The discussion around Karl et al., 2015 continues in certain segments of the media.
Last week, the allegations were that the paper was rushed to
influence the Paris agreement. That the multi-year multi-party talks could be
swayed by a single paper is of course pure bunkum (as an aside Bunkum arises
from the behaviour of a politician from Buncombe County where NCEI is located). The Paris climate agreement was the culmination of thousands of individual
studies and painstaking, careful, assessments of a wealth of scientific
evidence that led to a conclusion by the governments of the world that action
was imperative. That any single study was, or could ever be, a ‘clincher’ is pure
fantasy. The weight and breadth of evidence is what convinced all parties and
is the work of many thousands of experts.
This week, there has been a volte face (about face) and the allegation instead is that Karl et al. led to a delay in the release
of ERSSTv4 which was ‘unacceptable’. You’ll forgive me for a second while I
sweep up the remains of my shattered irony-meter strewn about over the floor.
Right, where was I? Well, firstly, the new allegation
fundamentally clears up one allegation in that the ERSSTv4 product was in no
sense experimental and had undergone full internal review as well as having (at
the time) two peer-reviewed published papers describing it.
Huang et al. put out a technical paper, published in the
Journal of Climate in February 2015, on the new dataset, accompanied by a paper
describing its uncertainties by Liu et al. The Huang et al. paper
covered in detail the dataset specification. It did not address the
implications of the dataset related to temperature trends over the past several
decades. It was a highly technical paper focused on explaining the details of
new corrections to sea surface temperatures. It was not intended for general
public communication.
At the same time, NOAA and ISTI had in late 2014 released a
major upgrade to monthly global land data holdings
source that is updated each month in NOAA’s
regular global temperature monitoring. It has extra
stations in many regions of the world and improved coverage
, and that is why Karl et al. took advantage of
this for a snapshot data set analysis that ended in 2014. The envisaged upgrade to GHCNM
will regularly add new data and process these data through the existing land
analysis processing suite.
Whenever NOAA puts out new data sets, that will be updated
each month for tracking global temperatures they always get numerous questions
that they have to be able to answer. So, NOAA waited on releasing this new
ERSSTv4 data set until the Karl et al. paper was out because the Karl et al.
paper presented the implications of the new corrections and new land data
sources to previously reported trends appearing in prominent works such as the
Fifth IPCC assessment including, but not limited to, the recent behaviour. NOAA
took extra steps to ensure the impact of the new corrections and data could be
readily explained. It took an extra 4 months to accomplish
this. If the Karl et al. paper had not been in the pipeline, arguably
NOAA would have had to write up a stand-alone paper to explain the implications
of the updated data set, essentially the “Karl et al. paper.”
And there is still nothing in these process complaints that
substantiates anything but high-quality science that has already been reproduced
by other scientists in peer-reviewed scientific articles. Those studies
validated NOAA's work. They validated the science, the data provided to
them by NOAA, and the quality of the work.