Month: February 2020

All gone by the year 2020: what does it matter anyway?

This is part 6 in the series on the prediction that glaciers in Glacier National Park will be gone by 2020. You might want to see to part 1, part2, part 3, part 4, part 5 and part 6 if you haven’t already.

The last six posts were about the prediction that the glaciers in Glacier National Park would be gone by 2020. I also delved deeper in the relation of this prediction with a similar prediction that the glaciers would be gone by 2030, making the case that the 2020 prediction was an update of the 2030 prediction (contrary to how it is reported in most media).

Now you could object that this looks like nit-picking. Glaciers are shrinking anyway, that is also clear from previous post, so what does it matter whether someone made a wrong prediction of how long the remaining glaciers would last. The discussion whether the glaciers in Glacier National Park would be gone by 2020 or 2030 seems small change compared to the big picture that they will be gone in the future.

I could somewhat understand such objection, but I think there is much more to it than that.

Remember, the 2020 prediction was broadly communicated in the media in 2009 as the latest science, based on current observations, therefor as more reliable than the science that preceded it. It was used as a confirmation that it was much worse than was thought at the time, see the Thinkprogress article from the first post in this series. One of the media articles even went so far as to insinuate that we should search for a new name of the Glacier National Park…

In the end, the prediction failed, so that confirmation based the latest science was not a confirmation at all. The glacier ultimately melted less than expected, despite the observations that were the basis of this prediction.

The same story is playing in the Saint Mary visitor center that had a diorama sign warning the visitors that, according to computer models, the glaciers would be gone by 2020. This claim was then in 2019 replaced by:

When they will completely disappear, however, depends on how and when we act.

What I didn’t notice in the first post in this series was that, beside the “gone by 2020” message, also this sentence was removed from the sign:

Glacier National Park was named for the sculpting actions of the Pleistocene glaciers that covered this landscape 12,000 to 130,000 years ago.

So there is no need whatsoever to rename the park, even after the glaciers would be gone. The name of the park was not inspired by the current glaciers, but by what prehistoric glaciers carved out in the landscape over a period of roughly 100,000 years. That as an aside.

What both stories have in common is that currently the public is unaware of the failed prediction, unless they saw and remembered the original failed prediction. The visitors of Glacier National Park because the signs were removed without any notice that there was such a prediction and why it failed and, as far as I know, the readers of Thinkprogress didn’t get that memo either.

The last mention at Thinkprogress of Glacier National Park is the article titled National parks are warming faster than the rest of the country, per new study. This is the relevant part:

“It is important to note that even if we really do a strong mitigation of greenhouse gases, the national park system is still expected to see a 2 degree temperature change,” John Williams, a professor of geography at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said in a statement.

“At this point,” he continued, “it is likely that the glaciers in Glacier National Park will ultimately disappear, and what is Glacier National Park if it doesn’t have glaciers anymore?”

That is also the brunt of the subtitle of the article: “What is Glacier National Park if it doesn’t have glaciers anymore?”, apparently without realizing that these glaciers were supposed to be gone around this time despite the prediction based on the same observation.

It went from “worse than thought” in 2009 to “worse than the rest of the country” in 2019. The visitors of Glacier National Park went from “gone by 2020” to “we are the ones that determine how long the glaciers will last”.

As far as I could find, there was no Thinkprogress article detailing the 2020 prediction fail, so readers only got the doom stories and not that the 2020 prediction didn’t hold water. The same with the visitors of Glacier National Park who got only one side of the story (the worst side), without any mention of the failed prediction or any explanation why it failed.

The bad news was perpetuated in both cases, although it was clear that it was not worse than thought. If that was really the case, then the glaciers would now virtually be gone.

Both audiences are withheld information about the many uncertainties involved. The current estimate that the glaciers would be gone is 2030. This is however the lower threshold. The upper threshold is, according to the US Geographical Survey website, currently 2080. They rely for this date on a 2010 paper (Brown et al., 2010). Strangely, this paper was already available shortly after the 2020 prediction was made, but only appeared on their website at the end of 2016/beginning of 2017. Strangely because until 2016 that page stated that it would be 2030 or maybe even earlier, despite that paper already being available at that time.

From 2020 to 2080, that is a huge stretch. It is going from something that would supposed to occur around this time to something that unlikely will happen in my time. That means that there are many uncertainties involved, untold to the public.

When a science involving high levels of uncertainties is brought with certainty and it doesn’t work out as expected, then it might backfire. Climate science communications centers around the trust that the scientists have figured it all out and that we, mere mortals, have to believe those scientists on face value. When an uncertain science is brought with high certainty and the prediction fails, then it will decrease public trust.

So, that failed prediction does matter. It shows that the science that it was based on, is highly uncertain, notwithstanding its communication was stripped of all these uncertainties.

It further shows that the media, but also the National Park Service and the US Geographical Survey, are biased in their communication to the public. It was already clear in 2010 that the end date of the glaciers could well be 2080, but in 2010-2014 the public only heard about the 2020 end date. Later the end date was reverted to 2030 and only in 2016 the 2080 end date was mentioned (six years after its publication). That is disappointing coming from two organizations that are supposed to be trustworthy, yet seemed to have other priorities. Trust is key here and those who look at the sequence of events will have their trust lowered by this…

This post closes the (longer than I initially expected) series on the “gone by 2020” prediction. But keep the element of trust in mind, it will come back in the next post.

Go to Part 1 | Part 2 | part 3 | Part 4 | part 5 | part6 | part 7

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February 9, 2020 at 05:59PM

SEA LEVEL: Rise and Fall – Part 5: Bending the Trend

Guest Essay by Kip Hansen — 9 February 2020

featured_imagefeatured_imageUSA Today shouts: “Rise in sea levels is accelerating along U.S. coasts, report warns”.   Many other media outlets have repeated the story:  The Guardian, The Hill, and U.S. News and World Report.   All of these make the same claims:

The report’s key message “is a clear trend toward acceleration in rates of sea-level rise at 25 of our 32 tide-gauge stations,” said Virginia Institute of Marine Science emeritus professor John Boon in a statement. “Acceleration can be a game changer in terms of impacts and planning, so we really need to pay heed to these patterns.”

“Although sea level has been rising very slowly along the West Coast, models have been predicting that it will start to rise faster,” the marine science institute’s Molly Mitchell said.”

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  also has warned about sea level rise acceleration. It has noted that by the end of the century, global sea level is likely to rise at least one foot above 2000 levels, even if greenhouse gas emissions follow a relatively low pathway in coming decades.”…. “On future pathways with the highest greenhouse gas emissions, sea level rise could be as high as 8.2 feet above 2000 levels by 2100,” NOAA warned.” …. “Mitchell said that “seeing acceleration at so many of our stations suggests that – when we look at the multiple sea level scenarios that NOAA puts out based on global models – we may be moving toward the higher projections.”

[ Note:  My West Coast counterpart, Willis Eschenbach, has covered part of this story in an earlier essay today titled: Accelerating The Acceleration, and he does so in his own inimitable mathematical style.  You won’t find much duplication here as I hit it from a different angle. — kh ]

All of the media pieces say “according to a new report.”   There is no new report. The link goes to Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) website, the page of their U.S. Sea-Level Report Cards.  There was a report last year, which is self-published by VIMS, and is not, as far as I have been able to determine, peer-reviewed.

The news stories all stem from this press release issued by VIMS and written by one of their co-authors, David Malmquist.   And the true source of the data and the “report”?  VIMS emeritus professor John Boon, who retired in 2002 yet still puts out reports claiming Sea Level Rise Acceleration.

How much acceleration?  Let’s look at the data that prompted this news item from KTVU television in San Francisco, California:

ktvuktvu

Here past of what they say:

“Researchers at Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) issued their annual report card which looked at tide-gauge records for 32 coastal locations, stretching from Maine to Alaska. The analysis included 51 years of water-level observations, from January 1969 through December 2019.

“The key message from the 2019 report cards is a clear trend toward acceleration in rates of sea-level rise at 25 of our 32 tide-gauge stations,” said VIMS emeritus professor John Boon.” 

The KTVU report is one of the few that give numbers to back up these claims (kudos to KTVU):

“San Francisco’s rate of sea-level rise last year was 1.91 millimeter, and Alameda saw a yearly increase of 1.10 millimeter. The sea-level acceleration rate measured at 0.03 mm and 0.05 mm, respectively at those tide-gauge stations. Researchers projected that if this continues, sea level in San Francisco and Alameda will be almost .5 feet higher in 2050 compared to 1992. “  [ emphasis — kh ]

Let’s look at this in the image provided in VIMS’ report card:

TG_accuracyTG_accuracy

Sorry to make that image so BIG, but if I had not, you wouldn’t have been able to see the Sea Level Rise Acceleration at all.  It is those little orange bars right above the zero line.   Note that the official NOAA specification for tide gauges states that the estimated accuracy for tide gauge monthly means is +/- 5 mm.  I have added that range on the chart for your convenience — but I had to stretch the height of the chart to fit it in, because, for the mathematically inclined, the estimated error range for tide gauge monthly means (and thus the above annual trends as well) is 200 times the size of the reported acceleration for the Alameda tide station and more than 300 times of the acceleration for San Francisco.

How does Boon et al. manage to measure these infinitesimal acceleration rates in spite of the oversized known measurement error range?  Like this:

anyport_SLR_Boon_annotanyport_SLR_Boon_annot

Since at least as early as 2012, Boon and his team at VIMS have been trying to convince the world that “sea level is accelerating!”  They do it by bending the trend line….and then, like all good climate scientists, extending their trend line into the far future.  Of course to do so successfully, they have to have a data set that is not too long — so in this case they start all of their calculations in 1969. The chart above though labeled “Anyport, USA” is in fact the data for Sewells Point (Norfolk), VA.  The real NOAA chart looks like this:

Sewells_Point_NOAASewells_Point_NOAA

Boon et al. obscure the data by throwing a “decadal signal” on top of the actual measured data, and then, using their own proprietary formulas, calculate a quadratic trend line for the data segment 1969-2019.  They have been doing this since 2012 — so let’s see how their acceleration predictions have worked out.

Here is the chart from the 2012 report:

Boon_2012_BostonBoon_2012_Boston

Boston is shown as having a linear trend of 2.882 mm/yr.  (ignore the ridiculous thousandths of millimeters claim for now).    Here’s NOAA on Boston, showing a rather monotonic steady rise of about 2.8 mm per year since the 1920s.

Boston_Tides_and_Currents_8Boston_Tides_and_Currents_8

But, Boon’s 2.88 isn’t all that different.  At the end of 2011, Boon says that Boston has an acceleration of 0.15 mm/yr.  So by 2015, that rate should be 3.482.  Let’s see….in Boon’s 2015 paper:

Boon_2015_BostonBoon_2015_Boston

Ah ha, Boon has shifted to new system of calculation described as “Contoured joint probability density of parameters”, so that instead of simple numerical predictions, we have predictions at “height percentiles”.  But, giving Boon the benefit of the doubt, we’ll look at his mean number (50%) for Boston SLR for 2015, which is now 3.07 mm/yr.   Boon’s 2012 prediction is off by about 15% — relative sea level at Boston, over these four years, only increased by 0.04 mm/yr (if the increase is even in fact real, as it is vanishingly small compared to the know measurement error range).

How about the latest “Report Card” for Boston?  It shows some interesting things.

boston_2019_dualboston_2019_dual

The chart at the VIMS site is an interactive chart (unlike my modified screen chart above).  Mousing over a data point at the VIMS site gives the numbers I use above and in the following.

There are differences between published Linear Rate data and the chart above, but they are smaller than those for Acceleration data.   The calculated acceleration for Boston does not actually show up in the Linear Rate.  The interactive chart just posted this month shows that Boon found acceleration in 2011 of 0.305 mm/yr at Boston.  Thus, by 2015, four years later, there should have been an increase in the linear rate for the annual single year, 2014, of an additional 1.2 mm — that obviously did not happen.  If we apply the Boon (2012) published acceleration rate of the much lower 0.15 mm/yr for eight years to 2019, it should add 1.2 mm/yr to the linear rate through 2019.   Using Boon’s 2019 Report Card interactive chart, 2011 is shown as 2.93 mm/yr and 2019 is shown as 3.22 mm/yr.  Simple math gives us a difference in linear rates of only 0.29 mm/yr, which, divided by the eight years, reduces to 0.03625 mm/yr — only about one tenth of that predicted.

Let’s try the 2009 Annual Acceleration Rate of 0.251 mm/yr.  If we hold that constant over ten years, to 2019, it would have meant an Annual Linear Rate for 2019 of  2.411 (in 2009)  plus 2.51 of ten years of Annual Acceleration for an predicted annual Linear Rate in 2019 of 4.921 mm/yr.  The actual calculated annual Linear Rate for 2019 is 3.22.

The point is that the calculated Annual Accelerations are not adding up or showing up over the following years as Annual Linear Rates as predicted by charts such as this:

Boston_2019_ReportBoston_2019_Report

Let’s take a closer at just the last decade, covered by the Boon et al. reports discussed above:

Boston_decade_compareBoston_decade_compare

On the left is the NOAA  Tide Gauge at Boston, the same monthly mean sea level data used by Boon, in the segment on the right.    The past decade shows that mean sea level dropped at Boston  starting at 2010 for five years and then rose again to back up to the same level by the end of 2019.  (There may be some data break at 2009, where there is a sudden shift upwards of almost 10 mm in a single month — don’t know if there was any equipment or location change then.)  While there is no doubt that Mean Sea Level at Boston is rising, there is no change that seems any different than the simple assumption of a continued, monotonic steady rise.  Boon’s use of the solid blue line (decadal signal) and the orange “quadratic trend” obscure and confuse the long-term view, as shown in the NOAA Tide Station chart far above.

Interested readers can download the VIMS 2018 report here and refer to their updates for 2019 here.

Bottom Line:

Boon, although long retired,  and his group at VIMS have been touting sea level rise acceleration for almost a decade now.  It is their thing and apparently they are convinced of its truth.

The past published acceleration rates do not actually appear in their own futures — the rates published in 2012 do not appear in the mean sea level increases in 2019.

Any times series, and any segment of a times series, should show an acceleration (change in rate-of-change — faster or slower) over time, as it is unlikely that any real series of measurements of a natural phenomenon remain exactly constant.  However,  Boon’s Acceleration Rates found for the West Coast in the 2019 reports cards are implausibly small given the known Error Range for Monthly Means for NOAA Tide Gauges and I would not consider them statistically significant and certainly not climatically significant.

Developed areas, anywhere in the world, that have been built within a few feet of today’s Relative Mean Sea Level  and local Mean Higher High Water for their locality are already in imminent danger of being damaged by extreme tides, surges from today’s storms and from tsunamis if in areas prone to such.  These localities need to urgently begin mitigation efforts.

For now, most coastal areas should plan on Relative Sea Level continuing to rise at its long-term rate for their locality and in planning, add on extra leeway in case warming waters begin to rise a bit faster.  No one needs to panic or plan for the near-impossibility of multi-meter sea level rises over the next century.

 # # # # #

Author’s Comment:

VIMS and Boon are not the only groups pushing the idea that sea levels are not only rising but that that rise is accelerating.  Nerem and his team at Colorado are pushing — and pushing again —  the same.

Global Mean Sea Level is changing and is generally accepted as rising, as it has done for several hundred years. There is no reason to think that this long-term trend will change on a global basis unless and until the Global Climate either shifts to Radically Warming or Radically Cooling.

Boon at al. demonstrate clearly the dangers of the Over-Mathemati-cation (made up word there) of Science — a Reification of Very Tiny mathematical and statistical results into real world threats.

Note that the featured image is a good example of a not-yet-bent official SLR graphic from  Climate.gov  — the Federal government’s official climate propaganda site.  Click for a full-sized image.

I have written here more than a dozen times about Sea Level.   The series “Sea Level: Rise and Fall” (Parts 1 and 2) starts with some basic principles.

I am interested in what your hometowns are doing in regards to sea level rise.  Let me know.

Start your comment with “Kip…” if speaking to me.

# # # # #

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February 9, 2020 at 04:01PM

YZ Ceti update: resonant echoes of Pluto’s moons


There’s been a data update for the three planet system of star YZ Ceti, which featured in our 2018 post: Why Phi? – resonant exoplanets of star YZ Ceti. According to NASA the third planet YZ Ceti d is a ‘super Earth’, about 1.14 times the mass of our planet.

The paper:
‘The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs.
Characterization of the nearby ultra-compact multiplanetary system YZ Ceti’
(Submitted on 5 Feb 2020)

With an additional 229 radial velocity measurements obtained since the discovery publication, we reanalyze the YZ Ceti system and resolve the alias issues.

The re-calculated synodic periods for planets b,c,d are:
b-c 5.9514156 days
c-d 8.9250255

3 b-c = 17.854246
2 c-d = 17.8650051
This is a first-order (3:2) resonance.

Orbit periods:
53 b = 107.10611 days
35 c = 107.09615
23 d = 107.09398
(Data: exoplanet.eu)

18 b-c (53-35) = 12 c-d (35-23) = 30 b-d (53-23)
Dividing by 6, the synodic ratios in ascending order are:
2 c-d = 3 b-c = 5 b-d (2:3:5)
2,3, and 5 are Fibonacci numbers.

The same ratios apply to three of Pluto’s moons. Quoting our post Why Phi? – Moons of Pluto:
‘The ratios of synodic periods are such that there are 5 Styx–Hydra conjunctions and 3 Nix–Hydra conjunctions for every 2 conjunctions of Styx and Nix.’

That line comes straight from Wikipedia.

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February 9, 2020 at 02:25PM

Strong Breeze Ciara

By Paul Homewood

 

According to the BBC, winds are gusting at over 50mph this afternoon here in Sheffield.

 

image

https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/2638077

 

 

Which is all very strange, because the Met Office is forecasting gusts of only 42mph:

 

image

https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/forecast/gcqzwtdw7

 

The Met Office also properly show true wind speeds, not gusts, which the BBC now ignore when it gets windy, no doubt to emphasise extreme weather.

Sustained windspeeds of 20mph only qualify as “Fresh Breeze” on the Beaufort Scale:

image

https://billboyheritagesurvey.wordpress.com/2012/01/13/beaufort-scale/

 

Wind speeds here in Sheffield peaked this morning, but only at 29mph, in other words a Strong Breeze:

 

image

https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/observations/gcqzwtdw7 

 

Meanwhile, according to the Telegraph, the Met Office are absurdly calling Ciara the “storm of the century”. Just about every reader’s comment has rubbished the article.

image

 https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/02/09/storm-ciara-hits-britain-mph-wind-rain-travel/

 

 

Full round up tomorrow.

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February 9, 2020 at 02:15PM