There is a belief out there that with unlimited money and the will, it is possible to cook scientific results to promote your agenda. We have come across this phenomena in the drug industry and in aqgricultural chemical industry. Both are now showing a serious disconnect from empirical reality, mostly because more of the same appears better to these profoundly ignorant opportunists.
It has proven mostly correct in the short and medium term. That is why we have not had a real repeat of the thalidomide scandal although serious anomalies have occurred that could be covered up.
The same rules have been applied to so called Climate Science. This report essentially unravels just how stunningly blatant the data manipulation has been. This surely means that we will be operating at several degrees warmer in a century even if the glaciers fully recover. In short our best data has been cooked in order to present the warming argument and all are paid or bamboozled to go along. Thus we have the related nastiness shown by these so called scientists who all surely know they are paid to run a fraud. There is no error to correct, but there is fraud to hide through intimidation.
All these so called scientists will be ultimately written out of the record simply because none of their data will be properly recoverable in order to correct likely. It may take another twenty years.
.
Forget Climategate: this ‘global warming’ scandal is much bigger
How can we believe in ‘global warming’ when the temperature records providing the ‘evidence’ for that warming cannot be trusted?
http://www.breitbart.com/london/2015/01/30/forget-climategate-this-global-warming-scandal-is-much-bigger/
It’s a big question – and one which many people, even on the sceptical side of the argument, are reluctant to ask.
Here, for example, is one of the two most prominent English sceptics in the House of Lords, Matt Ridley outlining his own position.
I am a climate lukewarmer. That means I think recent global warming is real, mostly man-made and will continue but I no longer think it is likely to be dangerous and I think its slow and erratic progress so far is what we should expect in the future. That last year was the warmest yet, in some data sets, but only by a smidgen more than 2005, is precisely in line with such lukewarm thinking.
Though I’ve no reason to doubt the sincerity of Ridley’s position, I
can also see plenty of reasons why it would be a politically convenient
line for him to take. The same applies to Lord Lawson’s position on
climate change and Bjorn Lomborg’s position on climate change. All of
these distinguished figures on the mildly sceptical side of the argument
have taken the view that the figures provided by the various scientific
institutions, such as the Climatic Research Unit at the University of
East Anglia and NASA GISS, as relayed to us in the assessment reports of
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, are broadly trustworthy.
Their beef is not so much with “the science” as it is with the
political hysteria and green propagandising that has accompanied that
science, as well as with the counterproductive policies resulting from
it.
To repeat, these may be earnest, heartfelt positions but they are
also politically expedient ones. What it means is that in debates
Lomborg and Lords Ridley and Lawson don’t come across as too “out
there.” It means that they cannot, by any reasonable stretch, be tarred
as “deniers”. Not only are they not denying the existence in “global
warming” but they’re not even that far off from where the mainstream
“consensus” is.
This all seems to me tactically wise. If their positions weren’t so
eminently “reasonable” they would be invited to speak at organisations
like the BBC even less often than they are already.
What it does, unfortunately, mean, though, is that those of us on the
sceptical side of the debate who want to push the argument a bit
further are put in danger of being made to look like extremists. Crazed
conspiracy theorists even.
So before I go into technical detail about why the temperature
records are suspect, let me provide an analogy which ought to make it
perfectly clear to any neutral parties reading this why the problem I’m
about to describe ought not to be consigned to the realms of
crackpottery.
Suppose say, that for the last 100 years my family have been
maintaining a weather station at the bottom of our garden, diligently
recording the temperatures day by day, and that what these records show
is this: that in the 1930s it was jolly hot – even hotter than in the
1980s; that since the 1940s it has been cooling.
What conclusions would you draw from this hard evidence?
Well the obvious one, I imagine, is that the dramatic Twentieth
Century warming that people like Al Gore have been banging on about is a
crock. At least according to this particular weather station it is.
Now how would you feel if you went and took these temperature records
along to one of the world’s leading global warming experts – say Gavin
Schmidt at NASA or Phil Jones at CRU or Michael Mann at Penn State – and
they studied your records for a moment and said: “This isn’t right.”
What if they then crossed out all your temperature measurements, did a
few calculations on the back of an envelope, and scribbled in their
amendments? And you studied those adjustments and you realised, to your
astonishment, that the new, pretend temperature measurements told an
entirely different story from the original, real temperature
measurements: that where before your records showed a cooling since the
1940s they now showed a warming trend.
You’d be gobsmacked, would you not?
Yet, incredible though it may seem, the scenario I’ve just described
is more or less exactly analogous to what has happened to the raw data
from weather stations all over the world.
Take the ones in Paraguay – a part of the world which contributed
heavily to NASA GISS’s recent narrative about 2014 having been the “hottest year on record.”
If it wasn’t for the diligence of amateur investigators like retired
accountant Paul Homewood, probably no one would care, not even
Paraguayans, what has been going on with the Paraguayan temperature
records. But Homewood has done his homework and here, revealed at his
site Notalotofpeopleknowthat, is what he found.
He began
by examining Paraguay’s only three genuinely rural weather stations.
(ie the ones least likely to have had their readings affected over the
years by urban development.)
All three – at least in the versions used by NASA GISS for their
“hottest year on record” claim – show a “clear and steady” upward
(warming) trend since the 1950s, with 2014 shown as the hottest year at
one of the sites, Puerto Casado.
Judging by this chart all is clear: it’s getting hotter in Paraguay, just like it is everywhere else in the world.
But wait. How did the Puerto Casado chart look before the temperature data was adjusted? Rather different as you see here:
Perhaps, though, Puerto Casada was an anomaly?
Nope. Similar adjustments, in the same direction, appear to have been made to the two other rural sites.
Ah. But there was surely some innocent explanation for this, Homewood
surmised. Perhaps the rural stations were wildly out of kilter with the
urban stations and had been ‘homogenised’ accordingly.
Except, guess what?
OK. So why am I making you look at all these charts? Because seeing is believing.
Without those charts, it would be all too easy for you to go: “Yeah
well he’s not a scientist so he probably doesn’t know what he’s talking
about” or “he’s exaggerating” or “he has got the wrong end of the
stick.”
So, judge for yourself. These are the actual before and after charts, reproduced from NASA’s own website.
Now the next thing the doubters among you will be thinking is: “Well
these are reputable scientific institutions. They wouldn’t be making
these adjustments without good reason.”
And I’d agree with you. That’s certainly what one would reasonably hope and expect.
But the odd thing is that no satisfactory explanation has been
forthcoming from any of the institutions which have been making these
adjustments. Not from NASA GISS. Nor from NOAA, which maintains the
dataset known as the Global Historical Climate Network. Nor from the
Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia which, with the
Met Office, maintains the third of the world’s three surface data
records, known as Hadcrut.
About as close as we’ve got to an attempted justification is this piece by Zeke Hausfather – Understanding Adjustments To Temperature Data – at the website of lukewarmer Judith Curry.
The explanations he offers for the basic principles of temperature
adjustments are plausible enough. They include things like the Urban
Heat Island effect; weather stations which have moved locations; weather
stations which appear to give false readings which need to be adjusted
in line with their neighbours; changes in measuring equipment; changes
in the time of day measurements are taken (formerly in the afternoon,
now more usually in the morning,) and so on.
In other words it’s a case of “move along. Nothing to see here” and “trust the Experts. They know best.”
The problem with Hausfather’s explanations is that though they’re
fine on the theory they don’t seem to bear much relation to the
actuality of the adjustments that have been made around the world.
Take, for example, the Urban Heat Island effect. This is where
weather stations, over time, have become surrounded by buildings or
other heat sources and which therefore record hotter temperatures than
they used to. You’d expect, as a result of this, that recent (ie late
20th century) raw temperature readings from urban areas would be
adjusted downwards in order to make them more accurate. Rarely though,
is this the case. More usually, the adjustments appear to have been made
in the other direction, so that the late twentieth century readings are
made hotter still – while the early twentieth century readings have
been adjusted to make them look cooler.
And this isn’t just an issue with the adjustments to the Paraguay stations by the way. It has happened all over the world.
As Paul Homewood reminds us here, it
has been happening everywhere from Iceland, Greenland and Russia to
Alice Springs in Australia. Also, it has been reported on, at least in
the climate sceptical blogosphere, for quite some time. Among the first
to spot the problem was Steve McIntyre who back in 2007 observed the
curious fact that where NASA’s James Hansen had once acknowledged that
the 1930s was the hottest decade in the US, he subsequently amended it –
with the help of some conveniently adjusted records – to the 1990s.
Anthony Watts of Watts Up With That? has been reporting on this for years; as have bloggers including Steven Goddard and journalists like Christopher Booker.
So why has the scandal never broken into the mainstream? Why has it
never made the same splash Climategate did (not, mind you, that
Climategate ever got much play in the MSM either)?
Well, one reason, I guess is that the alarmist establishment is
pretty good at fobbing off criticisms with seemingly plausible
scientific answers. (See Hausfather above).
It takes time and effort to counter these excuses: time and effort which few people can afford.
As an example of the kind of superficially plausible excuse-making I mean, here is climate scientist Ed Hawkins claiming that the reason for the amendments to the raw data at Puerto Casado is that the weather station has been moved.
Well, fair enough, you’d think – and take his word for it. But blogger Shub Niggurath
wouldn’t and has demolished this excuse by pointing out that there is
no evidence for the weather station having moved. It’s just a handy
excuse, that’s all. And in any case, it doesn’t explain why similar
changes were made to the records of the other stations: were they all
moved too?
But the bigger reason, of course, is this: if you make the case that
all (or at least a good many) of the world’s surface temperature data
records have been wantonly tampered with to the point where they are
effectively useless, you are more or less accusing some of the world’s
most distinguished (and lavishly funded) scientific institutions of, at
best, culpable incompetence and, at worst, outright fraud.
Also, to accuse so many temperature gatekeepers of getting the
details so badly wrong, you are also implying that there must be some
kind of conspiracy involved, even if it is only a conspiracy of silence
to cover up what a tremendous cock up they’ve made of their work over a
period of years.
Finally, you are suggesting that everything we have been told about
dramatic, unprecedented, man-made global warming by the alarmist
establishment over the last three decades may be based on a massive lie.
Think about it. The satellite records (which show no global warming for
the last 18 years) only go back to the late Seventies. So for the main
thesis about global warming, the scientists and policymakers who have
been pushing the alarmist narrative are largely dependent on the surface
temperature data (which, of course, goes back much earlier).
But if this data cannot be trusted, all bets are off. I’m not saying
there has been no 2oth century global warming, I think there probably
has been, but I don’t honestly know. The worrying part, though, is that
neither – it would appear – do the scientists.
Unless, of course, they can come up with an excuse to explain it all. But I’m not holding my breath.
2 comments:
well, we cannot use glaciers since Paraguay has none. But Chile and Argentina do, and those glaciers are melting. Unless you cherry pick the data and show that two are growing, so global warming must be a fraud because some places, somewhere, are getting cooler.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/06/090622-glaciers-growing.html
"Manmade global warming/cooling, climate change, whatever you wanna call it" is nothing but a political scam designed to raise revenues for insolvent western governments. It is otherwise known as "The Weather." Get used to it.
Post a Comment