Originally posted by BlasterBates
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Nope, another direct hit on your foot. You cannot read the paper, it has not been released, nor has any data to support the claim. All we have is a conference poster. Posters are not generally peer-reviewed.
This is the latest attempt by Watts to demonstrate that the US Surface record is unreliable, here's a resume of the timeline:
- Watts crowd sourced a survey of US weather stations, volunteers went out with digital cameras and reported the condition of their local installations. This is not actually a bad idea, even if he announced early on what he wanted the data to show.
"I believe we will be able to demonstrate that some of the global warming increase is not from CO2 but from localized changes in the temperature-measurement environment."
Anthony Watts, Pittsbugh Tribune., 2007.
-Watts releases his first glossy 'report' for the Heartland Institute in 2009, based on the surfacestation data it was little more than a collection of pictures of carefully chosen stations and their trends. Of course the selected badly sited stations had warming trends, while those on good microsites showed cooling or a flat trend. How odd. But no data comparisons were included.
The NOAA then published a paper showing that there was no significant trend difference between Watt's well and poorly sited stations, in fact the good stations showed a slight cooling bias.
There was no retraction or apology from Watts, the report is still available on the Heartland website.
In 2010, along with Joe D'Aleo, Watts put out another report which opened with 'Instrumental temperature data for the pre-satellite era (1850-1980) have been so widely, systematically, and uni-directionally tampered with that it cannot be credibly asserted there has been any significant “global warming” in the 20th century."
Which made it a little disingenous for him to state less than a year later, that
The Earth is warmer than it was 100-150 years ago. But that was never in contention – it is a straw man argument. The magnitude and causes are what skeptics question.
Several independent parties then calculated that the main issue Watts and D'Aleo based their accusation on - a dropout of stations, made no difference to the trend.
There was no retraction or apology from Watts, the report is still available on the Heartland website.
Watts then published a peer-reviewed paper with Fall et al, which identified some interesting features in the data but showed once again that siting had no effect on the trend in mean temps.
Three and a half years ago, Watts put out a claim that 'half of the global warming in the USA is artificial', based on a new paper, however numerous people pointed out issues and it as been 'under revision' ever since.
This time round, the trigger for the study is Leroy 2010, which has a new rating scheme for weather stations and it seems our heroes are only applying one of Leroy's 5 criteria (Heat sinks) and classifying stations differently - Leroy classes 1-3 out of 5 as 'good', retaining about 90% in France for example - while Watts et al only like classes 1-2, meaning they are trying to estimate US temperature trends using just 92 stations, and they stop the analysis in 2008, with no explanation. The suspicion is that the team has spent the last 3 years or so slicing and dicing to get the numbers they want.
But we cannot check because they won't tell us which are the 'good' stations. What we do know is....
- Using his 'good' stations Watts finds a trend for the US of >2C /century. Cause for concern.
- Most of the planet is ocean, unaffected by station siting. Sea temperatures are unequivocally rising
- Applying the NOAA quality adjustments (homogenising) causes the discrepancy to evaporate. No convincing reason not to homogenise has been advanced.
We await the paper's publication and release of the data. Maybe 2016 will be their lucky year.
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