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Second Inquiry Exonerates Climatic Research Unit

mvdwege writes "After being cleared of charges of misconduct by a parliamentary committee, now the CRU has the results of the inquiry (PDF) by a panel of scientists into their scientific methods. Here is the CRU press release. Criticisms: The statistical methods used, though arriving at correct results, are not optimal, and it is recommended future studies involve professional statisticians if possible; and the CRU scientists are lacking somewhat in organization. A very far cry from the widespread allegations of fraud. It seems 'Climategate' is ending with a whimper."

6 of 764 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Here is how you do science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    blue-ribbon committees of politicians

    From page 7 of TFA:

    APPENDIX A
    PANEL MEMBERSHIP
    Chair: Prof Ron Oxburgh FRS (Lord Oxburgh of Liverpool)
    Prof Huw Davies, ETH Zürich
    Prof Kerry Emanuel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Prof Lisa Graumlich, University of Arizona.
    Prof David Hand FBA, Imperial College, London.
    Prof Herbert Huppert FRS, University of Cambridge
    Prof Michael Kelly FRS, University of Cambridge

  2. Re: you have a a strange way of reading reports by Cochonou · · Score: 5, Informative

    Fraud you say ? Don't you think your view lacks a bit of perspective ?

    From the report, on dendroclimatology:
    "Although inappropriate statistical tools with the potential for producing misleading results have been used by some other groups, presumably by accident rather than design, in the CRU papers that we examined we did not come across any inappropriate usage although the methods they used may not have been the best for the purpose. It is not clear, however, that better methods would have produced significantly different results. "
    "With very noisy data sets a great deal of judgement has to be used. Decisions have to be made on whether to omit pieces of data that appear to be aberrant. These are all matters of experience and judgement. The potential for misleading results arising from selection bias is very great in this area. It is regrettable that so few professional statisticians have been involved in this work because it is fundamentally statistical."
    "After reading publications and interviewing the senior staff of CRU in depth, we are satisfied that the CRU tree-ring work has been carried out with integrity, and that allegations of deliberate misrepresentation and unjustified selection of data are not valid. In the event CRU scientists were able to give convincing answers to our detailed questions about data choice, data handling and statistical methodology. The Unit freely admits that many data analyses they made in the past are superseded and they would not do things that way today."

    On historical instruments reports:
    "Like the work on tree rings this work is strongly dependent on statistical analysis and our comments are essentially the same. Although there are certainly different ways of handling the data, some of which might be superior, as far as we can judge the methods which CRU has employed are fair and satisfactory. Particular attention was given to records that seemed anomalous and to establishing whether the anomaly was an artefact or the result of some natural process."
    "The Unit has demonstrated that at a global and hemispheric scale temperature results are surprisingly insensitive to adjustments made to the data and the number of series included. "
    "Recent public discussion of climate change and summaries and popularizations of the work of CRU and others often contain over-simplifications that omit serious discussion of uncertainties emphasized by the original authors."

    In the conclusions:
    "We saw no evidence of any deliberate scientific malpractice in any of the work of the Climatic Research Unit and had it been there we believe that it is likely that we would have detected it."

  3. Re:Here is how you do science. by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Informative

    In case anyone is wondering about these people (because I was, and thus checked):

    * Prof Ron Oxburgh FRS: a geophysicist, strongly worried about climate change. Worked with Shell and has ties to a number of alternate energy companies.
    * Prof. Huw C. Davies: Works in the Institute of Atmosphere and Climate, is a climate modeler. Couldn't find any industry links for him.
    * Prof Kerry Emanuel: Professor of Atmospheric Science, is extremely interested in hurricanes and cyclones. Seems to disagree with the IPCC position that hurricanes are increasing because of global warming.
    * Prof Lisa Graumlich: Director of the school of Natural Resources and the Environment. Doesn't seem particularly an expert on global warming, but if you want to know what effect a changing climate would have on agriculture, ask her.
    * Prof David Hand: a statistician. He's done statistic work for a lot of companies. Doesn't seem to know much about climatology, but he knows more about statistics than I even dreamed existed.
    * Prof David Hand: Professor of Theoretical Geophysics. Has publicly criticized the Mann Hockey Stick graph. Also really likes math.
    * Prof Michael Kelly: spent a lot of time researching semiconductors. Seems to have no relation to climate science at all, but he is the part-time Chief Scientific Advisor to the Department for Communities and Local Government, whatever that is.

    Seems they chose a good variety of people, and the chances of these guys being part of a conspiracy are low. Also, they are a smart group, and I would not try to trick them.

    --
    Qxe4
  4. Re:Here is how you do science. by quokkaZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    It seems some "skeptics" have (finally) got off their arses and made an honest attempt to make their own global temperature reconstruction using the NCDC dataset. Which is a great improvement over the morons who think filling in form letters for vexatious FOI requests has something to do with science.

    And what a surprise! They find that their record pretty much agrees with the CRU compiled record. If anything it shows a little more warming.

    It is discussed here http://noconsensus.wordpress.com/2010/04/29/global-land-temps-cru-style/

  5. Re:Sadly... by quokkaZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    You want some falsifiable predictions from mainstream climate science. Try these:

    1. The global temperature will increase - predicted by Hansen's model from early eighties. There is an observed increase in temperature.

    2. Arctic and antarctic to warm faster than rest of the planet - predicted by all models. Observed.

    3. Troposphere to warm and stratosphere to cool - predicted by all models. Observed.

    4. Increasing signature of CO2 in long wave spectrum form top of atmosphere. Observed by satellite spectrographically.

    5. Increasing acidification of the oceans. Observed.

    and plenty more where those came from. Please cut the crap about climate science not being falsifiable. Try looking at the evidence, the science and the facts for a change.

  6. Re:Let's go ahead and quote from the report: by jeff4747 · · Score: 5, Informative

    So... we didn't look into whether their numbers were right.

    Their numbers are the records of temperature measurements. They literally came from a book. How, exactly, do you propose we determine if the numbers were right? Check for massive transcription errors that all happen to go one way?

    The entire "climategate" scandal was about their ANALYSIS of the data, not the data.

    As a less snarky answer, if you want to see the data go look at their journal papers.

    The methods were subjective? This is science? Maybe it's me. Maybe I don't understand the term "science".

    Well, if you understood science, perhaps you'd have looked into the problems here.

    First, we didn't have thermometers 5000 years ago, so there's no accurate data. So we have to look for other ways to measure temperature after-the-fact. Tree rings and ice cores seem to correlate well, with tree rings having higher fidelity than ice cores. And for most of the time period where we do have thermometers, tree rings correlate well with the thermometers from the 1800s until the 1960s.

    Starting in the 60's, tree rings are showing a colder temperature than we measure with thermometers. Why? Nobody knows. Best guess is pollution, but it's a problem for the biologists, not the climatologists.

    Should we then treat the pre-1800 tree-rings as accurate? Well, that's going to be subjective. Since we don't know what's causing the slowdown for the last 50 years, an argument could be made that tree ring data is unreliable. On the other hand, our other source of pre-1800s data (ice cores) match the pre-1800 tree rings and we have a hypothesis whereby the slowdown is a new phenomenon.

    In addition, we have this habit of placing the thermometers where people are. Since the thermometer is in a city, we know there will be a heat island effect. For modern readings, we've placed thermometers outside cities so that we can measure that effect. But that won't help for old readings. So we have to compensate for heat island effects without being able to accurately measure them and their change over time (small city = smaller effect). This correction, by definition, has to be subjective.

    If you really were interested in the science here, you'd go fire up Google Scholar and read their papers where they explain all this. On the other hand you are moving the goalposts from "look! Bad analysis!!!" at the beginning of "climategate" to "look! Bad data!!". That kinda indicates you aren't actually interested in the science.