Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. writing in the Wall Street Journal
* * *
* *
With their latest subpoena to the Obama administration,
House Republicans risk descending into a rabbit hole, albeit a useful one.
Lamar Smith, the Texas GOPer who runs the House science
and technology committee, has been seeking, voluntarily and then not so
voluntarily, emails and other internal communications related to a study
released earlier this year by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. The study, by adjusting upward temperature readings from
certain ocean buoys to match shipboard measurements, eliminated the “pause” in
global warming seen in most temperature studies over the past 15 years.
* "THE STUDY, BY... ADJUSTING... UPWARD...
TEMPERATURE... READINGS...
* FOLKS! YOU CAN'T MAKE THIS $HIT UP!
Let’s just say, without prejudging the case, gut instinct
has always indicated that, if there’s a major global warming scandal to be
discovered anywhere, it will be found in the temperature record simply because
the records are subject to so much opaque statistical manipulation.
But even if no scandal is found...
(*PAUSE*)
...it’s past time for politicians and the public to
understand the nature of these records and the conditions under which they are
manufactured.
* YEP! MANUFACTURED!
This is where those who confuse science with religion,
and scientists with priests, take umbrage.
(*NOD*)
Unfortunately, NOAA has proved itself pliable to the
propagandizing urge. Witness its steady stream of press releases pronouncing
the latest month or year the “warmest on record.”
(*SMIRK*)
It always falls to outsiders to point out that these
claims often rest on differences many times smaller than NOAA’s own cited
margin of error. Case in point: When President Obama declared in January that
2014 was the warmest year on record, it had only a 38% chance of being hotter
(by an infinitesimal margin) than other "hottest-year" candidates
2010, 2005 and 1998.
(*SNORT*)
It doesn’t help that NOAA’s sleight of hand here seems
designed precisely to conceal the alleged “pause.” The "inconvenient
hiatus" in global warming showed up just as temperature measurement became
more rigorous and consistent; just as China overtook the U.S. as champion
emitter; just as 30% of all greenhouse gases released since the start of the
industrial revolution were hitting the atmosphere.
(*SMIRK*)
Presumably the hunt will now be on among House
Republicans for evidence that NOAA scientists selected only those re-jiggerings
that would make the pause disappear.
Good luck with that.
Not only are the adjustments, corrections and
interpolations eye-glazing — ground temperatures must be tweaked to offset
growing urbanization, polar temperatures for the fact that we don’t have
measurement data for long periods of history, etc.; but past records must be
assembled from measurements not under control of today’s researchers, using an
uncertain mix of devices and practices.
Where records don’t exist or are deemed inadequate,
scientists incorporate what they call proxies.
* OFTEN STRAWMEN.
Researchers will surely be prepared to justify each and
every tweak, but it seems all but impossible to bias-proof the choice of which
adjustments to make or not make. By the count of researcher Marcia Wyatt in a
widely circulated presentation, the U.S. government’s published temperature
data for the years 1880 to 2010 has been tinkered with 16 times in the past
three years.
* SIXTEEN TIMES...!!! (IN JUST THE PAST THREE YEARS!)
And, when all is said and done, it’s still not clear that
assigning an “average” temperature for the planet for a year is a meaningful
way to capture climate change, or, that claims to detect differences from one
year to the next of 2/100ths of a degree are anything but exercises in false
precision.
(*NOD*)
Evidence of climate change, of course, is not evidence of
what’s causing climate change. Yet three certainties emerge from the murk:
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas; atmospheric concentrations of carbon
dioxide have increased significantly due to fossil-fuel burning; and the reward
system in climate science is heavily tilted toward forecasts and estimates that
see a large human effect.
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