Colby Cosh

Colby Cosh

Maclean’s man in Edmonton writes about everything. Follow Colby on Twitter: @colbycosh

Norwich, we still have a problem

by Colby Cosh on Saturday, November 28, 2009 9:06am - 357 Comments

Laymen who have understandably decided to accept what much of the media now treats as axiomatic–that humans are causing potentially catastrophic global warming–must now be suffering some anxiety over the leaked e-mails from the Climatic Research Unit. Is an opinion leader like George Monbiot right to view this as a serious matter, or should they believe the reassurances of somebody like, say, Toronto Star environment columnist Peter Gorrie?

I ask solely as a matter of media-consumer interest, because, realistically, what Gorrie writes doesn’t matter to a climate-change skeptic, or to anyone with the time and the quantitative training to follow a scientific debate on his own. It matters to the guy on the subway who avoided Stats 101 as if it had horns and fangs, and that guy is now getting conflicting signals. I presume Gorrie would agree that his job is not just to confirm that reader’s prejudices–though people do like having their prejudices confirmed, and any argument a columnist can make will confirm somebody’s.

Like other columnists covering the CRU leak, Gorrie zooms in on just one “example” from the e-mails; although the etymology and sound of that word “example” would seem to imply some element of randomness in the selection, many of these columnists are choosing the same e-mail, because it contains an apparent faux pas that is relatively easy to explain away:

In one email, the research unit’s director, Phil Jones, refers to work by another scientist, Michael Mann, published in the journal Nature: “I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series … from 1961 … to hide the decline.”

“Trick” doesn’t refer to sleight of hand; it’s jargon for a good, useful solution to a research problem. The problem in question relates to the fact that one method used to estimate temperatures over centuries – measuring tree rings – doesn’t give good recent results. But actual observations, the “real temps,” were available.

It’s much easier to understand “scandal” than even that simplified explanation.

He’s right about the word “trick.” Scientists do use the word to describe simple solutions to sincere research problems. It does not, on its own, imply deception. The real problem with the Jones e-mail is the part about “hiding the decline.” The issue, really, is right there in Gorrie’s paragraph: tree rings appear to have serious problems as a means of inferring global surface temperatures from before human records were kept. As an abstract of the Briffa study Jones was discussing notes:

…tree-ring density records become de-coupled from temperature after 1950, possibly due to some large-scale human influence that caused wood densities to decline. Thus, the reconstructed temperature record after 1960 is considered unreliable.

Jones’ “trick” was to graft observed temperature data from after 1960 onto a line showing temperatures merely inferred from tree rings. If you just reported the tree-ring data straight-up, they would suggest that the earth has cooled since 1960, which conflicts with what we know was happening (assuming there are no biases in the temperature observations, but that’s another battleground several miles away).

In one sense you could argue that this is a “trick” in the innocent meaning of the term, a real answer to a real problem: Jones only meant to “hide” a presumptively nonexistent “decline”. But an ordinary person looking at a graph doesn’t expect the underlying data to be spliced together from two different sources if the point of the graph is to highlight what one source (the tree rings) tells us. Moreover, the divergence between the predictions of the tree-ring model and real post-1960 temperatures is a legitimate problem in paleoclimate reconstruction. (“Some large-scale human influence” on “wood densities”? Oh, hell, what about the fairy hypothesis? Couldn’t woodland sprites have sprinkled magic dust on those trees?)

In “hiding the decline”, Jones was thus proposing to “hide” a weakness in the research itself. IPCC peer reviewers squawked about this “hiding” when it was done in another way, by simply cutting off the data at 1960. As a matter of scientific ethics, Jones’s “trick” sucks. Though it’s still probably not one of the four or five most ethically troubling statements in the leaked CRU e-mails, even considering just the ones made by Jones.

Gorrie could have minimized the offence in dealing with this cherry-picked example of malfeaseance; instead, he handwaved it away completely. But then there’s a lot of handwaving in this column, like the obnoxious complaint that environmental reporters are being asked to “parse e-mails” (which, as described above, he goes on to do in a tendentious, half-hearted way) instead of “focusing on the evidence of human-made climate change”. As if the debate over the CRU e-mails was anything other than an argument about the provenance and quality of the most important body of a posteriori evidence for human-made climate change.

Gorrie also says, sympathetically, that climate scientists “resent having to respond to skeptics.” Well, who the hell doesn’t? That’s like saying that prosecutors resent the threat of having unfairly acquired evidence excluded from the courtroom, or that ballplayers resent the danger of getting picked off first base. They can resent it all they like, but it’s there in the rules of the game, for good reasons. Q: What do you call a scientist who can’t accept criticism from “skeptics”? A: Anything you like, as long as it’s not “scientist”.

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/danby danby

    Thank you Mr Cosh for eliciting some very stimulating discussion. I'll admit, it is very difficult to sort through this with any "certainty" , as both sides make very valid points – and I am no scientist. I did find the change in "tone" between the climate change and political posts of some of the regular contributors very interesting. Some who demand fair play in politics can be dismissive of arguments disputing AWG, while some who are quick to reject any whiff of government impropriety suddenly reach out for calm evaluation of all the evidence on climate change.
    Quite a contrast, say, from the Colin affair to the leaked emails.

  • tori

    EnterIn the emails, Phil wrote that he would rather delete his work that give it up in an FOI request. As a scentist, I would expect he would want to share his data with the world so it could be replicated by others and have its authenticity proven. Since it seems (from the comments contained within the harry read me file) phil et al have trouble even replicating within their own offices, I could see why the FOI hesitation.

    As for the intimidation with peer reviewed journals, here's a link on one of a few examples:
    http://www.eastangliaemails.com/emails.php?eid=48… text right here

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Dodger48 Dodger48

    http://www.gopetition.com/online/32485.html

    If you are concerned about this issue sign this petition to establish a royal commission to establish the cause and extent of the global warming issue. With climategate we know that the research was fudged and the peer review process was corrupt. Let get to the bottom of this before we committ billions to this issue.

  • Zoot Moot

    I keep on hearing this argument that the oil companies are going to lose money over this is not the case.A quick explanation of Cap & Trade;

    A polluter is given allowable CO2 emissions, if the polluter exceeds this limit it can than buy carbon credits from a company that is polluting less. Sounds fine right, here's the problem the polluters also own companies with low pollution therefore it transfers money from one of their companies to another, that company then transfers that money to another company. usually a holding company owned by the major polluter. FSLR(First solar) is a perfect example of this the controlling share holder Walton estates also owns an oil company. GE another major solar company GE electric also owns GE Oil and Gas therefore will not not be affected by Carbon Tax laws because it can just shuffle the money and carbon credits around to maintain it's current level of production. The Alberta Trunk Line is yet another example of this it will suck CO2 out the atmosphere be sent to the Alberta Oil Sands via the pipe line and will actually increase production. Tax the air, then tax you for collection, then sell it back to you at an inflated price(In the name of climate change) and the cycle repeats. Only the people will be paying carbon tax and the major polluters will continue to do business as usual all the while being able to track you via a GPS device in your vehicle and charging you per km after exceed you personal carbon footprint limit and you can't travel after that unless you have lots of money. "Well, I seen on the news that this is a good thing" Who owns the media? I know it seems alot to wrap your head around this but it is happening. Spread the word and produce this evidence and the climate gate information.

  • Lord Kitchener's Own

    "an ordinary person looking at a graph doesn’t expect the underlying data to be spliced together from two different sources"

    Well then, perhaps an ordinary person should read the whole article, including the footnotes and appendices, and including the part that explains why the graph includes data spliced together from two different sources. If we want scientists to start publishing articles in peer-reviewed journals in a way that said articles can be easily understood by "ordinary people" (and not only that, but in a way that is SO easily understood that all graphs contained therein speak for themselves and require no actual words to describe what they represent!) then we might as well just stop publishing peer-reviewed journals all together, and fire all of our scientists.

    It seems to me, in this specific example, you appear to be arguing that scientists should not be allowed to include graphs in their articles, because reading the accompanying text explaining what the graph actually shows is just too darned hard for "ordinary people". The implication of this line from the post is that Jones included a graph showing X in an attempt to fool people in to thinking the graph shows Y. This completely ignores the fact that the article explains explicitly that the graph shows X, and why it shows X. That "ordinary people" want to just look at the graph and base all their conclusions on the picture, and ignore things like footnotes and appendices shows exactly why we should look to scientists to settle these controversies, not "ordinary people".

    Perhaps a first step in that direction would be deciding that we're not actually faced with a choice between believing journalist (and not climate scientist) George Monbiot or believing journalist (and not climate scientist) Peter Gorrie. I'm not entirely confident either one of them has a firm grasp on what they're talking about.

  • Holly Stick

    Well, they both know more than Cosh.

    Maybe we need to start a peer-reviewed Journal for Dummies explaining science for pundits and other ignorant people.

  • Craig O

    Yeah, I'm finding Cosh's comments on "laymen" or "ordinary people" and their knowledge of science a bit confusing, given that (unless I'm mistaken), he has no scientific training himself.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Gaunilon Gaunilon

    An ordinary scientist doesn't expect the plot to have spliced data either. It's misleading. Different data sets are always denoted with clearly different traces.

  • Bill D. Cat

    A jury of our peers ? I hope Mann et al are so lucky .

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/colbycosh colbycosh

    I don't know what's confusing about it, but you're not mistaken.

  • Craig O

    What's confusing is that you impose a mentality on laypeople, without including yourself in that group despite being, in this situation, a layperson.

    The implicit accusation here is that Jones and Gorrie are misrepresenting things to people who don't have the expertise to properly judge the data – but you don't have the expertise to properly judge it either, so why should we be taking your interpretation of the e-mails and the data over those who are better qualified (ie the climate scientists or just scientists in general who dismiss this e-mails as saying virtually nothing)?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/colbycosh colbycosh

    In the blog entry (which, honestly, isn't getting addressed much as such in this comment thread), I talk about a specific kind of layman who depends entirely on the media to report on developments in hard science. I'm a journalist who generates his own science stories, and who does have relevant training in statistics and the history of science. But I don't ask anyone to believe me on that basis, and I don't worry about my credentials when I write about science; I worry about the actual limits of my knowledge. What I write can speak for itself (and I guess my track record could speak on my behalf, for better or worse, but understandably not many in this new audience are aware of it). I do notice that no one with any number of science degrees has actually said one word here in defence of Gorrie's column.

  • Craig O

    You haven't answered my question, but I'll accept that you take more of an interest in the subject than many.

    But, let's cut some pretenses here – this is not an article about science, it's an article about the e-mails of scientists. That's an important distinction – a science article would be discussing the hypotheses of scientists with respect to available data. You're discussing the scientists themselves – it's a social commentary.

    On the last point, I doubt you'll find many people here with science degrees of any sort – sadly, I might well be the closest. So, I'll weigh in – Gorrie's dead on. His point that "they especially resent having to respond to skeptics ", that you've focused on, is key. People get resentful when they're faced with their own guilt, this is true, but they also get resentful when they're faced with injustice or (scientists especially) when they're forced to deal with people who do not see reason or logic.

    Rather than assume which it is, let's start at what we know – these scientists are resentful of skeptics. That doesn't necessarily mean that the skeptics are right and that makes the scientists resentful, it doesn't necessarily mean that the skeptics are raving lunatics and that dealing with them makes the scientists resentful. About all it means is that these scientists are human and whatever the cause, they respond like humans. How terrible.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/kylebailey260 kylebailey260

    Colby,

    So you did some history of science from an arts perspective?

    Helps explain why you are one of the few journalists who is picking up on Monbiot's Popper reference eh?

    I think you did a good job of framing the 'dude who failed stats 101' perspective.

    For the record , I'm finishing off a science undergrad……and I'd say there isn't anythign wrong with Gorrie's column…..its just that Monbiot's arguments for the Popperian ideal outweigh everything.

    Monbiot presents "this is how science should work', Gorrie talks about the actual imperfect reality……but we're all too busy caught up in a silly debate about AGW to listen to what MOnbiot is pointing out- science should always be strivign to be free and open, to resists the tenedency to close the doors on intermediate data and reasoning and assume that the intermediate induction is correct.

    I've actually been dying to read Popper- so I might be a little off on my characterization?

    It is really tragic how science undergrads can graduate without being terribly conversant with the philospohy of science.

    In case you're curios about how you sound to new readers….you sound like someone who is well informed about science, more than the average bear, but definately not a trained scientist.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/colbycosh colbycosh

    The "They're only human!" defence is used on precisely those occasions when somebody's behaviour is indefensible on any other grounds.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

    Except it's not a defence. It's an explanation. And it's brought out on precisely those occasions when somebody is trying to expect non-human perfect behavior.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

    An ordinary scientist reads the whole thing.

  • Craig O

    Exactly.

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