Oh, You Mean that Science

The panel concluded we know a lot about the last 400 years, but have far less confidence in the period 900 to 1600, and not much confidence at all about prior to 900. The panel indicated it is “plausible” that the last 25 years of the 20th Century were warmer than any period in the last 1,000. But Mann’s and the IPCC’s claims about the last 1990s “likely” being the warmest decade and 1998 the warmest year had no plausibility. And Mann’s attacks on McIntyre and McKitrick for pointing out flaws in his statistical techniques received a comeuppance by the panel on page 107 of the report, when the panel diplomatically stated:

“Some of these criticisms (by McIntyre and McKitrick) are more relevant than others, but taken together, they are an important aspect of a more general finding of this committee, which is that uncertainties of the published reconstructions have been underestimated.”

The hockey stick, in short, is 600 years shorter than it was before and the uncertainties for previous centuries are larger than Mann gave credence. And when the uncertainty of the paleoclimatogical record increases with time, the uncertainty about human contribution is likewise increased.
tech central station

Steven McIntyre is one of Canada’s great contributions to the debate on climate change. He comes from a highly quantitative business background and his website/blog, climate audit has become a clearing house for climate change skeptics.

McIntyre’s great heresy is to have suggested that the data and the statistical procedures used to develope the IPCC’s famous hockey stick model were open to question. For this heresy McIntyre was roundly abused…after all, the international orthodoxy is that climate change is true and its our fault.

McIntyre pushed forward and discovered that the principal author of the IPCC study would not release the data the hockey stick was founded upon. He also discovered both statistical errors and errors in the algorithm the principal investigator used. More abuse followed.

However, the release last week of the National Academy of Science panel report, suggests that McIntyre has a lot of this right.

McIntyre’s larrger point was that, in business, no one would proceed with a serious investment without exercising due dilligence regarding the assumptions underlying the project. With Kyoto no such due dilligence has been exercised.

Given that the cost of Kyoto’s implementation is in the hundreds of billions of dollars the failure of governments and their scientists to insist upon a rigorous due dilligence proceedure before committing to the unlikely enterprise of Kyoto is, at best, negligent. At worst it suggests that the climate alarmists simply bamboozled the bureaucrats and created a program for the de-industrialization of the West on the flimsiest of scientific pretexts.

However, such is the power of the Kyoto orthodoxy that simply suggesting a rigorous assessment of the hockey stick’s underlying statistics and data remains beyond the pale.

Written by jay on June 28th, 2006 with 3 comments.
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3 comments

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Get your own gravatar by visiting gravatar.com KevinG
#1. June 29th, 2006, at 12:28 AM.

The report also said:

The committee pointed out that surface temperature reconstructions for periods before the Industrial Revolution — when levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases were much lower — are only one of multiple lines of evidence supporting the conclusion that current warming is occurring in response to human activities, and they are not the primary evidence.

That is, there are many independent lines of evidence that arrive at the same conclusion and Mann’s research is not the primary evidence. That’s kind of an important thing to say don’t you think?

Get your own gravatar by visiting gravatar.com David Magda
#2. July 1st, 2006, at 10:04 PM.

The hockey stick model isn’t in as much doubt as some would like to believe:

http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=8

A peer-review paper even goes so far to completely discredit McIntyre’s conclusions:

The close reproducibility of the MBH98 reconstruction based on both (a) the use of an independent CFR method and (b) the use of the individual proxies used by MBH98 rather than the Multiproxy/PC representation used by MBH98, discredits the arguments put forth by McIntyre and McKitrick (2003) in support of their putative correction to the MBH98 reconstruction.

http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=10

A bit of searching turns up some corrections to some things stated by McIntyre (and McKitrick):

http://info-pollution.com/mandm.htm

Also, from the “About” page on Tech Central Station:

TCS is supported by a small group of sponsors: the American Beverage Association, ExxonMobil, Freddie Mac, General Motors Corporation, Gilead Sciences, McDonalds, Merck and PhRMA.

Not a large surprise that the TCS would publish articles casting “doubt” on climate change, given some of the sponsors.

P.S. Would it be difficult do add a ‘preview’ button to the comments? It would be convenient to see how my comment comes out–this way I can reformat it so that it’s easier to read if necessary. Just a suggestion.

Get your own gravatar by visiting gravatar.com jay
#3. July 2nd, 2006, at 1:57 AM.

David, the debate on McIntyre’s work has been fierce as one might expect it to be given that he is suggesting the essential model of the IPCC is fundamentally flawed. However, what he has done is asked for some basic safeguards such as the archiving of data series as part of the mormal publication process (something Mann has so far refused to do) so as to allow independent verification of the results. Given that we are proposing to spend billions and potentially lose trillions in Kyoto compliance costs this would seem a minimal requirement.

As for TCS: I occassionally write for TCS and have never - with one exception - found any heavy handed pro-business bias or editorial requirement. After all, many of those same companies support PBS and assorted other organizations which are in no way required to toe the party line.

(The case where I saw a bit of editorial bias was where I wrote an article which responded to a TCS slag of the Caandian medical system. I could not help pointing out that Canadians live longer than Americans at about 2/3 the per capita health care expenditure. Poor Nick Schultz simply did not have room for this article at TCS. He didn’t say it was wrong, just unwanted. Writing op/ed this happens and it certainly does not reflect the hand of corporate control. Rather, in the US, it reflects a touching faith in a hopeless, sprawling, inefficient, health care system which provides brilliant care for some and none at all for others because it is “market driven”. Ah well.)

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