"We found that at those seven stations across the country, from Auckland down to Dunedin, between 1909 and 2008 there was a warming trend of 0.91°C."
An Insider’s Story of the Global Attack on Climate Science
An Insider’s Story of the Global Attack on Climate Science
Jim
Salinger
29
January, 2014
A
recent headline – Failed
doubters trust leaves taxpayers six-figure loss
– marked the end of a four-year epic saga of secretly-funded
climate denial, harassment of scientists and tying-up of valuable
government resources in New Zealand.
It’s
likely to be a familiar story to my scientist colleagues in
Australia, the UK, USA and elsewhere around the world.
But
if you’re not a scientist, and are genuinely trying to work out who
to believe when it comes to climate change, then it’s a story you
need to hear too. Because while the New Zealand fight over climate
data appears finally to be over, it’s part of a much larger,
ongoing war against evidence-based science.
From
number crunching to controversy
In
1981 as part of my PhD work, I produced a seven-station
New Zealand temperature series,
known as 7SS, to monitor historic temperature trends and variations
from Auckland to as far south as Dunedin in southern New Zealand.
A
decade later, in 1991-92 while at the NZ Meteorological Service, I
revised the 7SS using a new homogenisation
approach to make New Zealand’s temperature records more accurate,
such as adjusting for when temperature gauges were moved to new
sites.
The
Kelburn Cable Car trundles up into the hills of Wellington.
Shutterstock/amorfati.art
For
example, in 1928 Wellington’s
temperature gauge
was relocated from an inner suburb near sea level up into the hills
at Kelburn, where — due to its higher, cooler location — it
recorded much cooler temperatures for the city than before.
With
statistical analysis, we could work out how much Wellington’s
temperature has really gone up or down since the city’s temperature
records began back in 1862, and how much of that change was simply
due to the gauge being moved uphill. (You can read more about
re-examining NZ temperatures here.)
So
far, so uncontroversial.
But
then in 2008, while working for a NZ government-owned research
organisation, the National
Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA),
we updated the 7SS. And we found that at those seven stations across
the country, from Auckland down to Dunedin, between 1909 and 2008
there was a warming trend of 0.91°C.
Soon
after that, things started to get heated.
The
New
Zealand Climate Science Coalition,
linked to a global climate change denial group, the International
Climate Science Coalition,
began to question the adjustments I had made to the 7SS.
And
rather than ever contacting me to ask for an explanation of the
science, as I’ve tried to briefly cover above, the Coalition
appeared determined to find a conspiracy.
“Shonky”
claims
The
attack on the science was led by then MP for the free market ACT
New Zealand
party, Rodney Hide, who claimed
in the NZ Parliament
in February 2010 that:
NIWA’s
raw data for their official temperature graph shows no warming. But
NIWA shifted the bulk of the temperature record pre-1950 downwards
and the bulk of the data post-1950 upwards to produce a sharply
rising trend… NIWA’s entire argument for warming was a result of
adjustments to data which can’t be justified or checked. It’s
shonky.
Mr
Hide’s attack continued for 18 months, with more than 80
parliamentary questions being put to NIWA between February 2010 and
July 2011, all of which required NIWA input for the answers.
The
science minister asked NIWA to re-examine the temperature records,
which required several months of science time. In December 2010, the
results were in. After the methodology was reviewed and endorsed by
the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, it was found that at the seven
stations from Auckland to Dunedin, between 1909 and 2008 there was a
warming trend of 0.91°C.
That
is, the same result as before.
But
in the meantime, before NIWA even had had time to produce that
report, a new line of attack had been launched.
Off
to court
In
July 2010, a statement of claim against NIWA was filed in the High
Court of New Zealand, under the guise of a new charitable trust: the
New Zealand Climate Science Education Trust (NZCSET). Its trustees
were all members of the NZ Climate Science Coalition.
The
NZCSET challenged the decision of NIWA to publish the adjusted 7SS,
claiming that the “unscientific” methods used created an
unrealistic indication of climate warming.
The
Trust ignored the evidence in the Meteorological
Service report I first authored,
which stated a particular adjustment methodology had been used. The
Trust incorrectly claimed this methodology should have been used but
wasn’t.
In
July 2011 the Trust produced a document that attempted to reproduce
the Meteorological Service adjustments, but failed to, instead making
lots of errors.
On
September 7 2012, High Court Justice Geoffrey Venning delivered a
49-page
ruling,
finding that the NZCSET had not succeeded in any of its challenges
against NIWA.
The
NZ weather wars in the news
The
judge was particularly critical about retired journalist and NZCSET
Trustee Terry Dunleavy’s lack
of scientific expertise.
Justice
Venning described some of the Trust’s evidence as tediously
lengthy
and said “it is particularly unsuited to a satisfactory resolution
of a difference of opinion on scientific matters”.
Taxpayers
left to foot the bill
After
an
appeal that was withdrawn
at the last minute, late last year the NZCSET was ordered to pay NIWA
NZ$89,000 in costs from the original case, plus further costs from
the appeal.
But
just this month, we have learned that the people behind the NZCSET
have sent it into liquidation as they cannot afford the fees, leaving
the New Zealand taxpayer at a substantial, six-figure loss.
Commenting
on the lost time and money involved with the case, NIWA’s
chief executive John Morgan has said
that:
On
the surface it looks like the trust was purely for the purpose of
taking action, which is not what one would consider the normal use of
a charitable trust.
This
has been an insidious saga. The Trust aggressively attacked the
scientists, instead of engaging with them to understand the technical
issues; they ignored evidence that didn’t suit their case; and they
regularly misrepresented NIWA statements by taking them out of
context.
Yet
their attack has now been repeatedly rejected in Parliament, by
scientists, and by the courts.
The
end result of the antics by a few individuals and this Trust is
probably going to be a six-figure bill for New Zealanders to pay.
My
former colleagues have had valuable weeks tied up with wasted time in
defending these manufactured allegations. That’s time that could
have profitably been used investigating further what is happening
with our climate.
But
there is a bigger picture here too.
Merchants
of doubt
Doubt-mongering
is an old strategy. It is a strategy that has been pursued before to
combat the ideas that cigarette smoking is harmful to your health,
and it has been assiduously followed by climate deniers for the past
20 years.
One
of the best known international proponents of such strategies is US
think tank, the Heartland
Institute.
The
first in a planned series of anti-global warming billboards in the
US, comparing “climate
alarmists” with terrorists and mass
murderers. The campaign was canned after a backlash.
Just
to be clear: there is no evidence that the Heartland Institute helped
fund the NZ court challenge. In 2012, one of the Trustees who brought
the action against NIWA said
Heartland had not donated anything
to the case.
However,
Heartland is known to have been active in NZ in the past, providing
funding to the NZ
Climate Science Coalition and a related International Coalition,
as well as financially backing prominent climate “sceptic”
campaigns in Australia.
An
extract from a 1999 letter from the Heartland Institute to tobacco
company Philip Morris.
University of California, San Francisco,
Legacy Tobacco Documents Library.
The
Heartland Institute also has a long record of working
with tobacco companies,
as the letter above illustrates. (You can read that letter and other
industry documents in
full here.
Meanwhile, Heartland’s reply to critics of its tobacco and fossil
fuel campaigns is here.)
Earlier
this month, the news broke that major tobacco companies will finally
admit they “deliberately
deceived the American public”,
in “corrective
statements”
that would run on prime-time TV, in newspapers and even on cigarette
packs.
It’s
taken a
15-year court battle
with the US government to reach this point, and it shows that
evidence can trump doubt-mongering in the long run.
A
similar day may come for those who actively work to cast doubt on
climate science.
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