Global Warming Fraud? Say It Ain’t So!
BY Herschel Smith9 years ago
Gavin and Tom delivered their fraud right on schedule ahead of Paris, just as I predicted they would. They claim that October had the highest temperature anomaly ever recorded for any month …
Somehow, they managed to calculate Earth’s temperature within 0.01 degrees – even though they had no temperature data for about half of the land surface, including none in Greenland and very little in Africa or Antarctica.
This kind of mind-blowing malfeasance would get them fired and probably escorted out of the building by security at many engineering companies.
This is fascinating. This writer is saying what I have essentially said about AGW and the need for a different human research and ethical paradigm when it comes to global warming.
But it’s important to be able to discern science from pseudo- or non-science or bad science. I work in science and engineering every day. I have for 33 years of my career. I am a registered professional engineer. An example of bad science might be AGW (anthropogenic global warming). The notion that a “researcher” can prove anything about trends by claiming 1 degree C change over a half a millennia is ludicrous on its face. Furthermore, trusting tree ring data is only valuable if your thesis doesn’t suffer from falsification of data (i.e., the “hockey stick” lie). But even if tree rings could be a trusted source of information when we have no recorded data, the information is statistically insignificant. No one with whom I work, engineer or scientist, not one of the hundreds I know, would actually put his or her name on such a calculation or thesis, especially if it involved affixing a PE seal to the work. AGW is bad science.
Now to what is actual science. If I use a computer model of a system (which involves physical and engineering calculations) and generate a curve of results from input that has been perturbed, or in other words, a sensitivity study, and I generate a curve fit with TableCurve-2D, and then put that polynomial into MathCad and integrate to a solution (because for some reason I wanted the results from integration), that is science and engineering.
Or say that I use the Bernoulli equation and information on pipes from the Crane Flow of Fluids Technical Paper No. 410, or Cameron Hydraulic Data, to build a piping network, that is science and engineering. Or say I want to evaluate the performance of a projectile and I use Newtonian physics and ignore aerodynamic drag for simplicity, or say that I do not ignore drag and I account for it, that is science and engineering. Or finally, let’s say that I use Henry’s law to ascertain how much of a gas is dissolved in the liquid in a system, that is science and engineering.
Note well. I asserted that AGW, as it was being practiced, isn’t science or engineering. So what would it take to be persuasive to me?
If you want me to give a report on science or engineering the time of day, get a registered professional engineer to prepare the calculations, seal the work with his PE seal, and send it to me for review. Otherwise you’re just wasting my time.
As I’ve said before, give me an engineering report on the field measurements, and instrumentation used, calibration data sheets, and a data mean, prove to me that you meet the central limit theorem with the ten or so statistical tests used for Monte Carlo calculations, get it peer reviewed, and most of all, have it all done by a registered PE who can be taken to court and lose everything (including his livelihood) if he’s wrong, and then maybe I’ll take it seriously.
Otherwise, the AGW advocates are just wasting my time. But they won’t do that, because they want to write papers in the echo chamber that is AGW “science.” I think that’s what this author is saying too.
On November 21, 2015 at 9:52 am, Fred said:
Some scientists want science.
http://cfact.org/pdf/2010_Senate_Minority_Report.pdf
In a constitutional republic don’t we own these emails? We did pay for the report didn’t we? Are NOAA data classified now?
http://us4.campaign-archive1.com/?u=c920274f2a364603849bbb505&id=12a5019e1a&e=f4e33fdd1e
Disturbingly NOAA is now an armed enforcement “agency” along with dozens of others.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/09/14/armed-epa-agents-in-alaska-shed-light-on-70-fed-agencies-with-armed-divisions.html
and
https://pjmedia.com/blog/what-does-the-national-oceanic-and-atmospheric-administration-need-with-96-armed-agents
On November 23, 2015 at 2:57 pm, Archer said:
Are NOAA data classified now?
Well, according to the Obama Administration and a majority of Democrat presidential candidates, “climate change” is the #1 national security concern.
So, yes, NOAA data might soon be classified if it isn’t already. Because national security.
On November 25, 2015 at 8:33 pm, Joseph P. Martino said:
A technical issue. I used to do technology forecasting as a consultant (I’m now retired). The last thing I would EVER do is use table-curve to fit a curve to some data, then extrapolate it. Yes, I fitted curves to data, but only curves that had a theoretical basis behind them as suitable forecasting methods for the particular problem I was working on (Logistic, for instance). Simply getting a “best fit” to some data is an example of GIGO.
On November 27, 2015 at 12:09 am, Herschel Smith said:
Oh dear! How could you have possibly gotten the impression that I advocate using ANY curve fitting technique and extrapolating the model, much less for global temperature?