The fiddling with temperature data is the biggest science scandal ever
New data shows that the “vanishing” of polar ice is not the result of runaway global warming
8 February, 2015
When future generations look back on the global-warming scare of the past 30
years, nothing will shock them more than the extent to which the official
temperature records – on which the entire panic ultimately rested – were
systematically “adjusted” to show the Earth as having warmed much more than
the actual data justified.
Two weeks ago, under the headline “How
we are being tricked by flawed data on global warming”, I wrote
about Paul Homewood, who, on his Notalotofpeopleknowthat blog, had checked
the published temperature graphs for three weather stations in Paraguay
against the temperatures that had originally been recorded. In each
instance, the actual trend of 60 years of data had been dramatically
reversed, so that a cooling trend was changed to one that showed a marked
warming.
This was only the latest of many examples of a practice long recognised by
expert observers around the world – one that raises an ever larger question
mark over the entire official surface-temperature record.
Following my last article, Homewood checked a swathe of other South American
weather stations around the original three. In each case he found the same
suspicious one-way “adjustments”.
First these were made by the US government’s Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN). They were then amplified by two of the main official surface records, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (Giss) and the National Climate Data Center (NCDC), which use the warming trends to estimate temperatures across the vast regions of the Earth where no measurements are taken. Yet these are the very records on which scientists and politicians rely for their belief in “global warming”.
First these were made by the US government’s Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN). They were then amplified by two of the main official surface records, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (Giss) and the National Climate Data Center (NCDC), which use the warming trends to estimate temperatures across the vast regions of the Earth where no measurements are taken. Yet these are the very records on which scientists and politicians rely for their belief in “global warming”.
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