Today brings yet more supposed revelations on the subject of
climate change, and, like so many London bus stories, it’s a case of waiting
for ages only to see two coming at once. This is not a coincidence. Nor is the
routine crowing from the denialist lobby at what they are hailing as yet
another of those magic bullets that never end up convincing the scientific
mainstream that it is wrong.
The Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature
(BEST) project, led by Richard Muller, has released a
pre-review report which effectively confirms
previous reports of warming, with Muller concluding “While this doesn't prove that global warming is caused by human
greenhouse gases, it is currently the best explanation we have found, and sets
the bar for alternative explanations”.
Given Muller’s previous scepticism, and the hostility of the
denialists towards him, there was always going to be a backlash, and this has
come from Anthony Watts, who had at first said of BEST that “I'm prepared to accept whatever result they
produce, even if it proves my premise wrong”. Now Watts has asserted “New
study shows half of the global warming in the USA is artificial”.
How so? Well, this reprises the argument over heat island
and other distorting influences on temperature recording stations. It is an
argument that Watts has
ventilated at some length previously. This time, however, he claims to have
used “A WMO-approved Siting
Classification System devised by METEO-France’s Michel Leroy” to produce “A new improved assessment”.
Moreover, Watts claims that “The pre-release of this paper follows the practice embraced by Dr
Richard Muller”, giving the impression that his study is as valid as that
from BEST. However, and with Watts and Co there is inevitably a however, he
does not tell how or where his study is to be peer reviewed (the BEST study is
to be peer reviewed by the Journal of Geophysical Research).
Also, given the reference to Michel Leroy, one might expect,
if not endorsement, at least some comment from him in the Watts study. There is
none. And the team behind the Watts study consists only of known sceptics John
R Christy, Stephen McIntyre, and Evan Jones, which latter you may find hard to
find any information for, although I have unearthed a comment contribution from
him at the Watts blog.
Both the Muller and Watts studies need to pass muster at
peer review before anyone sounds off about their significance. Only one of them
so far is going to be thus submitted, and it isn’t the Watts one. So before the
denialist lobby call “game over”,
they need to wait until the result of that peer review.
If there is one.
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