Month: April 2022

ScoMo/Albo debate at Gabba

If anybody can find a decent audio/video – or even just best highlights – please post a link.
I made a few notes in order.
Albo said early on “cheap clean energy” – candidate for joke of the night.
ScoMo did nail him to the barn door on boats. ALP never did ONE TURN BACK – gotta love pollies lies.
ScoMo mentioned ASX resources stock Lynas in the light of US and Australia developing sources of rare earth metals (elements) independent of China.
ScoMo should have mentioned our GDP.
When Albo said “we do the big things” ScoMo could have reminded him of – Building the Education Revolution(School Halls and buildings) $16Bn – Pink Batts $2.5Bn and several deaths – “Gonski school funding” resulting in constantly lowered education standards compared to International benchmarking $20Bn PA.

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April 20, 2022 at 08:34PM

Sorry, But Hard Science is Not Done This Way.

by: Geoffrey H Sherrington

Scientist.

Melbourne Australia.

20th April 2022.

The short story: Can we detect a change of CO2 in the air after emission reductions following Covid-19 lockdowns?

No, we cannot, because the present measurement of CO2 in the air has errors and uncertainties that are too large to allow detection of the estimated change.

These measurement deficiencies likely arise partly from cherry picking of raw data, a problem that is widespread in climate research, making much of it eminently contestable.

……………………………………

This adds to the WUWT article of a year ago, about the Covid-19 lockdowns, their effects on estimated emissions of CO2 and whether any change is detected in the CO2 measurements at Mauna Loa, Hawaii (MLO).

The Global CO2 lockdown problem – Watts Up With That?

…………………………………………….

THE UNCERTAINTY OF CO2 ANALYSIS.

Uncertainty means different things to people in climate research. It should not, because it is defined at length in publications such as those from the international Bureau of Weights and Measures, BIPM, Paris.

https://www.bipm.org/documents/20126/2071204/JCGM_100_2008_E.pdf/cb0ef43f-baa5-11cf-3f85-4dcd86f77bd6

At one extreme, one can use a modern analytical chemistry instrument designed for CO2 analysis, hit the start button 100 times, take a standard deviation and announce a high precision, sometimes confused with high accuracy. This approach tends to reflect little more the voltage stability of the instrument and does not help to understand climate.

At the other extreme, one can measure the CO2 over a wide range of operating conditions in the raw environment, trying to hold extraneous variables constant, to measure an operational accuracy to put into the larger uncertainty context. Some examples follow.

Many CO2 laboratories now use an IR laser cavity-ring-down spectroscopy device. One maker, Picarro, summarises instrumental performance.

https://www.laserfocusworld.com/test-measurement/test-measurement/article/16549667/crds-measures-atmospheric-co2

We determined the measurement precision by repeated measurements of gas flowing from the 380-ppm CO2 cylinder at room temperature. A spectral scan was taken every 5 min. The standard deviation is 0.093 ppm CO2. Over an ambient temperature range of 35°C to 20°C, the measured standard deviation degraded to 0.14‑ppm CO2 ….

A year ago, New Zealand’s NIWA emailed me about their CO2 measurements at Baring Head.

The CO2 mole fractions for the eight long-term transfer standard calibration gases are determined by the WMO Central Calibration Laboratory (CCL), with an estimated uncertainty of ±0.07 ppm (1-sigma) with respect to the WMO scale”.

(It is usually found that the instrument performance figure will be smaller than the laboratory operational figure).

Two groups measure CO2 at Mauna Loa, the USA government’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (here NOAA) and the Scripps Institute of Oceanography (here Scripps). The NOAA group continues to claim this:

Global Monitoring Laboratory – Carbon Cycle Greenhouse Gases (noaa.gov)

  1. The Observatory near the summit of Mauna Loa, at an altitude of 3400 m, is well situated to measure air masses that are representative of very large areas.
  2. All of the measurements are rigorously and very frequently calibrated.
  3. Ongoing comparisons of independent measurements at the same site allow an estimate of the accuracy, which is generally better than 0.2 ppm.

(my bold; NOAA Updated December, 2016; March 2018, September 2020, accessed 13th April 2022.)

 Both NOAA and Scripps have posted public data for daily, weekly and monthly ppm CO2 mole fraction in dried air. (Some results are from in-situ measurements, others are performed after collection of air in flasks).

Here is a graph showing the analysis difference in ppm between the 2 laboratories on the same day, in situ samples, for year 2020:

Note that the Scripps results are, on average, some 0.3 ppm lower than NOAA. “Rejects” are discussed below.

For a longer snapshot, here is a similar graph for the weekly results, for years 2017 to 2021 incl., plus the first 3 months of 2022.

An offset of 0.3 ppm persists, to show NOAA to be higher on average. However, these weekly results can scatter about this mean by up to 1.5 ppm, clearly indicating that one lab or the other (or both) is working outside the NOAA-claimed 0.2 ppm accuracy in this example.

There is a pattern to the differences. NOAA is higher in the early and late parts of the year, with Scripps higher in mid-year. This allows an inference that the difference involves seasons and maybe the way that outliers are treated in the lab. NOAA continues to publish this figure and explanation about the way the accept/reject results that do not satisfy defined criteria. (Both Scripps and NOAA appear to employ some form this accept/reject filtering.)

Assuming that normal statistics apply, the weekly figures graphed above would seem to show an overall, useful accuracy more like +/- 0.9 ppm, which is twice the standard deviation of 0.45 for the 275 numbers plotted in the weekly difference graph above. Their mean is -0.29 ppm.

“REJECTS”.

NOAA describe their selection method for treating measurements they consider affected by adverse effects in this already-quoted link:

Global Monitoring Laboratory – Carbon Cycle Greenhouse Gases (noaa.gov)

The colour coded dots are defined.

V MEANING: The standard deviation of the 5-minute mole fraction averages should be less than 0.30 ppm within a given hour. A standard deviation larger than 0.30 ppm is indicated by a “V” flag in the hourly data file, and by the red color in Figure 2.

U MEANING: Hours that are likely affected by local photosynthesis (11am to 7pm local time, 21 to 5 UTC) are indicated by a “U” flag in the hourly data file, and by the blue color in Figure 2.

D MEANING: Data where this hour-to-hour change exceeds 0.25 ppm is indicated by a ‘D’ flag in the hourly data file, and by the green color in Figure 2.

S MEANING: After the application of the ‘V’, ‘U’ and ‘D’ flags, there can be times when a single hour remains unflagged, but is bracketed by flagged data. This makes it unclear if this single hour could be representative of background air or not. We therefore apply a ‘S’ flag to these single hours. Pink color.

It is plausible to infer that the difference between Scripps and NOAA arises from the subjective choice at each lab on what to accept and reject, but this is a surmise that would require a purpose-designed inter-laboratory comparison to firm up.

More insight can be gained by examination of the change on CO2 from day to day, sometimes called a “first difference” analysis. The next graph shows NOAA and Scripps again, the same data as above, in first difference daily form.

The distribution of the first difference values is visually different. Scripps seem to have comparatively fewer mid-range values between 1 and 1.5 ppm either side of the zero line. NOAA tends to hug this line, as intuition would suggest it should. Missing data are assigned a value of -2 for graphing purposes here.

Climate researchers in general tend to use more subjectivity than is found in the hard sciences – and it seems to lead to problems.

Further to the CO2 uncertainty just shown, normal laboratory procedure would involve the determination of CO2 in dry air by other analytical chemistry methods. In the final analysis, one could compare results at a given time at a number of locations, by a number of different analytical methods, by different operators and by different instruments. This would give (more or less) the ultimate, practical uncertainty – but there would be justified dissent from those who claim to know why there are differences between sites like Point Barrow Alaska, Alert Canada, LaJolla California, American Samoa, Cape Grim Tasmania and the South Pole – all of which have high quality existing analyses for CO2.

Here, from the Kenskingdom blog, is a time series graph of the difference between Mauna Loa CO2 and the others named. By eyeball, the 2 sigma calculation would be about 5.5 ppm at a given time (and increasing). 

https://kenskingdom.wordpress.com/2020/06/

In summary, it is said in some papers referenced below that the lockdowns were expected to show a CO2 decrease of about 0.2 ppm over part or all the year 2020, compared to 2019 and/or earlier years. That has to be put into context with the various uncertainties of actual measurements just discussed, with 2 sigma values ranging in ppm CO2 from 0.14 to 0.1 to 0.2 to 0.9 to 5.5 ppm.

It is simply scientifically incorrect to draw conclusions from measurements that are beyond the ability of the measurement process to produce.

……………………………..

SOME ESTIMATES OF LOCKDOWN REDUCTION OF CO2.

Recently, Dr Roy Spencer has examined CO2 changes at MLO during the early Covid Lockdown.

Explaining Mauna Loa CO2 Increases with Anthropogenic and Natural Influences « Roy Spencer, PhD (drroyspencer.com)

The model match to observations during the COVID-19 year of 2020 is very close, with only a 0.02 ppm difference between model and observations, compared to the 0.24 ppm estimated reduction in total anthropogenic emissions from 2019 to 2020.

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NOAA has written this.

https://gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/covid2.html

If emissions are lower by as much as 25%, then we would expect the monthly mean CO2 for March at Mauna Loa to be lowered by about 0.2 ppm, and again in April by another 0.2 ppm, etc. Thus, when we compare the average seasonal cycle of many years we would expect a difference to accumulate during 2020 after a number of months. The International Energy Agency expects global CO2 emissions to drop by 8% this year. Clearly, we cannot see a global effect like that in less than a year. 

………………………….

Rob Monroe from Scripps offered this analysis dated 3rd May 2021.

Why COVID Didn’t Have a Bigger Effect on CO2 Emissions | The Keeling Curve (ucsd.edu)

The COVID-19 pandemic caused carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil fuels to drop in 2020 by seven percent compared to 2019. This decrease in emissions slowed the increase in atmospheric CO2 compared to what would have occurred without the pandemic.

It was too small and too brief, however, to stand out strongly in individual CO2 records, such as the Keeling Curve.

In 2020, CCO2 increased by 2.0 parts per million (ppm) at Mauna Loa as concentrations approached 420 ppm. This estimate uses a two-month average centered on Jan. 1, 2021 compared to the similar average one year earlier. The 2020 increase was 22 percent lower than the increase in 2019 of 2.54 ppm, but it was not markedly lower than in other recent years. In 2014, CO2 also increased by 2.0 ppm, and in 2017, CO2 increased by 2.1 ppm. The highest year-over-year growth on record was in 2016, at 3.0 ppm.

……………………………………….

Authors of a November 2020 press release from the World Meteorological Organisation surmised.

https://public.wmo.int/en/media/press-release/carbon-dioxide-levels-continue-record-levels-despite-covid-19-lockdown

Geneva, 23 November 2020 (WMO) – The industrial slowdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic has not curbed record levels of greenhouse gases which are trapping heat in the atmosphere, increasing temperatures and driving more extreme weather, ice melt, sea-level rise and ocean acidification, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

This WMO conclusion is not justified. It is not known if the Covid reduction could be detected, for reasons given above.

CONCLUSIONS.

It can be seen that the calculated or expected reduction in airborne CO2 from the Covid lockdowns is generally of the order of 0.2 ppm spread over several months in year 2020.

This reduction seems close to – if not smaller than – the uncertainty of the measurements examined here for Scripps and NOAA.

However, there is much uncertainty in the three main parts of this exercise.

1.The reduction in emissions from lockdowns etc is not well known and is usually expressed with many qualifications in papers accessed to date.

2. The airborne fraction of CO2 attributed to emissions from mankind remains speculative between wide bounds.

3. The uncertainty of analysis of CO2 in the atmosphere is uncertain because uncertainty is poorly defined (and often poorly understood) in climate research papers.

Therefore, there is little probability that the effect of lockdowns after Covid-19 on measurements of airborne CO2 will be accurately detected using current published/publicised methods.

END NOTE.

Climate research has a major credibility problem. It is shown when a detailed examination of claims about climate change are examined in detail. There is seldom a proper estimation of precision, error or uncertainty reported. Where these uncertainties are reported, they are very often shown ‘at their best’ with data and methods that would allow proper reporting are downplayed, excused or simply not mentioned.

One poster child for this problem is the so-called “Hockey Stick” of Mann, Bradley and Hughes, 1st April, 1998.

Global-scale temperature patterns and climate forcing over the past six centuries | Nature

Deep analysis by Steven McIntyre and Ross McKitrick , 1st November, 2003 (and later) revealed scientific deficiencies of types similar to the ones reported here for CO2 data.

https://doi.org/10.1260/095830503322793632

Such deficiencies have consequences. Global energy production is currently in turmoil, partly as a consequence of such deficient science. Also, if reductions in airborne CO2 following Covid-caused emission reductions, how are we going to monitor mandated emission reductions?

Authors have to cease and desist from cherry picking, concealment of adverse data, misrepresentation of uncertainty and reluctance to respond to criticisms of their work.

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April 20, 2022 at 08:08PM

“CBS Sunday Morning” Puts all its Eggs in Chicken Little’s ‘Reposition Global Warming as Theory (Not Fact)’ Basket

From the Gelbspan Files

By Russel Cook

On — of all days — Easter Sunday, April 17, 2022. I’m not kidding, that’s exactly what the CBS Sunday Morning program did with their “Suing over climate change: Taking fossil fuel companies to court” report. In doing so, they telegraphed to the whole country how enviro-activists indeed only have one viable-looking weapon in their arsenal when it comes to supporting their claim that fossil fuel companies deceived the public into thinking no harm was happening while ‘knowing’ their products were causing catastrophic man-caused global warming.

The premise of CBS’ 6:45 minute segment was quite simple, featuring Charleston, South Carolina Mayor John Tecklenburg offering his views on sea level rise, and Connecticut Attorney General William Tong assuring the CBS audience that the lyin’ Exxon company knew in the early 1980s about the certainty of man-caused global warming. David Middleton, a guest post author at Anthony Watts’ WUWT website, has already dealt at quite some depth with the faults of Mayor Tecklenburg’s ‘science’ assertions. Attorney General Tong’s assertion of Exxon knowing in 1982 that “as the levels of carbon dioxide rise, the temperature of our atmosphere will rise” is contradicted by Exxon’s own 1982 document expressing sizable doubt about what computer models were predicting. That document also inconveniently dates to within two years of newspaper accounts speculating on the dim prospect of a new ice age, a larger science discussion which Exxon quite likely also knew about.

Between Tecklenburg’s and Tong’s viewpoints, CBS stated that the U.S. global warming lawsuits “are modeled after the ‘Big Tobacco’ cases of the 1990s, and accuse the companies and industry groups of making false and misleading claims about climate change” while their video simultaneously showed – in rapid succession without attribution – two print ads, where the clear implication is that the ads are false and misleading.

In their online transcript version of this broadcast segment, typically as many news outlets do, CBS Sunday Morning captioned its single ‘newspaper ad’ illustration with a source name and a bit of additional ‘information’ not spoken in the video:

One of a series of 1991 newspaper ads from the Information Council for the Environment, an energy industry group. Internal documents said the goal of their advertising campaign was to “Reposition global warming as theory (not fact).”
[source:] Information Council for the Environment

When I saw a broadcast report in the summer of 2020 by the BBC with a quite similar premise to this CBS Sunday Morning report, I didn’t simply write about it, I made the effort to file a formal complaint to the BBC. Utilizing the CBS company’s website feedback form, I sent the following text verbatim to them on the same evening of their broadcast. The link in “Error 1” was included in my text complaint regarding a minor oversight for CBS. However, I’ve have embedded three links here for readers here to click on, which go to screencaptures backing up my specific points:

4 errors in need of retraction your 4/17/22 “Suing over climate change: Taking fossil fuel companies to court” report

CBS Sunday Morning staff,

Error 1: King County in Washington state as one of two dozen U.S. lawsuit participants – King County self-dismissed its lawsuit in Sept 2021 – see: https://aboutblaw.com/ZPQ
Error 2: The “Information Council for the Environment” (ICE) “Chicken Little” newspaper ad illustration – that ad was never published, it was never seen by the public, and therefore cannot serve as evidence of fossil fuel industry ‘disinformation campaigns.’ Note that your inexplicably cropped copy has “Informed Citizens” at its bottom right, contradicting your online caption that this campaign was named “Information Council for the Environment.” Your copy is a horribly degraded multi-generation photocopy condition. What’s your explanation for that?
Error 3: Your online caption under the “Chicken Little”ad claims ICE’s goal was to “reposition global warming as theory, (not fact).” The administrators of ICE, if you make the effort to contact them, will confirm that the “reposition global warming” strategy goal was part of a proposal to them which they rejected outright. The “Informed Citizens” name was also rejected; confirmed in a 7/8/91 New York Times Matt Wald piece.
Error 4: Your report seems to imply the ICE campaign (a short-lived PR effort containing no actual disinformation) was an effort by one of the energy companies named in the ‘two dozen’ global warming lawsuits. None of the defendant companies had any affiliation with the ICE campaign.

You need to retract the assertions associated with the above 4 errors and also explain why your “Chicken Little” ad copy and the other one in your video – no matter how they were provided to you – DO NOT source from the ICE campaign, but are instead photocopies from Greenpeace USA.

Will CBS Sunday Morning retract anything in their report? One possible demonstration that they received and read my complaint would be if we see a revised map from them eliminating King County v. BP et al., which reduces their statement of “more than two dozen cities, counties and states” to exactly two dozen — 24 total. Their count differs from my count, but that’s another math / filing interpretation story.

At this point, I should note a sort of retraction myself regarding a detail in my above complaint to CBS, but my clarification will not hurt my claims, and will not help their situation one bit. When I said …

… your “Chicken Little” ad copy and the other one in your video … DO NOT source from the ICE campaign, but are instead photocopies from Greenpeace USA …

…. I’m correct about the Chicken Little ad, when my long-ago downloaded PDF file image from Greenpeace’s archives is compared to CBS’ Chicken ad copy. But with regard to that other one, the “Serious problem” ad which was published in Flagstaff / Bowling Green / Fargo newspapers (I detailed that here and here), Greenpeace’s degraded photocopy is actually far worse than what appears briefly in the CBS video version of their report, which I’ve captured in a full screen view for best clarity.

Who was revealed as having that clearer copy? Neither Mayor Tecklenburg’s Charleston v Brabham filing (the 11th one from the Sher Edling law firm that uses those illustrations in all 15 of its boilerplate copy filings) nor AG Tong’s Connecticut v. ExxonMobil filing; it doesn’t mention the ICE in any manner. And it isn’t the supplier of evidence to Sher Edling, Kert Davies, whose Climate Files website still currently shows the horribly degraded versions that trace all the way back to his tenure at the old Ozone Action organization, which is the place that gave the first ongoing media traction to the “reposition global warming” ‘leaked memos,’ a year before Ross Gelbspan boosted that further.

Who appeared within just the last two years in a not-likely-to-be-sheer coincidence situation with a previously unseen, associated with a much clearer “Serious problem” ICE ad?

Readers of GelbspanFiles will remember how I asked about that new barely two years-old development in my “The Real ICE ads, Part 2” blog post.

The BBC article I refer to there is this lengthy one which relied largely on “Merchants of Doubt” documentary movie star/book author Naomi Oreskes and Kert Davies for its accusations about fossil fuel industry-led ‘disinformation campaigns’ (BBC’s online article itself was an outgrowth of an August 2020 BBC radio broadcast interview featuring Kert Davies).

A third of the way down in that BBC article was Oreskes dutifully regurgitating talking points about the ICE campaign, followed immediately by two never-seen-before-in-public ad photocopy versions. Compare the BBC article’s “Serious problem” ad copy, left, to the CBS version.

Identical dust spots. I was thinking the CBS video arbitrarily stopped before it got to the bottom of the ad, but as seen here, the BBC version crops the bottom at the exact same level.

Rather than be one more news outlet in a long line of outlets, organizations, and individuals regurgitating what appears to be unsupportable propaganda talking points, CBS Sunday Morning and the entire CBS news organization should take this ripe opportunity to ask a simple question, “what’s really going on here?” and then follow the path this serious, unbiased, objective question leads them, asking why nice tidy problem-solving answers aren’t seen, but instead more and more questions arising about the ‘industry-orchestrated disinformation campaigns accusation’ and the core clique of people who’ve long promulgated it.

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April 20, 2022 at 04:57PM

Germany’s Methane Commitments

A few weeks ago, Germany pledged to reduce methane. Germany After COP26: Europe’s Driving Force to Get to Net-Zero? | Wilson Center Now they are pledging to increase it. Germany & Netherlands roll out gas drilling plans — RT Business … Continue reading

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April 20, 2022 at 04:25PM