By Michael Fumento on 8.16.07 @ 12:08AM
Turns out eight of the hottest ten years in U.S. have not occurred since 1995 -- but NASA's Goddard Institute doesn't seem to want anyone to know it's had to correct its statistics.
In retrospect, you knew there would be trouble when you put the
people responsible for the Space Shuttle program in charge of
tracking U.S. temperatures. So perhaps it shouldn't have come as a
big surprise when it was revealed that NASA committed a bit of an
oopsie regarding data constantly used by the mainstream media and
other global warming proponents.
If you follow the global warming debate, one thing you "know" is
that to even call it a "debate" is to whisk yourself away to the
land of the Flat Earth Society and Holocaust deniers and to be on
the take from Big Carbon. Another is that nine of the ten warmest
years recorded in the U.S. lower 48 since 1880 have occurred since
1995, with the very hottest being 1998.
Regarding the first, all you need to see is the
cover of the current Newsweek, promising to expose
"the well-funded naysayers." (Discussed
in the Aug. 9 TAS.) I know about such smearing firsthand
in that there's a "fact sheet" on me from a group called EXXONSECRETS.ORG
that claims it's "documenting ExxonMobil's funding of climate
change skeptics." Yet I've never received a petro-penny from
ExxonMobil or anybody in the fossil fuel industry.
As to the stuff about the hottest years...Well, whaddya know!
Turns out that's wrong, too. Figures from NASA's Goddard Institute for
Space Studies (GISS) now show the hottest year since 1880 was
1934. Nineteen-ninety-eight dropped to second, while the third
hottest year was way back in 1921. Indeed, four of the 10 hottest
years were in the 1930s, while only three were in the past
decade.
The real 15 hottest years are spread over seven
decades. Eight occurred before the chief "greenhouse gas,"
atmospheric carbon dioxide, began its sharp rise; seven occurred
afterwards.
Rush Limbaugh was incorrect in saying the new figures are "just more evidence"
that "this whole global warming thing is a scientific hoax."
Conversely, global warming hotheads are also wrong in insisting the revelation deserves no more
mention than the back of a Trivial Pursuit card. The GISS, which is
directed by global warming guru James
Hansen, is saying likewise. He's wrong. Part of the importance
is in the data and part is in how Hansen's agency behaved, which
might be labeled a cover-up.
In pooh-poohing the revision, the GISS ignores the tremendous
emotional impact it's had in practically claiming each year is
hotter than the one before. Instead it observes (correctly) since
the U.S. accounts for merely two percent of global land surface, a
relatively small adjustment in its figures doesn't meaningfully
impact the global picture.
But, notes Canadian mathematician Stephen McIntyre,
who exposed the false figures, "The Hansen error . . . has a
significant impact on the GISS estimate of U.S. temperature
history"... (Emphasis added.) Is this important because we're
a major world power or that we produce the best fried chicken? No,
it's important because we have a far more sophisticated system of
temperature monitoring than countries with far larger land masses.
Hence, data from each of these nations affect the global model more
than the American data.
"Many of the stations in China, Indonesia, Brazil and elsewhere
are in urban areas (such as Shanghai or Beijing)," observes
McIntyre. This can produce hotter temperatures, yet some of the
major trackers of the data from these countries, including the
National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration,
make no attempt to adjust for monitor placement errors. In any
event, for some reason "the U.S. history has a rather
minimal (warming) trend if any since the 1930s," while the ROW
[rest of the world] has a very pronounced trend since the
1930s.
Thus if the U.S. model, by far the most accurate one, became
the model, it would be a gut punch to those claiming we
must take drastic, horrifically expensive measures right now to
ameliorate warming.
Therefore, for the GISS to say this "only" affects the U.S. data
is rather like a used car salesman insisting, "This automobile
defect is trivial; it only affects steering and braking."
Then there's the whole issue of how the revised data came about
and came to light.
Perhaps you noticed that in writing "it was revealed" I appear
to have violated a cardinal rule of grammar in using the passive
voice right there in the first paragraph where my third grade
teacher couldn't possibly miss it. This was actually dramatic
foreshadowing because, you see, NASA didn't change the figures
without being pushed and once it did it refused to publicize
them.
McIntyre was already the bane of the hotheads for debunking the
infamous "hockey stick" graph promulgated by University of
Virginia geoscientist Michael
Mann and colleagues beginning in the late 1990s. Mann's
calculations, using new imputs, showed temperatures to be flat over
the last thousand years like a hockey stick shaft before suddenly
angling up like the blade in the last half of the 20th century.
This statistically wiped out both the Medieval Warming Period (c. 900-1300), which
unleashed the Vikings, and Little Ice Age (c. 1250-1850), even though
historical information for both is overwhelming. Yet the
highly-politicized Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
eagerly adopted
the hockey stick graph in its 2001 Assessment Report. But then
McIntyre and fellow Canadian economist Ross McKitrick showed Mann's methodology produces hockey-stick shapes
even when applied to random data -- bringing back those scary
Scandinavians and ice-skating on the Thames.
McIntyre's latest debunking was the discovery of an error in
GISS records for the years 2000 through 2006. In simplest terms,
they hadn't been adjusted to compensate for the location or time of
day where the data was gathered.
But nobody correlated those newer figures with the older ones
until McIntyre did, even though later Hansen admitted it was "easy to fix." McIntyre
published the data on his own website (which is currently down
because it's overloaded with traffic) and got the agency to admit
it was wrong and post new figures. It even sent him a thank you
note.
Yet the GISS did absolutely nothing to alert scientists or the
public to the new figures. This though it has publishedfive global warming press releases so far this
year, each one alarming. It took the blogosphere and radio talk
show hosts to publicize the new figures even as the mainstream
media essentially ignored it. (The Washington Post finally
ran an
article a week after the controversy began, siding with the
GISS and describing McIntyre as nothing more than a "blogger." All
the presidential candidates have blog sites, but somehow the
Post refrains from tagging them as bloggers.)
Ultimately the greatest importance of all of this is that it
strongly appears to substantiate the intuitive belief that, with
scientist-politician Hansen at the helm the GISS, whose data are
far more important to modeling global temperatures than it lets on,
is not a neutral collector and disseminator of statistics but
rather a politicized mouthpiece.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Global Warming, NATO, Energy