Guest essay by Eric Worrall
The National Center for Science Education has in my opinion betrayed the scientific principles they claim to defend, by suggesting in its global warming primer that climate models are reliable, and by claiming the serially debunked Mann hockey stick graph is credible.
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Q: Still, shouldn’t there be some explanation for the slowing? [the pause]
Yes, there should be, and while scientists are still trying to understand the details, the basic explanation almost certainly goes as follows. The addi- tional heat and energy trapped in the atmosphere by the rising carbon diox- ide concentration can manifest itself in several di erent ways, and the ris- ing surface temperature shown in figures 2.1 and 2.2 is only one of those. In fact, more than 90% of the added heat and energy is expected to warm the water in the oceans (as opposed to warming the land and ocean surface), and data indicate that the ocean waters have continued to warm without any evidence of slowing (figure 2.3).
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Scientific models differ from the models you may be familiar with in everyday life, which are typically miniature representations of real objects, such as model cars or airplanes. In contrast, a scientific model is a conceptual representation, often developed with the help of com- puters, that uses known scientific laws, logic, and mathematics in an attempt to describe how some aspect of nature works. The model can be tested by seeing how well it corresponds to reality. Models are important in almost every field of science, but here we’ll focus specifically on models of Earth’s climate.
The principle behind a climate model is relatively simple. Scientists create a computer program that represents the climate as a grid of cubes like those shown in figure 2.6, so that each cube represents one small part of our planet over one range of altitudes in the atmosphere. The “initial conditions” for the model consist of a mathematical represen- tation of the weather or climate within each cube at some moment in time. This representation might incorporate data on such things as the temperature, air pressure, wind speed and direction, and humidity at the time the model begins. The model uses equations of physics (for example, equations that describe how heat flows from one cube to neighboring cubes) to predict how the conditions in each cube will change in some time period, such as the next hour. It then uses the new conditions and the equations to predict the conditions after another hour, and so on. In this way, the model can simulate climate changes over any period of time.
Decades ago, climate models were fairly simple, using grids no more complex than the one in figure 2.6. Over time, however, scientists have in essence used trial and error to make the models better and better. Again, the principle is easy to understand: If your model fails to reproduce the real climate in some important way, then you look to see what might be going wrong. For example, you might have neglected some important law of physics, or the cubes in your grid might need to be smaller to give accurate results. Once you think you know what went wrong, you revise the model, and see if it works better. If it does, then you have at least some reason to think you are on the right track, and if it doesn’t, you go back to the drawing board.
Today’s climate models are fantastically detailed, and they reproduce the actual climate of the past century with remarkable accuracy. Indeed, the modern models work so well that scientists can use them to conduct “experiments” in which they ask what would happen if this or that were different than it is. Figure 2.7 shows an example of the power this approach provides. The red curve shows temperatures over the past century and a half as predicted by the best available climate models, which take into account both natural factors affecting cli- mate, such as changes in the Sun’s output and volcanic eruptions, and human factors, such as the increase in the carbon dioxide concentra- tion from the burning of fossil fuels. Notice that these models provide an excellent match to the general trends in the real data (black curve). In contrast, models that leave out the human factors predict the blue curve, and as you can see, this curve does not agree with the observed warming of the past few decades. The fact that we get a close match between the models and reality only when changes in both natural and human factors are included gives us great confidence that human factors are the cause of the recent warming.
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What’s the bottom line for Skeptic Claim 2?
There are no known natural factors that could account for the substantial warming of the past century. We’ve discussed two sets of observations that definitively rule out the Sun as the cause: (1) solar energy input has been falling while the temperature has been rising; and (2) the upper atmosphere has been cooling while the lower atmosphere warms, which is consistent only with greenhouse warming, not warming due to the Sun. Scientists investigate other potential causes with models, and today’s sophisticated models match up extremely well with observations of the actual climate — but only when we include the human contributions to global warming, not natural factors alone. The match makes it highly likely that the models are on the right track, giving us further confidence in the idea that human activity is the cause of most or all recent global warming.
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Wait — didn’t I hear that the hockey stick graph has been discredited?
Well, you probably have heard this, since it is frequently repeated in places like the Wall Street Journal’s op-ed pages, but it is not true. The original version of the “hockey stick” was published by climate scientist Michael Mann in 1998, and he used only a single data set. Skeptics jumped on it, claiming all kinds of reasons why the data should be doubted. Scientists took the skeptic concerns seriously, and therefore did what scientists do: They investigated in more detail. Indeed, the reason you see so many data sets — from independent sources including tree rings, corals, stalagmites, ice cores, and more — in figure 2.10 is that the scientific community went to great lengths in trying to either confirm or refute Mann’s original “hockey stick.” Keep in mind that every curve you see in figure 2.10 represents many years of fieldwork and careful research by a substantial group of scientists, who often put their lives on the line to collect the data in remote and dangerous locations. As you can see, these additional studies clearly confirm Mann’s original conclusions. Still not mollified, the skeptics were so adamant in their objections that they convinced Con- gress to ask the National Research Council (NRC) to investigate those conclusions. The NRC report, published in 2006, concluded that the graph and the data were fully valid.
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Read more: https://ncse.com/files/pub/evolution/excerpt–primer.pdf
The NCSE document clearly contradicts itself with regard to the reliability of climate models. The suggestion that models are so reliable they can be used to conduct climate experiments is ridiculous in the face of the admission that the reason for the pause is still being investigated, that the models might have to be adjusted. The “modern” models have failed their first serious test.
One third of all the CO2 humans have ever produced was emitted during the pause. If model assumptions were correct, this should have blown global temperatures sky high. The fact surface temperatures stagnated, you can’t simply sweep an anomaly like that under the carpet, or into the ocean. Even if the ocean did swallow the heat, a valid climate model should have predicted this. If a model cannot predict when the ocean will swallow vast amounts of excess heat, then projections of future temperature are utterly unreliable.
As for suggestions Mann’s hockey stick has been upheld by scientific investigation, you could read many excellent analysis of hockey stick methodology issues, but what I find most intriguing is that even the scientists who helped produce the hockey stick had reservations – they just chose not to talk about those concerns in public.
Climategate email 0938018124.txt (CRU Professor Keith Briffa in September 1999, recipients include Michael Mann)
… I know there is pressure to present a nice tidy story as regards ‘apparent unprecedented warming in a thousand years or more in the proxy data’ but in reality the situation is not quite so simple. We don’t have a lot of proxies that come right up to date and those that do (at least a significant number of tree proxies ) some unexpected changes in response that do not match the recent warming. I do not think it wise that this issue be ignored in the chapter.
For the record, I do believe that the proxy data do show unusually warm conditions in recent decades. I am not sure that this unusual warming is so clear in the summer responsive data. I believe that the recent warmth was probably matched about 1000 years ago. …
Climategate email 3759.txt, sent to Keith Briffa in August 2000, discusses substantial evidence that the medieval warm period and little ice age were global, not local variations of limited geographic scope, as was claimed by Michael Mann.
Hi Keith,
Here is the Oroko Swamp RCS chronology plot in an attached Word 98 file and
actual data values below. It certainly looks pretty spooky to me with
strong “Medieval Warm Period” and “Little Ice Age” signals in it. It’s
based on substantially more replication than the series in the paper you
have to review (hint, hint!). In terms of rbar, sample size, and eps, it is
probably okay back to about AD 980 at this time. I still have 3-4 more
subfossil sections to process, but it is doubtful that the story will
change much. When I come over in October, I am thinking about asking
Jonathan Palmer to come over from Belfast for a visit. What do you think
about that?
Ed …
Cimategate source material available from Wikileaks
Oroko Swamp is in New Zealand, a long way from Northern Europe, where the medieval warm period and little ice age are documented history. The existence of a substantial global medieval warm period and little ice age is a direct contradiction of the flatness of the pre-anthropogenic component of Mann’s hockey stick reconstruction. And its not just the reconstruction from Oroko Swamp in New Zealand – other proxies from Japan, Antarctica and elsewhere have confirmed that the medieval warm period and little ice age were global.

Submitting to pressure to tell a nice tidy story, at least in public, ignoring or discounting evidence which contradicts the alarmist position, trying to sweep aside criticism of a theory by suggesting everything is OK because a major anomaly is being investigated – this isn’t the scientific method I was taught.
In my opinion the NCSE is doing a grave disservice by advancing such a nakedly partisan assessment of climate science, by ignoring or glossing over very real issues with climate alarmist positions. I’m not suggesting the NCSE should necessarily take the skeptic position on every climate issue, but a little more balance would provide a much better teaching resource for their audience. Let us hope the NCSE have the integrity to apologise for and correct their unbalanced assessment, once they realise what they have done.
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Proof that afternoon warming is not caused by the sun: “solar energy input has been falling while the temperature has been rising.”
Nope, and it doesn’t apply to seasons either, or to whatever temperature effects a grand maximum of solar-magnetic activity may have, so add NCSE to my list of dozens of scientists, scientific groups, including the IPCC, who claim that a body stops warming, not when the heat applied falls below the heat it gives off, but when the heat applied passes its maximum.
The two are only the same if the body has no (or little) thermal mass so that its temperature equilibrates instantly (or rapidly) when forcings change. That is NOT the earth, which continues to warm well beyond the point when a cyclical forcing passes its peak.
We see this with solar forcing each day, over the change of seasons (where the maximum solar forcing is on the first day of summer), and if changes in solar activity have a substantial forcing effect the same pattern will occur on the time scales over which solar activity varies.
Solar activity was at least high, and by some estimates at grand maximum levels, from roughly the 1920s through the end of the century. Our peuedo-scientific climate alarmists are in lockstep in claiming that any temperature effect from this peak in solar activity would have turned negative when solar activity passed its peak, perhaps sometime around 1980. Pure lunatic anti-science.
The best argument against solar activity being a substantial driver of climate is the one Willis has made many times: the absence of any clear 11year or 22yr temperature signal corresponding to the 11yr solar cycle (22yr if polarity is included), but just because we can’t discern such a signal doesn’t mean it isn’t there.
Temperature fluctuations on this time scale are dominated by ocean oscillations, the mechanisms and timings of which remain mysterious. To discern a solar-cycle temperature signal we would have to first be able to identify the effect that ocean oscillations are having on temperature, subtract it out, and see if there is a solar signal in what remains. We would have to be able to control for a variable (ocean oscillations) that we can’t control for. An 11yr temperature signal may well be there. We just don’t know how to separate it out yet.
I quote: “Today’s climate models are fantastically detailed, and they reproduce the actual climate of the past century with remarkable accuracy. ”
Abject nonsense. You have had 29 years to do your ” trial and error” modeling and so far you have failed to produce pone model that accurately describes future climate. Thar i enough expensive super computer time wasted, Just close the operation and save us from any further imaginary climate disasters.
“Today’s climate models are fantastically detailed, and they reproduce the actual climate of the past century with remarkable accuracy.”
Which “actual climate” are they referring to, I wonder? Would that be the actual climate before or after the adjusters got their hands on the data and used it to promote their CAGW narrative?
What does reproducing bastardized, bogus surface temperature data say about your climate model? It says to me that your model reproduces bogus data so your model must also be bogus.
Alarm was well underway by the time MBH98 came out. Up until then, as I understand it, received wisdom(paradigm) was that the MWP and LIA existed, with many proxy studies showing this.
And then MBH98 was accepted without question, and suddenly several other studies came out claiming to support it.
So what was wrong with all those previous studies? Why had nobody noticed the hockey stick before? What changed to make it so ‘obvious’ after MBH98?
Sorry, Nick, Simon et al, it all sounds rather suspicious to me.
Oh, and PS: Why were Soon and Baliunas slaughtered so when their study confirmed the pre-MBH findings?
Summat not quite right here. . .
These ‘studies’ are sooo obviously explicitly commissioned to reinforce any given message, narrative or objective while today’s Guardian is running two more articles, each hailing ‘studies’ that support their climate hysteria. I trust them about as far as I can throw Greenland.
ARE YOU FREAKING KIDDING ME? !!!!!
YES
I refer to Nick Stokes’ comment of May 3 2017 at 11.13 pm.
I have seen this plot countless times over the last ten or more years, and no doubt almost everyone who reads this blog (and others that are connected with climate affairs) has too.
What I have NEVER seen, and what I’ve asked about often enough, is not the graphic but // the actual numbers \\ that were used to to derive it.
I have all Mann’s data from the 1998 paper, Who else that reads this blog has those – 112 columns andd I seem to remember 583 rows representing what Mann chose to present as climate (temperature!) related data from many sources. Some (13) were actual temperatures or closely related to actual temperatures, though not necessarily correctly labelled. Others were rainfall or precipitation, others ice core data, and yet others “principal components”.
Mann operated on this bizarre assortment of scientific data in a way that few understood and which he proved somewhat hesitant to publicise, but which was eventually unravelled by McIntyre and Mcitrick.
What is evident, if you even cursorily examine the data columns, is that their scales differ by orders of magnitude. Any trivial but reasonable examination of the data is defeated unless you decide to re-scale them to sensible sizes – so that averages over columns have a real meaning and are not dominated by those columns having large absolute values.
This is a very simple operation. “Standardise” every column to means zero, variance one. Only now can one legitimately combine the columns and hope to be able to spot what has happened over time.
Without the numerical data, that I have repeatedly requested access to, that forms the basis of Nick Stokes’ plot, it is impossible to comment sensibly on the apparent hockey stick shape.
SO, PLEASE, SOMEONE, can you supply the actual data, NOT the plot. I can do all my own plotting perfectly well! Then I know that it it reliable.
What I wish to do is to see whether a hockey stick arises naturally from the /original, published/ data.
I cannot produce one from the data that I have available.
Robin
Recognize this for what it is:
Propaganda: noun; Information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view.
How much wind would a screen block if the openings were 1″ squares and the wires were 0.0004″ thick? Or is that not a valid model for comparing the effects of atmospheric CO2?
Not valid. A more appropriate analogy would be how much SUN would a mesh as you describe block if it was three dimensional and filled the whole troposphere? IR is just going the other direction.
The answer is “a lot.” The effect of more Co2 is to lower the average altitude at which IR gets caught, keeping the warmth closer to the surface, which warms the surface more.
…WRONG…The CAGW “theory” claims the heating takes place in the Troposphere (the hot spot, which doesn’t exist)
I had some 50 swg dcc (double cotton covered) wire once and that was 1 thou’ i.e. 0.001″, thinner than a human hair. A wire 0.0004″ diameter would be even trickier to handle but you would get many kilometers of it on a 8 oz spool.
WOW, you guys are still at it ?? Awesome !!
+ 100 E
“Today’s climate models are fantastically detailed, and they reproduce the actual climate of the past century with remarkable accuracy. ”
Astrologers also tell your past with remarkable accuracy, (after they have found out about it by various means).
Where they fail is to tell your future.
Climate scientist saving a polarbear
http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/4E91yMMLljI/hqdefault.jpg
Well, the NOAA, NASA and Hadley Center druids do advocate child sacrifice to the climate gods. What better way than helping to feed allegedly endangered polar bears?
This was during “hug a polar bear week” I believe. That poor polar bear was on the brink of extinction, but saved in the nick of time by that kind climate scientist. After she jumped in, it was back to Darwin’s survival of the fittest. The polar bear appears to be fitter than the climate scientist.
Indeed, absent high-powered rifles, polies are fitter than humans.
In the state of nature Arctic food chain, polies outrank Eskimos, a fact acknowledged by pre-firearms Eskimos.
The sacrifice has more fat than even a well fed seal.
“Here is my most recent post if you’d care to respond:”
No, if it comes down to haggling over whether ordinary smoothing (as clearly stated) is somehow a “horizontal shift”, I’m out of it.
We are at the top of an interstadial period. CO2 has essentially caught up but is just riding on the back of a larger oceanic/atmospheric teleconnected multi-millennially long oscillation. We are supposed to be warm with micro-trends up and down while at the top. These trends can be safely ignored as a threat. It’s the larger down slope that we need to learn about and prepare for. This is so blatantly obvious yet ignored by the current crop of climate research starlets and their fan clubs. Idiots.
Looking at the temperature charts, it appears the top of the interstadial was about 3 to 5 thousand years ago.
Depends on which proxy you are using. Which one is your favorite?
Save the children, close this shop down. Only way to stop their BS.
This club has the wrong name.
They are brainwashing young people. We don’t want that do we.
No need to explain anything to them or spend any time or effort to make a point.
These people are completely entrenched in their mission.
Once a commie always a commie.
Shut the place down.