTech
Reply to  Frank
June 27, 2015 11:45 pm

Right.
I saw that BS in the anti-skeptic talking points, too.
It’s still wrong.

Mike Bromley the Kurd
Reply to  Frank
June 27, 2015 11:54 pm

And readings from an Hawaiian volcano ARE representative? A-hem.

Reply to  Frank
July 2, 2015 4:42 am

If you think that measuring temperature on a hot asphalted parking lot is representative for global temperatures, then the late Ernst Beck’s data show historical global CO2 levels of that time…
Mauna Loa indeed is on a volcano but mostly measures trade winds and if the wins is downslope from the vents (or upslope from the valley) these data are noticed but not used for daily to yearly averages.
Moreover CO2 was measured at the South Pole first, where the nearest volcano is thousands of km away and no vegetation can interfere, in contrast to many historical measurements taken in the middle of Paris, Philadelphia, forests, below, between and over growing crops (!) etc…
See for the many stations that measure CO2 in minimum contaminated places:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/dv/iadv/
And my comment on Beck’s data, after several years of direct discussion with him:
http://www.ferdinand-engelbeen.be/klimaat/beck_data.html

Robert
Reply to  Frank
July 11, 2015 6:44 pm

I would really enjoy the debates. Only the question is not whether global warming ‘is’ or ‘is not’. The fact is 97% of the real scientific body on this planet is screaming beware! This warning incudes the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and the Pope. So if 97 of the 100 canaries in your coal mine were sick or dying, would you continue to go in that coal mine?? I think not. This is about risking our planet. Who would play that game when your canaries are dead?

Mark Johnson
June 27, 2015 12:29 pm

The green line shows the influence of greenhouse gas emissions, not the actual co2 level.
Remember, CO2 emission to temperature rise in not linear, so the two graphs should not look the same.

CodeTech
Reply to  Mark Johnson
June 27, 2015 11:45 pm

Wait… do you ACTUALLY believe what you just typed?!?!?!

Latitude
June 27, 2015 12:39 pm

so what ever happend to this….comment image?w=380&h=351

Latitude
June 27, 2015 12:42 pm

(ok, something going on that I’m not aware of, scratch that last link and use this one)
what ever happened to this….
http://drtimball.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Callendar-circle.gif

bw
Reply to  Latitude
June 27, 2015 1:06 pm

The surface boundry layer affects local mixing of CO2 from the soil biology. This varies with wind speed.
Thererfore the “apparent” CO2 concentration at the surface varies with wind speed. That’s pretty erratic.
As technology improved, the existence of the boundry layer caused increased interest in taking measurements from balloons, to get above the boundry layer. There are many papers on this. Pielke has a summary paper on surface boundry layer effects.

TonyL
Reply to  Latitude
June 27, 2015 6:03 pm

One of my all-time favorite charts. Apparently, the scatter in the 1800s is quite real. That is to say not measurement error, bias or sampling artifact. The selection of all the low points to construct the historical record tells it’s own story.
I have always thought it would be interesting to monitor at sea level as winds come off the ocean. The monitored level would vary, at the least, according to sea surface temperature and barometric pressure. It would be interesting see how large the range goes, and if you really do see a 280-550 ppm spread on an hourly, daily, seasonal basis. Well mixed, anyone?

Reply to  TonyL
July 2, 2015 5:17 am

TonyL,
Only in the first few hundred meters over land, CO2 levels are not mixed, as many sources and sinks are at work. One can measure 600 ppmv in a forest at night under inversion and 250 ppmv during the day when photosynthesis is at work. Once above a few hundred meters and everywhere over the oceans, CO2 levels are within 2% of full scale. No matter if you measure near the North Pole (Alert, Barrow) at sea level, Mauna Loa at 3,400 m or the South Pole at near 3,000 m. That is for 95% of the atmosphere (as mass).
La Jolla, Barrow, Alert and other stations are coastal and measure mostly CO2 with winds from the ocean side. The (1 hour average) raw data from Barrow can be plotted, here for 2007-2008:
http://www.ferdinand-engelbeen.be/klimaat/klim_img/co2_trends_brw_2007_2008.jpg
Most of the outliers are when the wind blows from land side…

Greg
Reply to  Latitude
July 2, 2015 2:16 pm

Professor Tim Patterson, (who does have the right credentials), commented on the Reuters “model” … “Since there has been no warming since 1998 during the so-called pause with a massive disconnect between model projections and global temperature reality I think that I am doing ok so far. As to the Bloomberg article by Roston and Migliozzi, an accurate deconstruction by David Burton was published two days ago on “Watts Up With That” entitled “Bloomberg’s made-up climate widget” that summarizes what is wrong with the figure that you forwarded quite nicely. See: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/06/27/bloombergs-made-up-climate-widget/
The disconnect between reality and the stuff that you get from the media, including the piece that you passed on, is quite remarkable. A lot of checking brains at the door going on these days….
all the best
Tim”
As I understand it, Canadian businesses operating in the north and needing to know viability of “Ice Roads” in light of “Global Warming”, paid Professor Patterson to do research. Perhaps our Government needs to listen to his conclusions!
Greg.

Mark from the Midwest
June 27, 2015 12:50 pm

“Roston, … holds an M.A. in Russian history, and a B.A. in modern European history, both from Columbia University.”
Perfect academic training for contributing to the subject matter of climate change, Comrade reader.

Reply to  Mark from the Midwest
June 27, 2015 1:10 pm

Reminds me of a certain viscount in Great Britain with a BA in the classics, and a diploma in journalism.
..
Perfect academic training for contributing to the subject matter of climate change.

Charles Nelson
Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
June 27, 2015 2:25 pm

The aforementioned Viscount tends to be very careful with the scientific data he uses…so they’re quite different in that respect at least.

catweazle666
Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
June 27, 2015 2:46 pm

“Reminds me of a certain viscount in Great Britain with a BA in the classics, and a diploma in journalism.”
No, not really.

Mike the Morlock
Reply to  Mark from the Midwest
June 27, 2015 5:44 pm

Hi mark.
Hmm M.A.in Russian history wonder what he did his Thesis on. No PHD?
michael

JEyon
Reply to  Mark from the Midwest
June 28, 2015 12:51 pm

ad hominem – leave that to the alarmists

Mike the Morlock
Reply to  JEyon
June 28, 2015 3:20 pm

JEyon
no ad hominem. His B.A. was modern European History. He did a masters in modern Russian history
I majored military history and minored in Soviet studies. He seemed to like history why did he change areas of interest? And I really wonder what his take of modern Russia history is. Know your enemy and all that.
michael

JEyon
Reply to  JEyon
June 28, 2015 3:28 pm

Mike the Morlock –
i was actually responding to Mark from the Midwest and his issue of Roston’s credentials – nothing changes ad hominem from being ad hominem – Roston may in fact be wrong due to lack of training – but first you have to prove him wrong – not assume that he first

Mike the Morlock
Reply to  JEyon
June 28, 2015 4:11 pm

JEyon, When you study history you must learn how to “do” research. I have no problem with his education insofar as his ablity to write a postion paper on the subject of climate change. We do not know how he came to his conclusions.
michael

JEyon
Reply to  JEyon
June 28, 2015 5:48 pm

Mike the Morlock –
Mark from the Midwest made an ad hominem statement – do you deny that?

czechlist
Reply to  Mark from the Midwest
June 28, 2015 2:40 pm

I don’t care really care about the credentials of the author(s).
I care about the accuracy of the measurements, the fidelity of the data reporting and the veracity of the conclusions.

rd50
June 27, 2015 12:50 pm

They are afraid of plotting corresponding temperature anomalies after 2004 for a good reason.
Comparing CO2 increase from Mauna Lua starting in 1958 to any temperature anomalies time series show 3 phases:
1958-1977: No correlation between these two variables to show that CO2 was responsible for temperature increase during this period.
1978-2003: Good correlation between the two, so CO2 is a good possibility to explore.
2004-2015: No correlation between these two variables to show that CO2 was responsible for temperature increase during this period.
You can see the above relationships much better at:
climate4you.com
They also use Greenhouse gases for their label, not CO2. They seem to think that H2O is not a greenhouse gas. We also see this with “carbon pollution” instead of naming carbon dioxide itself and the old trick of changing global warming to climate change. Have fun.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  rd50
June 27, 2015 9:10 pm

Mauna Lua? That means “toilet mountain” in Hawaiian. Are you casting aspersions upon the CO2 data?

Reply to  jorgekafkazar
June 28, 2015 7:04 am

It’s just for s**** and grins.

Louis Hunt
June 27, 2015 12:51 pm

…so it is true that an increase in CO2 levels starting from 316 ppmv causes less warming that an increase by the same amount starting from 361 ppmv.”
Besides the misspelling of than to “that,” isn’t the sentence backwards? Surely the logarithmic nature of CO2 causes less warming at higher concentrations, not more. Otherwise, alarmists would be even more alarming than they are. 🙂

Reply to  Louis Hunt
June 27, 2015 2:30 pm

Yes, you are correct, Louis. Thank you for spotting that!
Mods, can you please fix my goofs? So sorry!

Reply to  daveburton
June 28, 2015 10:20 am

Mods, I swapped “316” and “361” — can you please fix ’em for me? Thanks. -DB

patmcguinness
Reply to  Louis Hunt
June 28, 2015 5:32 pm

“…so it is true that an increase in CO2 levels starting from 316 ppmv causes less warming that an increase by the same amount starting from 361 ppmv.” ”
Yes. The best way to calculate the influence of Co2 on temperature is to use the longer time period possible with accurate measurements, so go back to 1950.

Reply to  patmcguinness
July 3, 2015 7:13 am

Well, Mauna Loa measurements go back to March, 1958. Since CO2 levels vary a bit by location, there are potential pitfalls if you compare Mauna Loa measurements with measurements from other locations.

bw
June 27, 2015 12:55 pm

The most important “greenhouse gas” is water. Water vapor over the tropical ocean surface reaches 40000 ppm. Adding the 400 ppm CO2 you get a total of 40400 ppm of greenhouse gas. Next year the amount will reach 40401 ppm.
That water vapor quickly rises, cools and condenses into thick clouds. Clouds then reflect large amounts of incoming solar, which causes the surface stop warming.
In the upper atmosphere where water vapor is under 100ppm, the effect of “greenhouse gas” causes the air to cool more efficiently. The stratosphere is cooler than 20 years ago.

Louis Hunt
June 27, 2015 1:02 pm

“But there are no downward-zags in the real GHG data.”
That may be true if CO2 is measured once a year at the same time of the year, but CO2 does measure lower during the growing season and higher just after winter ends.

Reply to  Louis Hunt
June 28, 2015 7:08 am

Should be “Northern Hemisphere growing season”.

petermue
June 27, 2015 1:19 pm

I’m still not convinced that pre-industrial CO2 values were at ~280 ppm.
Where does that number originate from?

Reply to  petermue
June 27, 2015 1:33 pm

Ice core data comment image?w=720

petermue
Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
June 27, 2015 3:09 pm

Ice core data at this time are highly doubtful. Layers have a huge time span to be exact in detail.
Instrumental data from 19th century show unequally higher values (300-400 ppm), even if the used equipment was not 100% reliable from a present-day perspective. Thermometers, however, weren’t also.
http://www.eike-klima-energie.eu/uploads/media/180CO2-D.pdf
So the whole general view from those times are likely somewhat distorted and “adjusted” to the AGW science.

Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
June 27, 2015 4:54 pm

Ice cores match broad based studies (i.e. Callendar 1938)
..
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/qj.49706427503/pdf

petermue
Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
June 27, 2015 10:34 pm

Callendar was just 1938. I’ll try to translate the decisive part from the German PDF:
“The findings [3% accuracy of Pettenkofer method, before Callendar] have been stated by reputable scientists with Nobel degrees. Modern climate scientists following Callendar simply ignored CO2 measurements in the past, let alone techniques, which were standard practice in textbooks. Chemical methods have been discredited as unreliable, allowing only few which fit the hypothesis, that climate is in relation to CO2.
(Sorry for my bad english, I’m from Germany)
I consider ice cores are highly unreliable, especially the last few centuries above the firn layer.
The CO2 values of the relatively thin and uncompressed top layer (above the firn) are distorted by outgassing, gas diffusion and eluviation when the layer becomes thicker and thicker and pressure on it increases.
Top layers never give a correct measurement in my sight, and much less do older, almost depleted layers, which were formerly on top.
Not to mention wrong handling from drilling (coolants) and decompression of the deeper cores.
The best evaluation is from instrumental measurements, which should always preferred from nebulous proxies like ice cores.

Reply to  Joel D. Jackson
July 2, 2015 5:37 am

Petermue,
There is no reason to doubt the CO2 data from ice cores: they are very reliable, with a repeatability of the CO2 levels from the same part of the core of 1.2 ppmv (1 sigma). The only drawback is the resolution, which depends of the snow accumulation rate. The cores with the highest resolution are from Law Dome, drilled around 1990 where the ice is 40 years old at closing depth but the CO2 levels are only 7 years older than the air in the atmosphere. It takes a few years more to close all bubbles which makes that the resolution is better than a decade and includes an overlap of ~20 years (1960-1980) between ice and direct measurements at the South Pole:
http://www.ferdinand-engelbeen.be/klimaat/klim_img/law_dome_sp_co2.jpg
The old wet method was accurate to +/- 3%, that is +/- 10 ppmv, not even accurate enough to have noticed the seasonal changes. What is clear is that the rules Callendar made up prior to separate “good” from “bad” data (like not in the middle of towns. forests, agricultural purposes,…) were quite effective: his classification of “good” CO2 measurements was around the levels measured in ice cores many years later.

Dr Tom Arno
June 27, 2015 1:27 pm

Love the irony. How so many (97%) have wasted the time of so few when logic is applied! Fascinating. GHG rise 1800-1950 and 1950 to now strikingly similar!
Dr Tom A. Broadcast meteorologist.

knr
June 27, 2015 1:29 pm

has ever with climate ‘science’ we see that what really matters is the ‘effect’ of a paper not the quality of its data nor the honesty of its claims .

Curious George
June 27, 2015 1:37 pm

Also note uncertainty of “orbital changes” at a 95% confidence level. I did expect orbital changes to be known to an extreme precision. All that accuracy is lost when converting it to modeled temperature changes.
By the way, the “95% confidence level” has nothing to do with statistics. That’s simply an interval within which 95% of model results fall. Who selects those models and model runs I don’t know.

Coeur de Lion
June 27, 2015 1:40 pm

I think I have a degree in railway engineering.

Reply to  Coeur de Lion
June 27, 2015 3:09 pm

Do you also write porn and harass women?
If yes, you qualify for a lucrative career in climate nescience!

David
June 27, 2015 1:44 pm

I should think that methane would be the third, not second, most significant GHG, after water vapour and carbon dioxide, respectively.

Dawtgtomis
Reply to  David
June 27, 2015 2:01 pm

I completely concur (like I’m somebody or something).

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Dawtgtomis
June 27, 2015 9:13 pm

You forgot to add ‘robustly.’

Green Sand
June 27, 2015 2:02 pm

Welcome to the wonderful new world of “Graphiti”!

nigelf
Reply to  Green Sand
June 27, 2015 2:57 pm

Good one!

Vanguard
June 27, 2015 2:16 pm

So according to Bloomberg’s Eric Roston and Blacki Migliozzi the only cause for the increase of 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit since 1880 to 2005 is human factors, in particular GHG emissions. This brings up a few question in my mind.
Had GHG not increased would the earth’s temperature have stay the same for the entire 125 years?
Has the earth’s temperature ever seen similar changes in temperature over the course of a century prior to the last 100 years?
I would ask them to explain what was the cause of the earth’s temperature changing prior to 1880?

MarkW
Reply to  Vanguard
June 27, 2015 3:29 pm

The answer I get from warmists is that while we don’t know what caused temperature fluctuations prior to 100 years ago, it doesn’t matter. We know that the recent increase was caused by CO2, the models prove it.

CodeTech
Reply to  Vanguard
June 27, 2015 11:58 pm

As I recall, when one of the most prominent warmists finally tried fitting UHI into the temperature record, he did it completely backwards, then claimed that there’s no way that cities are heating the atmosphere significantly…
I’ve long suspected that a complete lack of logic is a requirement for believing the AGW hypothesis could possibly be correct.

Charles Nelson
June 27, 2015 2:22 pm

They really are growing more delusional as time goes by!
But let’s face it, who here would ever refer to or rely on Bloomberg for information?

Chris Hanley
June 27, 2015 2:48 pm

‘Diagram showing the GISS monthly global surface air temperature estimate (blue) and the monthly atmospheric CO2 content (red) according to the Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii. The Mauna Loa data series begins in March 1958, and 1958 has therefore been chosen as starting year for the diagram. Reconstructions of past atmospheric CO2 concentrations (before 1958) are not incorporated in this diagram, as such past CO2 values are derived by other means (ice cores, stomata, or older measurements using different methodology), and therefore are not directly comparable with modern atmospheric measurements. The dotted grey line indicates the approximate, overall linear temperature development, and the boxes in the lower part of the diagram indicate the relation between atmospheric CO2 and global surface air temperature, negative or positive. Last month shown: May 2015. Last diagram update: 15 June 2015’ (Prof. Ole Humlum):
http://www.climate4you.com/images/GISS%20GlobalMonthlyTempSince1958%20AndCO2.gif

Jim from Maine
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 28, 2015 7:32 am

This graph pretty well sums it all up very nicely.
Isn’t there some way we could crowd-fund an effort to buy a full page in USA Today and other press outlets to display this graph, and highlight the trend line a bit more?

Cindy
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 30, 2015 4:55 pm

It looks to my untrained eye that the blue temp line zigs up about from 0.5-ish to 0.6-ish just between 2010 and 2015, and that the center point of the squiggle in 2015 is 0.2 to 0.3 degrees C. higher than it was in 2002. Why is that stretch labeled “none” as if there’s been no change? Am I missing something obvious?
I have an idea as to why the temp dropped in the 60s and 70s, but it’s pure speculation. There was a major population shift from farms to cities in the 40s. Connecticut reverted from almost all farm and pastureland to the heavily wooded state it is now. This happened all over New England, and I suspect it may have happened in a lot of the developed world. While expanding coal use kept CO2 pushing up, the regrowth of trees would have slowed it as well as cooled a lot of land that was formerly plowed and open to the sun. That’s a wild guess. Thoughts from the real scientists here?

Green Sand
June 27, 2015 2:50 pm

Bloomberg? Why do I always seems to read it as “Boiler room”?
Suppose that’s down to old age, experience and maybe just a little knowledge gained?
Simple formula that has improved my family’s well being over the years – Bloomberg = caveat emptor.

MarkW
Reply to  Green Sand
June 27, 2015 3:31 pm

Would this be the same Bloomberg who has spent millions of dollars backing anti-gun laws and referendums?

Alan Robertson
Reply to  MarkW
June 28, 2015 5:26 am

Yes.

whiten
June 27, 2015 2:59 pm

Adjusting (desperately) the temp data only, can not “revive” the AGW….the CO2 data must be adjusted too, shamelessly and regardless.
If it can be shown “scientifically” through the “adjusted” data that we just have somehow “missed” the “fact” that the CO2 emissions have actually decelerated lately instead of accelerating (as per the unadjusted real data), and somehow there can be shown some kinda of plateau of the overall CO2 emissions-concentration, for the last decade approximately, then voila the AGW gets another chance, through an idiotic “incarnation”.
Do not be surprised, desperate people resolve to desperate solutions….imagine what will resolve to, the desperate idiots……….

rd50
Reply to  whiten
June 27, 2015 3:57 pm

Fortunately, they can’t.
China started CO2 atmospheric measurements in 1990. They match Mauna Loa perfectly as you can see here:
http://www.cma.gov.cn/en2014/news/Features/201501/P020150109636386879852.pdf

Editor
June 27, 2015 3:45 pm

What’s the link to the original Bloomberg’s Eric Roston and Blacki Migliozzi article?

Editor
Reply to  rd50
June 27, 2015 4:12 pm

Reply to rd50 ==> Thanks.

Reply to  rd50
June 27, 2015 7:47 pm

Thanks, rd50, I should have included that in the essay. (It originated as part of an email thread about that page.)

Jack
June 27, 2015 3:53 pm

The warmists in Canberra Australia want a light rail to take cars off the road. A poll was done and the results showed Canberrans were against it.
So they analysed the figures and found only 15% of right wing voters wanted it. So they removed the portion that didn’t want it and rejigged the figures so they made it appear that people were actually in favor of light rail,
There is only deception and rank dishonesty coming from warmists, regardless of CO2 or temperature.

Reply to  Jack
June 28, 2015 7:39 am

Sounds like something right out of the Agenda 21 playbook.

CMS
June 27, 2015 4:11 pm

Interestingly there graph makes a pretty good argument for aerosols. Would of course needed to be flipped to compare, but looks pretty close. http://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2015-whats-warming-the-world/

rd50
Reply to  CMS
June 27, 2015 5:35 pm

I agree, indeed this proposal has been made since the clean air act in USA started in 1970 there is no question about the decrease in aerosols and other European countries also started cleaning.
Look at the graph above from climate4you and see the temperature started to increase from around 1975 up to 2000 or so.
If you want to go further, then look at when China started polluting. I don’t know how much aerosols they have emitted. The temperature increase greatly diminished starting around 2000 or so. It may be due to the increase in aerosols from China. Intriguing possibility as also previously been speculated.

Julian Flood
Reply to  CMS
June 29, 2015 2:51 am

CMS,
If we have disturbed aerosol production (pollution of ocean surface with oil and surfactants, or alteration of DMS producing plankton numbers, or etc etc) then the post WWII warming is easily explained — not total replacement for GHG effects but sufficient to reduce panic levels to nil. This theory also explains the blip.
Gissa grant and I’ll do the research….
JF

Yirgach
June 27, 2015 5:08 pm

Joe Bastardi has a good Summary this weekend (http://www.weatherbell.com/saturday-summary-june-27-2015) . Towards the end he gets into the current “experiment”, which is what will happen to global temps after the current El Nino ends and both the PDO and AMO go negative. His bet is while there will be a spike in temp from the El Nino, the negative PDO and AMO will cause a cooling back to the level off the ’70’s. In other words, any step up will be temporary and the major trend will be cooling.
Of course all this will play out by 2020, so sit back, have a beer and enjoy the show….
At least JB is willing to admit he could be wrong, but he is also willing to wait and see how it all turns out.
Kinda like Iris Dement:

June 27, 2015 5:59 pm

Not to be nitpicking or anything but Bloomberg’s graph DOES actually state that “the green line shows the INFLUENCE of greenhouse gas emissions.”

Reply to  Onar Åm
June 28, 2015 7:41 am

Really? Well then. Glad someone finally nailed that down. We can now stop spending billions of research dollars trying to solve that issue.
/sarc off

Lancifer
June 27, 2015 6:03 pm

Yirgach,
I’ve always loved that Iris DeMent song.
“Some say they’re comin’ back in the garden, lot’s of carrots and little sweet peas..
I choose to let the mystery be.”

rd50
June 27, 2015 6:10 pm

I will defend these journalists. They did a GREAT job. Not that I disagree with the comments made by David Burton. Indeed I am glad he mentioned this article because it is a GREAT example on how to convey information to the public and particularly the politicians. This is a masterpiece.
1. Where did they get the information: Gavin Schmidt.
2. How did they present the information: Great graphic presentation
3. Is the information relevant: NO
4. Why is the information not relevant:
a) too much information before reliable data on CO2, pre 1958, irrelevant to the current issue of industrial emission of CO2 although I would prefer to have data from about 1940.
b) lacking information on temperature anomalies after 2004, although such are available (see graph above from climate4you.com). These values were not given to them by Gavin Schmidt. Not their fault.
So don’t blame the journalists. They did a great job presenting the data given to them. Adding CO2 info pre 1958 smoothed everything. Then, removing the temperature anomalies data from 2004 to 2015 prevented them to see that while CO2 kept increasing, not so for temperature anomalies.
This is the issue at hand: we must stop using fossil fuels because CO2 is the driver.
We have the data as shown in the plot above (and many other at this site all well prepared). When was this presented to the politicians? I listened to the testimony of J. Curry before Congress and did read her prepared report. There is only one thing that counts for the public and the politicians. The relationship between CO2 and temperature during recent time. Where was THE graph to explain what is currently going on between CO2 and temperature?

Chris Hanley
Reply to  rd50
June 27, 2015 10:24 pm

“This is the issue at hand: we must stop using fossil fuels because CO2 is the driver …”.
That is a non sequitur, it doesn’t follow anything stated in the previous paragraphs besides it’s impossible and won’t happen.
Mr rd50, do you realise that the ‘dangerous global warming’ (aka Climate Change™) hypothesis as promoted by the IPCC and puffed by the media is contingent on strong positive water vapour feedback for which there is absolutely no evidence?

rd50
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 27, 2015 11:41 pm

Look again at the graph you presented above. It did happen. You can’t deny that for a while, there was a positive correlation between CO2 and temperature increase. A picture is worth a thousand words. Now give the same data to these journalists and see what happens. There is only one thing available to convince the public and politicians. Show them the graph. Telling them that something is impossible and will not happen and that positive water vapour….and that the effect of CO2 decreases logarithmically….etc. etc. will not work.

CodeTech
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 28, 2015 12:00 am

correlation != casuation

Chris Hanley
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 28, 2015 12:31 am

“A picture is worth a thousand words. Now give the same data to these journalists and see what happens. There is only one thing available to convince the public and politicians. Show them the graph …”.
Well obviously Mr/Ms rd50 doesn’t, or doesn’t want to, understand my comment.
However that politicians journalists and the public can be easily fooled by deceptive chartmanship is hardy worthy of admiration, except perhaps by an admirer of the good Dr Goebbels.

rd50
Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 28, 2015 2:32 am

To CodeTech
No, correlation does not equal causation. It never did.
What it does it make you think about a possibility, no more and no less.

Reply to  Chris Hanley
June 28, 2015 7:22 am

for a while, there was a positive correlation between CO2 and temperature increase.
And for a while there wasn’t.

sciguy54
Reply to  rd50
June 28, 2015 9:41 am

rd50
I must disagree. This is a great article if written by an activist. If the authors claim to journalists then it is a huge fail. If Bloomberg published this with the intent to influence the investments made by its readers then it is a borderline actionable act.
Why is it a fail? You gave many of the reasons why. Just a tiny bit of due diligence on the part of the authors would have uncovered the glaring holes in the “data” which was ladled to them by their source. And factual follow-up is one thing that a “journalist” should do.
On bloomberg.com I see a mission statement of sorts:
“Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world.”
One should note that they claim to deliver “accurate” information, but I hope their readers will be sophisticated enough to understand that an “accurate” recitation of information provided by a source is not the same as a complete and even-handed overview of the subject matter. The authors here are simply bending over forwards and backwards to further a meme. This is what activists do, not journalists.
Are they also trying to stimulate demand for certain industries in order to make money for themselves and their friends? The reader will have to judge that for himself.

rd50
Reply to  sciguy54
June 28, 2015 6:58 pm

As far as I know, these journalists are not activists. So I don’t want to accuse them of anything.
They received the information from, as far as they know, is a “reliable” source as I noted.
These journalists, as far as I know, may or may not have actually produced the graphs they presented.
If these graphs were prepared for them from the source they quoted, why should they be blamed instead of blaming the source? They reported.

patmcguinness
Reply to  rd50
June 28, 2015 5:30 pm

We should blame the journalists. They only show a PART of the story, and they do this out of bias.
How many media reports ever mention that up to 7/8th of our CO2 emissions will end up in the ocean?
See the points made below in an article with quotes from Keeling himself. They are never stated, but are out there as basic realities of Co2 and climate that no journalist will mention as it will tend to undermine an alarmist narrative.
“A major factor governing the rate of uptake of CO2 by the oceans is pace at which global CO2 emissions are increasing over time. Over the past decades, fossil emissions (measured as tons of carbon) have grown at 2 to 4 percent annually, from around 2 billion tons in 1950 to 9 billion tons today. The oceans as a whole have a large capacity for absorbing CO2, but ocean mixing is too slow to have spread this additional CO2 deep into the ocean.
As a result, ocean waters deeper than 500 meters (about 1,600 feet) have a large but still unrealized absorption capacity, said Scripps geochemist Ralph Keeling. The rapid emissions growth is unlikely to continue much longer as the reserves of conventional oil, coal, and gas become depleted and steps are taken to reduce emissions and limit climate impacts. As emissions slow in the future, the oceans will continue to absorb excess CO2 emitted in the past that is still in the air, and this excess will spread into ever-deeper layers of the ocean. The ocean uptake, when expressed as a percent of emissions, will therefore inevitably increase and eventually, 50 to 80 percent of CO2 cumulative emissions will likely reside in the oceans, Keeling said.”
https://scripps.ucsd.edu/programs/keelingcurve/2013/07/03/how-much-co2-can-the-oceans-take-up/

Lars P.
Reply to  rd50
June 30, 2015 1:38 pm

rd50: “I will defend these journalists. They did a GREAT job.”
rd50, I agree with sciguy54 above: June 28, 2015 at 9:41 am
“This is a great article if written by an activist.”
It may be that the “journalists” are not activists as you say (?), but also not journalists. Why? This is a pure propaganda piece, trying to hide under the carpet inconvenient facts.
A parallel diagram with human greenhouse emissions would have shown a different picture. Continuing to 2015 too. human emissions mattered after 1950, before not really.
You say: “If these graphs were prepared for them from the source they quoted, why should they be blamed instead of blaming the source? They reported.”
Sorry, no.
This is the difference between journalism and “journalism”. A honest journalist has to ask inconvenient questions, verifies the story, and tries to understand if what he reports makes sense.

June 27, 2015 6:11 pm

“The warming effect of CO2 diminishes logarithmically as levels go up”. And this statement in and of itself totally falsifies Catastrophic Anthropenic Global Warming.

catweazle666
Reply to  wickedwenchfan
June 28, 2015 3:04 pm

wickedwenchfan: ““The warming effect of CO2 diminishes logarithmically as levels go up”. And this statement in and of itself totally falsifies Catastrophic Anthropenic Global Warming”
You would think so, wouldn’t you?
According to CAGW theory. the relatively small – and diminishing – warming caused by the increase in atmospheric CO2 will cause an increase in atmospheric water vapour and a dangerous feedback will resupt.
Unfortunately for the Alarmists, the analyses of the NASA NVAP atmospheric water vapour measurements do not bear this out. Humlum and Vonder Haar show no discernible trend, Solomon et al in fact show a decrease of ~10% in the decade starting 2000.
Vonder Haar
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2012GL052094/full
Humlum
http://www.climate4you.com/GreenhouseGasses.htm
Solomon et al.
Abstract
Stratospheric water vapor concentrations decreased by about 10% after the year 2000. Here we show that this acted to slow the rate of increase in global surface temperature over 2000–2009 by about 25% compared to that which would have occurred due only to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. More limited data suggest that stratospheric water vapor probably increased between 1980 and 2000, which would have enhanced the decadal rate of surface warming during the 1990s by about 30% as compared to estimates neglecting this change. These findings show that stratospheric water vapor is an important driver of decadal global surface climate change.

https://www.sciencemag.org/content/327/5970/1219.abstract
So you are indeed correct.

June 27, 2015 6:25 pm

Let’s just sum the Bloomberg widget up in 4 words:
Garbage in, garbage out.
QED

Reply to  Tesla X (@Tesla_X)
June 28, 2015 7:45 am

I prefer the modern equivalent, first spotted on this site years ago:
Oooga in, Chucka out.

Reply to  Tesla X (@Tesla_X)
June 28, 2015 11:46 am

Actually for the global warming crowd it’s:
Garbage in, desired results out

Jeff B.
June 27, 2015 11:14 pm

When you are on the Left and mostly beholden to political dogma and narratives, lying comes as naturaly as breathing.

Mr. Pettersen
June 27, 2015 11:43 pm

So why dont you send this to Bloomberg and tell them to print it?
They should be sued for giving people wrong information and if they deny printing this means that they wants to misslead people.
So much for a free press !

Adam Gallon
June 28, 2015 12:54 am

Bishop Hill picks up more interesting points.
http://bishophill.squarespace.com/blog/2015/6/26/the-giss-graph-mystery.html
TCR of only 1.4, with aerosol forcing in-line with AR5, which is probably on the high side. So we’ve a low TCR, with a too-high aerosol componant, which would still make the model too sensitive to GHG.
They keep shooting themselves in the foot.

rd50
Reply to  Adam Gallon
June 28, 2015 6:10 am

I agree with the comments at Bishop Hill. Yes pretty graphs and clever presentation until they add the 2004 to 2015 temperature data.

markopanama
June 28, 2015 7:06 am

This was sent to me a few days ago by a wide-eyed mouth-breather who opined “Well I guess this about wraps it up for you skeptics!”
At first I was amused that Bloomberg, a financial rag, would go to such trouble to present (pseudo) science. Sort of like finding a stock market financial analysis in Car & Driver Then I looked a little deeper – Bloomberg is promoting the trillions of dollars that they claim are going to be invested in renewable energy stocks! What a surprise. They are serving their advertisers.
The chart and associated commentary in Bloomberg are nothing more than a classic example of financial institutions jumping on the bandwagon (creating the bandwagon) for the next big stock bubble by convincing uncritical and uneducated readers to invest their hard earned money in renewable get rich quick schemes.
So while the criticism of the science is certainly valid, it misses the point – this chart in nothing more than a carnival barker, telling whatever lies are necessary to get the rubes into the tent.

Reply to  markopanama
June 28, 2015 7:48 am

And you know that the Gore-troll is hiding somewhere under THAT bridge…ready to collect even more tolls from people being forced to cross the Green Bridge by various governments around the world.

June 28, 2015 7:25 am

SHOCKING !!!
Liberals caught lying about CO2 and global warming.
Shocking I tell you.

JohnD
June 28, 2015 11:23 am

Does anyone know the source for the graph “the widening divergence between models and reality” Thanks!

Xyzzy
Reply to  JohnD
June 28, 2015 3:00 pm

I believe it originated at UAH – Roy Spencer and John Christy

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Beijing
June 28, 2015 3:10 pm

“CO2 levels have been monotonically rising at least since 1958 (and almost certainly well before that), and we have excellent, precise measurements since March, 1958.”
Yah, well, no, fine… Let’s get a couple of facts wedged in here. The chemical method of the time for determining CO2 concentration was much more accurate than the NDIR machine used in the late 50’s. NDIR wasn’t so much ‘accurate’ as continuous which had not been done before.
To disregard earlier measurements is not reasonable particularly when they were more accurate and more precise.
Consider: how was the NDIR machine calibrated? Using calibration gas. How was that calibration gas certified? By chemical methods. Sure as heck not by NDIR methods because they have to be recalibrated frequently. At the Earth Monitoring Stations this is done every few hours using bottled gas and automated solenoids.
The fact that researchers don’t LIKE the chemically determined numbers from earlier in the twentieth century doesn’t make them inaccurate, just ‘off message’.
If the warming from 1920 to 1940 was primarily driven by sea temperatures there is every reason to expect the CO2 also rose (with a delay) to the values reported at the time, which is to say, above 400 ppm.

rd50
Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Beijing
June 28, 2015 7:07 pm

The chemical methods were perfectly fine. This is not the issue. The problem is the locations of the samples taken and competence of the analysts.

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Beijing
July 2, 2015 6:05 am

Crispin,
The alleged increase of 80 ppmv in only seven years and drop back again in only seven years is the equivalent of burning 1/3rd of all land vegetation and its regrowth, for which is not the slightest indication, as that would be visible in the 13C/12C ratio too. The same for the oceans: some sudden acidification of the oceans (undersea volcanoes?) could cause the release, but not such a fast drop in CO2 levels…
The main problem of the old measurements is where was measured: middle of towns, forests,… completely unsuitable for “background” CO2 levels then and now.
One of the main series which caused the 1942 “peak” in the historical compilation of the late Ernst Beck was in Giessen, mid-west Germany. Not far from the same place as the old station, a modern station takes CO2 samples every half hour. Here a few days in mid-summer under inversion, compared to “background” stations: Barrow, Mauna Loa and the South Pole, all raw data:
http://www.ferdinand-engelbeen.be/klimaat/klim_img/giessen_background.jpg
The historical data were taken three times a day, of which two were at the flanks of the daily curve…

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Beijing
July 2, 2015 9:22 am

Crispin,
There is no way the old methods could be used to calibrate the NDIR method: the accuracy was at best 3%, that is +/- 10 ppmv at 320 ppmv.
The first that Keeling Sr. did was making a very accurate device himself (he was a glass blower too) to measure CO2 levels with a repeatability of the measurements better than 1:40,000. That device was used to calibrate all calibration gases and equipment at Scripps, until a few years ago when it at last was sent to a museum. NDIR at Mauna Loa (and other stations) is calibrated every hour with three calibration gases and every 25 hours with an out of range mixture to control the calibration gases:
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/about/co2_measurements.html
That makes that CO2 measurements with the NDIR method are accurate to better than 0.2 ppmv. Some stations use GC for CO2 measurements and some samples are measured by mass spectrometer, mainly for the 13C/12C ratio.
The biography of Keeling is here:
http://scrippsco2.ucsd.edu/charles_david_keeling_biography in short, but the fascinating autobiography of Keeling about the first steps to measure CO2 more accurately and his struggle with the different administrations to maintain the CO2 measurements is gone…

L Leeman
June 28, 2015 4:26 pm

“ModelE2 consists of about a half-million lines of moldy Fortran code, which it is safe to assume nobody actually understands”
When you want to manufacture millions of something whose value depends on it being RIGHT, you would assume a tendency toward very thorough checking, rechecking and testing of code and design. Surely Intel’s engineers did that yet even so they put millions of flawed Pentium processors out into the field forcing a huge recall.
Imagine the chain of logic and numerical testing from FORTRAN compiler ( vintage unknown), to assembled FORTRAN statistical libraries, to model designers and builders to grad student coders to the present day ‘versions’.
I think raking through ALL the code of any ensemble model and verifying the numerical engines alone would yield a list of ‘oops’s worth considering. Perhaps this would be a good next project for Richard Muller and his funders to organize?

patmcguinness
June 28, 2015 9:04 pm

Mislabelled graph? Confusing models for actual measurements? Par for the alarmist course.
if it was an honest headline it would be: “It really is Climate Models”.
This act of journalistic malpractice all is in service to a non-sequitor narrative. Ok so greenhouse gases rose, and temperature since 1880 rose. This is not news. The mere fact of correlation is not causation and in fact what is really happening is GISS built their model wit the right aerosol fudge factors to make he match ‘work’. Hindcastwise- match. Forward projections? IPCC models have been an #epicfail.
Here you have a TCR of 1.5C being used in a model to show how grandly a TCR of 1.5C lines up with hidcast models. Yippie for 1.5C TCR estimates … ah, but isnt that at the low end of what IPCC models use? Oh my, yes it is. If you want to make models match reality, you have to lower the climate sensitivity. A score for Team Lukewarmer, not that the alarmists would ever admit to it…

chrisyu
June 29, 2015 12:25 am

The really nice part of the article,…..NO comments section. Don’t want anyone calling out the errors. Helps to present only one side, just listen to any good defense lawyer without hearing the prosecution side.

Reply to  chrisyu
July 1, 2015 8:49 am

Yep. But if they’d have had a comments section, I’d probably have just posted my complaints there, where hardly anyone would see them, instead of sending them to Anthony.

Jayce
June 29, 2015 3:23 am

Can anybody explain me why having a lot of “pseudo-random number generators” in your Fortran code is a bad thing? The fact they use stochastic models (what the author calls “pseudo-random number generators”) is a good sign, because they are much better at describing complex systems such as climate, than purely deterministic models. Finance uses lots of these “pseudo-random number generators” in their code to generate a lot of money, so that’s not something stupid to do.
Can somebody explain me why “They have just as much “confidence” for 1880 as they do for 2015!” is an aggravating factor? The laws of climate are the same in 1880 as in 2015, even though measurement can be different – but here we are not talking “error bars”, we are talking how sensitive the models is to all its input parameters, that what this “confidence” thing is about. So it shouldn’t vary that much over time….

Reply to  Jayce
July 1, 2015 9:26 am

jayce asked, “Can anybody explain me why having a lot of “pseudo-random number generators” in your Fortran code is a bad thing?”
The reason it’s a problem is that they claimed their graph shows just the effect of GHGs. But that cannot possibly be true. Their graph is inconsistent with that claim. You can see immediately from the graph that factors other than GHGs must have greatly affected the graph which they generated.
Pseudo-random number generators model “noise” — i.e., forcings which cause apparently random output changes, but can’t be modeled. That’s fine for modeling an entire climate system. But they claimed that their graph shows just the effect of GHGs. It doesn’t.
That graph should have been monotonically increasing, because the only forcings which supposedly affected it were monotonically increasing. It isn’t.
Also, that graph should have exhibited acceleration since 1958, because the only forcing which supposedly affected it (log(GHGs)) accelerated tremendously (nearly doubled). It doesn’t. In fact, it shows no acceleration since 1958.
jayce also asked, “Can somebody explain me why “They have just as much “confidence” for 1880 as they do for 2015!” is an aggravating factor? The laws of climate are the same in 1880 as in 2015, even though measurement can be different – but here we are not talking “error bars”, we are talking how sensitive the models is to all its input parameters, that what this “confidence” thing is about.”
Because what they depict is error bars. Specifically, it’s supposedly a 95% confidence interval.
It’s not “how sensitive the model is” to its input parameters. The slope of the graph, not the confidence interval, is what depicts how sensitive the model is to its input parameters (forcings).
The problem with the confidence interval that they showed is that their graph is supposedly a graph of the effect on temperatures of the forcing (the “input parameters,” i.e., GHG levels). But they ignored the uncertainty in that forcing when graphing the confidence interval of the output (temperature).
jayce wrote, “The laws of climate are the same in 1880 as in 2015…”
Indeed. So why do you suppose their graph shows 12% less calculated warming effect from GHGs for the period 1995-2005 than for 1959-1969, even though log(CO2-level) increased by nearly twice the rate over the period 1995-2005, compared to 1959-1969?

Jayce
Reply to  daveburton
July 2, 2015 6:14 am

Thanks for your constructive answer – I would like to pinpoint some apparent errors in what you said though:
“Pseudo-random number generators model “noise” — i.e., forcings which cause apparently random output changes, but can’t be modeled”
One other use of noise is to model microscopic systems, for instance climate parameters of a small region; In that case, the macroscopic system output (the global climate), if made of a huge numbers of these random microscopic systems, will not vary between two runs, even though the microscopic details will. So noise in this kind of scientific application is usually not used make some “random output changes”, but actually makes the macroscopic, complex system, more robust and realistic.
I still don’t understand why this article claims that using these pseudo-random numbers is such a big problem then.
“That graph should have been monotonically increasing, because the only forcings which supposedly affected it were monotonically increasing. It isn’t.”
Not necessarily, you assume a linear-response system, but climate isn’t, so a monotoneous increase of one input doesn’t mean monotoneous increase of the output.
Regarding the confidence interval stuff, I don’t see how what you have answered my question: “Can somebody explain me why “They have just as much “confidence” for 1880 as they do for 2015!” is an aggravating factor”

KevinM
June 29, 2015 5:47 am

“Reality doesn’t look very much like the Bloomberg graph, does it?”
You compared a graph with Y-axis labels to a graph section without y-axis labels, neither of which starts at zero.
Two loads of poo, sisde-by-
side

Reply to  KevinM
July 1, 2015 9:33 am

Sorry if I was unclear, KevinM. I was talking about the shapes of the two graphs.
The graph of Mauna Loa CO2 shows dramatic acceleration since 1958, but the Bloomberg graph shows no acceleration at all over that period. The graph of Mauna Loa CO2 shows monotonic increase, with no year showing a decrease in CO2 levels compared to the preceding year, but the Bloomberg graph zig-zags up and down.

ferdberple
June 29, 2015 6:30 am

it is clear that it is human population, not fossil fuels that drives CO2. Regardless of technology, the relationship has been virtually unchanged since 1850.
As such we are highly unlikely to be able to change this relationship regardless of any laws passed regarding fossil fuels.

tadchem
Reply to  ferdberple
June 29, 2015 11:05 am

Careful, ferd – with cranks like the AGW crowd around, you just may inspire a Malthusian solution to the imagined problem.
Personally I feel no obligation to protect the delusional from their Menckenish hobgoblins – only to protect myself from their over-reactions to their own nightmares.

Reply to  ferdberple
July 1, 2015 9:49 am

Nice graph. The correlation is striking, but be careful about the direction of causality. It actually runs both ways.
Obviously, population growth increases fossil fuel consumption and cement manufacturing, both of which emit CO2. But, the converse is also true. The causation also runs in the other direction. Elevated levels of what Scientific American once called the “Precious Air Fertilizer” increase population growth, by improving crop yields and reducing famines.

Thomas Brennan
June 29, 2015 10:20 am

Ok, but a good point they made is that they compared the output of the Sun to the temp rise. Apparently they’re claiming that solar output hasn’t really changed. (I don’t know how to measure Solar output in the 1880’s but that’s a different matter.) Also, the Earth’s orbit and rotation rate haven’t really changed. Other natural factors haven’t changed.
A 1 degree Fahrenheit change seems like it must be caused by human factors, since natural factors haven’t changed. One thing that has changed is CO2 concentration. So there is a correlation between CO2 and the temp rise. Now correlation doesn’t necessarily imply causation, as any logic student will tell you. BUT it is a reasonable hypothesis that there could be a link, at least between human industrial activity and the temp rise. That the CO2 output alone is what is causing it is one step farther along the causal-logic-ladder, and very model-dependent. There really is no way to prove that assertion.
CO2 models aside, I think that the general statement that “human industrial activity in one way or another is the cause of climate change” is very compelling.

Reply to  Thomas Brennan
July 1, 2015 10:04 am

If you’d said “a cause” instead of “the cause” in your final sentence, I’d have agreed with that statement, Thomas.
However, their point about solar output is weaker than it looks. There’s a lot more to the sun than just total solar irradiance. WUWT has many relevant articles:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/category/solar/ (E.g,, scroll down to the two articles in January, 2015.)
http://wattsupwiththat.com/category/cosmic-rays/

Reply to  daveburton
July 9, 2015 8:35 pm

A new “documentary” video about Svensmark’s theory (of the sun’s magnetic field affecting cosmic rays, which affect cloud formation, which affects climate) has been posted on YouTube. Documentary video productions are often very biased and unreliable sources of information, but they seem to make a very plausible case. I think it’s worth watching. Here’s the video:

Martin
June 29, 2015 12:15 pm

The Bloomberg graph has temperature (F) on the y-axis, and the Mauna Loa shows CO2-concentration (ppm). No wonder they don’t look the same!

Reply to  Martin
July 1, 2015 10:10 am

Martin, the Bloomberg graph shape is wrong. The Bloomberg graph supposedly depicts the effect on temperature of GHGs, mainly CO2. So it should be roughly proportional to log(C) with some time delay, where C is CO2 level.
But it isn’t. Not even close.

William Mosby
June 29, 2015 12:59 pm

The first part of this article tries to compare the effects of greenhouse gases on temperature (from the Bloomberg report) to the atmospheric concentration of CO2. At that point I decided that this article is deliberately trying to be deceptive or is just wrong. So I didn’t waste any more time on it.

ED
June 29, 2015 4:11 pm

I let my subscription to Bloomberg Businessweek expire some time ago. My biggest complaint is that they always assumed that catastrophic AGW was a proven fact. This seeped into their news stories and was obnoxiously everpresent in their editorials. Never ever featured a story that showed the other side of the debate.

lol
June 29, 2015 9:28 pm

graph fights, nice…
it doesn’t take away from the overall conclusion that human-generated CO2 is in greater numbers than every before and is having a profoundly negative effect on the planet, which of course is the point

catweazle666
Reply to  lol
June 30, 2015 1:36 pm

No, not really.

Lars P.
Reply to  lol
June 30, 2015 2:01 pm

rofl. quite the contrary lol.
The human emissions of CO2 have accelerated through the roof in the last decade:
http://edgar.jrc.ec.europa.eu/overview.php?v=CO2ts1990-2011
from 22060863.43 ktons in the 1990s to 24586832.08 in 2000 to 33376327.37 ktons 2011
A huge jump this century with no temperature increase this century.
Basically this invalidates the CO2 increasing temperature meme.
On the other side increasing CO2 in the atmosphere from 320 ppm in 1960 to 400 ppm now has ensured that 1 000 000 000 people more have something to eat.
http://www.co2science.org/data/plant_growth/plantgrowth.php

June 30, 2015 3:07 pm

What? Climate change deniers still dare to come out in the open?
[well people such as yourself seem to have no problem staying in the shadows, hiding behind an acronym for a name, all the while calling others hateful names, such as “denier”. So juvenile, wouldn’t you agree, “marinus”? – Anthony Watts]

Jakob
June 30, 2015 3:37 pm

Oh my god, this blogpost is so messed up, haha! If you don’t know what you’re writing about, just don’t do it 😛
First you write this:
“First: look at all those zig-zags, up and down, in their graph of GHG levels. Out of the 47 years they graphed since 1958, they show downward-zags in GHG levels for about a dozen of those years.
But there are no downward-zags in the real GHG data. CO2 levels have been monotonically rising at least since 1958 (and almost certainly well before that), and we have excellent, precise measurements since March, 1958.”
and then you admit that you understand that they’re not mapping CO2 levels at all:
“They didn’t really graph GHG levels, they graphed the supposed effect on temperature of GHG levels, but even that wasn’t realistic.”
Clearly a very biased or very confused post..

Reply to  Jakob
July 1, 2015 10:17 am

Jakob, they claimed their graph shows just the effect of GHGs. But that cannot possibly be true. Their graph is inconsistent with that claim.
If their graph really showed just the effect on temperature of GHGs, it would have been been monotonically increasing, at least over the last half-century, because GHG levels have been monotonically increasing for considerably longer than that. It also would have shown some acceleration (increase in rate of temperature rise), since the forcing accelerated dramatically. Neither is true in their graph.

July 3, 2015 9:15 pm

What the hell is wrong with you? Even if its ‘alarmist’, which it clearly isn’t, what is the negative side of taking care of the Earth by changing the way we are currently living. How about you put your best sweat pants and loafers on and actually go outside… and that doesn’t mean walk down the the corner store for another 4 liter bottle of mountain dew and a bag of doritos. Go to different countries, talk to people who really know the land like farmers and fishermen, environmentalists studying in the field, wildlife photographers… then see if you still feel the same.

Reply to  montyedits
July 9, 2015 9:06 pm

A roll-back of the industrial age, to drastically reduce CO2 emissions, is not “taking care of the Earth,” montyedits. Drastic curbs on CO2 emissions would impoverish billions of people, without any benefit at all to the Earth and its natural plant and animal environments.
“Future generations will wonder in bemused amazement that the early twenty-first century’s developed world went into hysterical panic over a globally averaged temperature increase of a few tenths of a degree and, on the basis of gross exaggerations of highly uncertain computer projections combined into implausible chains of inference, proceeded to contemplate a roll back of the industrial age.”
-Dr. Richard Lindzen (Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, MIT)
In addition, if it were not for the anthropogenic contribution to CO2 levels, crop yields would be an average of about 20% lower than they currently is, everywhere in the world. Some of that loss could be made up for by cutting down more forests, to put more land under cultivation. (Is that what you want?) But millions of the world’s poorest people, who struggle to find enough food to eat, would face starvation, were it not for the agricultural productivity gains due to anthropogenic CO2.
http://sealevel.info/ScientificAmerican_1920-11-27_CO2_fertilization1_50pct.jpg

Reply to  daveburton
July 10, 2015 7:17 am

s/they is/they are/
(I sure wish we could edit our posts.)