Centre of the storm

Colby Cosh profiles the gentle Canadian who has changed the climate science world

by Colby Cosh on Sunday, December 13, 2009 8:56am - 302 Comments

The private emails and logs leaked last month from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia can’t tell us whether industrial activity is really heating the earth’s atmosphere and endangering civilization. But they have settled the identity of the Great Satan of climate science. Torontonian Stephen McIntyre, a gentle, persistent amateur who had no credentials in applied science before stepping into the global warming debate in 2003, is mentioned more than 100 times.

In the emails, leading climate researchers dismiss him as a capitalist hireling or a hapless “bozo,” and argue about the relative merits of ignoring him versus counterattacking him, even as others acknowledge that his criticisms have merit and imitate his use of the Web as a venue for hyper-detailed scientific discussion. At one point in 2005, CRU director Phil Jones, now under suspension, ponders the possibility that McIntyre might use U.K. freedom-of-information laws to obtain raw weather-station data compiled by the CRU. He grumbles: “I think I’ll delete the file rather than send to anyone.” The overall impression is that of 100 elephants stampeding in confusion and panic around a mouse.

The political stakes are now so high when it comes to the “Climategate” scandal, and motives are being questioned so loudly on both sides, that few are noticing the remarkable story at the heart of it all: a 62-year-old mining executive and squash enthusiast has, for better or worse, found his way into the centre of a major scientific melée—almost by accident—and been able to make legitimate contributions.

McIntyre first became notorious in 2003 for his statistical critique, co-authored with economist Ross McKitrick, of the “hockey stick graph” that showed global temperatures rocketing upward in the 20th century. The hockey stick, featured in the 2001 report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, had a profound influence on policy worldwide, and played a starring role in presentations like Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth. The McIntyre-McKitrick critique called attention to uncertainties in its temperature reconstructions dating back before 1600, to certain problems with dendrochronology (the use of tree rings to estimate past temperatures), and to issues with the statistical calculations underlying the hockey stick. Some climatologists insist that the graph tells the same story when you correct for all this, but much of the critique is now accepted, and the hockey stick, whose weaknesses are better understood, has itself become a somewhat inconvenient distraction for climatologists and environmentalists.

Meanwhile, McIntyre, working alone, has gone on to score further critical points. In 2007, he caught a mistake in the reporting of U.S. surface temperatures by NASA’s Goddard Institute that was quickly acknowledged, with thanks, and corrected. (NASA’s gracious manner contrasts sharply with the attitudes displayed behind the scenes at the CRU.)

The truth is that McIntyre, 62, little resembles the caricature of a wild-eyed climate-change “denier.” He is scrupulous about focusing his criticism on statistical procedures and disclosure practices. He is polite to, and about, climate scientists. He refuses to make grand categorical statements of the “Global warming is just commie horse puckey” type, preferring to remain agnostic, and he discourages such talk on his website, Climate Audit.

When reached for an interview, he interrupts briefly to turn down a request to appear on BBC television about the exploding “Climategate” scandal. “Anything I say now would just be piling on,” he remarks, noting that he has no interest in helping the media stage a drama of personalities. Given the opportunity of a lifetime to gloat over those who referred to him as a “moron” and “Mr. I’m Not Entirely There In The Head,” he demurs.

Close observers of the climate wars recognize that the small group of scientists who first advanced the case for urgent concern over global warming were ill-prepared for the appearance of a critic like McIntyre. Spanish paleoclimatologist Eduardo Zorita of Germany’s GKSS Research Centre, who has clashed at times with both McIntyre and the climate-research elite, says that “in the realm of science, it doesn’t really matter by whom and why a study is criticized. It only counts whether or not the criticism is reasonably well-founded, is logical, and relevant for the final results.”

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  • Grant Carlson

    With Colby Cash handling the analytical siide of this global warming scam and Rex Murphy putting it into words everyone can understand
    ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lgIEQqLokL8 ) it seems Canadians are making a huge impact exposing this whole sorry business, and it is a business.

    Let's also not forget the great Mark Steyn for his delightful ability to mock the entire lot of these unconscionable "Warm Mongers".

    They do us proud!

    • Peter Hynes

      At first I thought that this reply was intended to be satirical, but now I'm not so sure. In the strange world of global warming "skeptics" it's hard to tell.

  • Grant Carlson

    "I support and work towards a clean air, water and more thoughtful use of products".

    I think that's true for most of us, Maureen, but many in the GW crowd will insist that if you are not following their particular agenda you must be ravaging 'the planet'; that anyone who opposes them must be evil and/or ignorant.. They are trying to control the 'dialogue', and of course the power and influence that naturally follows.

  • Max

    Consensus has no place in science.
    A scientist would never destroy data.
    the charlatans are the global warming scammers.

  • franshalls

    The New Socialism

    What makes it most dangerous is that the ‘environmental movement’ is based on a false premise, that CO 2 is harmful. and man is the sole contributor to AGW. Quite on the contrary. The science of CO 2 does not support what is being perpetrated by the zealots of the climate change and the environmental movement.
    There has been no warming since 1998, This cooling cycle is tied to the solar activity, which was the lowest since 1900 this past year. Man made CO 2 is less than 2% of all the CO 2 in the atmosphere, so changing it by any amount would mean nothing and the fact that man made CO 2 only accounts for about .117% of the green house effect. Also that historically increases in CO 2 follow warming and don’t precede it, and that there is no true correlation to increase of CO 2 and increase in temperatures. I other words co 2 does not creates heat, rather heat creates co 2. The global warming climate models have proved themselves totally flawed!

    CO 2 absorbs only 3% of the light that passes through it. That is confirmed by experiment. That is .03. Then we know from air samples that the atmosphere is about 3% CO 2 at present. That means .0009 or so of the light is absorbed by the CO 2, (.03 X .03) much less than one percent. This too is confirmed by experimental data. So, our expected heat exchange is less than one percent, much less than one percent. If as you say this is the expected result, then it is hardly significant. Next, we know that as much CO 2 as man produces, the oceans produce much more. Animals produce more, volcanic action produces more.

    Human activity produces 3% of annual CO 2 production. CO 2 makes up approximately 3% of greenhouse gases (as measured by it heat retaining capacity) therefore man made greenhouse gas caused mostly by the burning of fossil fuels makes up .09% of the annual total – nature kicks in the rest. So let’s do the math. Canada contributes 2% of man made CO 2 production or .0018 of the total greenhouse gas world wide. Now if we were prepared to destroy our economy and cut back our use of fossil fuels by say 6% we would thereby reduce the total world wide green house annual gas production by .000108%. Such a reduction would not save the world, indeed, it wouldn’t have any measurable effect at all, but apparently it would make us feel better. Feel like we are really doing something important. The new socialism.

    Just a side note, look at the so called CO 2 and other aerosols being expelled from Ontario Hydro coal fired power station Nanticoke located on the north shore of Lake Erie. It is the single most biggest polluter in Canada. (17.6 million tonnes each year). Just pointing out the political and ideological movement from the left always fingering the Alberta Oil Sands Project., but ignoring the monster in their own back yard. Hypocrits!

    I have a comment for all these global warmist proponents. According to medical science the average human being exhales approximate (900 gm’s) 2 lbs of CO 2 daily. With 6 billion people on this planet, you do the math. If you feel that CO 2 is so harmful and you want to save this planet, then I suggest you hold your breath.

  • ProfR.DBA

    As I recall, I had to include ALL of the data in an appendix to my dissertation. Science can only thrive with transparency.

  • scissorpaws

    And still the snows of Kilimanjaro disappear . . .

  • Grant Carlson

    "And still the snows of Kilimanjaro disappear . . "

    Any idea why, Scissorpaws?

    http://commonsblog.org/archives/000029.php

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

      Oh my the glacier that formed the Yosemite disappeared 10000 years ago. I am sure that it melted because of the Indian cavemen campfires CO2 and the farting of their buffaloes greenhouse gas was a major contributor for its demise.

  • Tommy Shanks

    Excellent article on a great human being. Giants with integrity who quietly do their work, like Norman Borlaug as well, are the saviors of mankind.

  • http://nil terry

    We owe you a lot Mr McIntire and we thank you very much for your sacrifice and dedication to get to the truth ,you missed your calling, we need people like you running the country ,honesty is something you cannot buy and dedication to find the truth at great expense to your self is something to be admired .THANK YOU. and all scientists who stood up to this tyranny .

  • http://www.keithsketchley.com/philapp2.htm Keith Sketchley

    The notion that Stephen McIntyre did not have “credentials in applied science” is misleading. I understand he had experience applying statistical mathematics in the real world where the financial stakes were high, a skill directly applicable to the complicated arranging of climate data to try to make sense of it. He also has a good mind, which is essential to science, and apparently solid values – something lacking in his CRU opponents.

    There’s a tendency for people to look for annointing by an academic institution, yet we know those are political bureaucracies with the widely varying quality inherent in such. Eduardo Zorita’s statement “It only counts whether or not the criticism is reasonably well-founded, is logical, and relevant for the final result.” reminds me of the philosopher Ayn Rand who said, when someone tried to pull rank to reduce the quality she was insisting on in a stage presentation, that she’d listen to the elevator boy if he made sense.

    Keith Sketchley, Saanich B.C. 250-216-3966

  • Fraud

    The world should be scandalized. And here we have Hillary Clinton supporting this fraud by pledging 100 Billion dollars towards it. Thank God for guys like McIntyre who will grab these bastards by the balls and squeeze some sense into them. Every politican who has bought into this world fraud should be given a fiscal enema…. preferrably while their balls are being vise-gripped.

  • garry dauron

    Really good article. Nice to see that people still have some wits and values.
    Thank you,
    Garry Dauron
    New Mexico

  • Jaker

    Climate change is real, it's just that all those that preach it are "Congeal"!

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

    The fact is most AGW believers are watermelons: green on the outside, but red on the inside

  • pro-CO2

    I find it very interesting that Wen Jiaboa Premier of China has qualifications in Geology and engineering. Here is a person who is trained to rely on facts and not be moved by rhetoric. No wonder he stalled at Copenhagen but was too polite embarass Obama and publically call for time out to review the facts.
    CO2 is a very precious molecular gas that feeds all plant life on earth.
    More people = more food

  • JimB

    There are two essentially distinct points to consider: Whether there is global warming, and (if so) whether and to what extent it is anthropogenic. We are in an interglacial (warming) period, so I am not surprised that there is some warming…so far quite beneficial. Whether there is any (or how much) contribution by mankind is still an open question. Even the CRU scientists state that they derived the AGW by modeling the global temperature and to the extent they were unable to match changes in other ways the remainder must ..MUST…be anthropogenic.

    Since their model is admittedly incomplete and imprecise (according to the leaked emails) this seems to me to be a bit flaky for science.

    And now we face a decade of COOLING?

    JimB

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

    "The world of mining is one in which everyone is constantly aware of how engineering results can be tampered with or misrepresented to rip off investors"

    As another geologist that works in the mineral exploration industry I can understand why McIntyre became immediately skeptical of the IPCC hockey stick. In our industry many of the "input" assumptions we are required to make to develop our economic models are imprecise due to statistical errors in data (ie ore grade, tonnage, commodity valuations, etc) . These economic models are used for investment decisions and presentations to potential investors. If an author of these models applies a unrealistic bias then the economic picture can be presented as very robust when perhaps the project investment is very risky. Our industry struggles with these risks continuously and we have created economic decision methodologies to address them (i.e Monte Carlo simulations). We have also regulated ourselves to ensure these data assumptions are fully disclosed to enable sophisticated decision makers to evaluate the risks.

    Industry geologists and engineers are therefore very skeptical of slick and flashy presentations (read Gore) that misrepresnt reality and, when questioned, "skeptics" are dismissed as "cranks" uninformed bozos by the authors of those slick presentations. This has all the earmarks of a sleazy mining promoter or snake oil salesman and that is exactly what Al Gore and Phil Jones have become for AGW.

  • spawn44

    AGW has taken a long walk off a short peer. If there was even an ikling of AGW these socialist frauds would not have had to cook the books.

  • Occamsblackjack

    Austinso, I usually ignore totally childish questions, but I need to deal with the choices you offer: black or white AGW doesn't matter one iota, or we are doomed unless we swallow the hoax hook line and sinker. I would need to get a lobotomy to consder that a question from an informed and adult mind. Global warming may be measureable but inconsenquential; it may be measureable and serious; or it may indeterminate at this point.
    The so-called "scientists" have wasted twenty years answering that question instead by lying, duplicitous behavior, intimidation, incestuous peer review behavior, personal attacks, deliberately lost data and generally language and behavior that is more reminiscent of Animal House than any scientific adult behavior. My position is that NOBODY knows the answer for a panoply of reasons, and the fraudsters' egregious behavior hasn't helped. We need less heat and more light, and the criminals gone permanently.

  • John Peate

    I have just been made aware of this piece on Macintyre. Is it because he is a Canadian that the Canadian media feels obliged to portray him as some kind of conscience to science.

    The fact is that Macintyre did nothing of what is claimed in the article. His "findings" in everything were nothing but nitpicking. He has been caught in fraudulent claims about tree ring technology – see the Keith Briffa study. He has been shown to be ignorant of the statistics he claims to use for his attack on science: as in his inability to interpret the code in the emails.

    He is a mischief maker who used FOI requests for information he already had, and has admitted he already had.. Then used the response of the CRU to slander great scientists and waste their time. He and his mentor, McKittrick are certainly guilty of conspiring with the Competitive Enterprise Institute to influence an already biased American Senate Committee.

    In short, he is not the gentleman portrayed and he does not appear in debate because he would be exposed for the ignoramus that he is. He is a fraud, a faker, a charlatan.

    He is Canada, shame not a scientific conscience.

  • http://www.yongyivalves.com safety valve

    I really like this article

  • http://intensedebate.com/profiles/lauraetipio lauraetipio

    I am somehow puzzle by all that's said about warming. As a scientist myself, but not in this area, I think sometimes some people are a bit too sure about what they think… althouh history should have learned that there's no such thing that being totally right…

    Scrabble Cheat

  • http://www.profenceworks.com Fence Man

    Global warming is still a big deal, its not something we can ignore until it bits us back. Everyone needs to take part in the effort to minimize their footprint. Sure global warming may be inevitable at this point, but we must take care of what we have. Of course if you you truly believe this is a scam then go ahead and follow the money, i will read about it and except that fact.

  • http://www.granitephotos.com musttafa

    Really good article. Nice to see that people still have some wits and values. Thank you, M Aydin Granite Colors Expert

  • http://www.infogrok.com industry data

    We are in an interglacial (warming) period, so I am not surprised that there is some warming…so far quite beneficial.

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