One of the things you learn as a scientist is the ability to look at a plot and think, "that just doesn't look right." That's the feeling I got when I saw this plot that Lomborg is currently pushing.pic.twitter.com/L6Lz8jEuFw
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So what's going on? This is what we call cherry picking. Cherry picking is when you analyze a small amount of data to reach a conclusion that the full data set does not support.
There are really two cherry picks here. First is the choice of an obscure (and frankly weird) metric. This metric almost certainly gives an answer that is opposite to what a more exhaustive set of metrics would show.
The other cherry pick is only looking at the U.S. Let's look at the plot for the entire northern hemisphere mid-latitudes (29N-60N). The occurrence of hot days explodes after about 1980.pic.twitter.com/oH24YFLjS9
There are lots of papers that correctly estimate heatwaves. E.g., check out this paper by @sarahinscience and S. Lewis. This is where I got the idea to use the Berkeley daily data.https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-16970-7 …
tl;dr: This is classic cherry picking: the plot cherry picks an unusual metric and also cherry picks a particular region. Examining the full data set shows the opposite of what's claimed. Temperatures and heatwaves are certainly worse today than in the 20th century.
In addition, other types of extreme weather are also definitely getting worse. Zero debate about that.https://twitter.com/AndrewDessler/status/1184526507802349569?s=20 …
Next time someone shows this plot, please respond with this thread.
Important additional info by the expert, @RARohde:https://twitter.com/RARohde/status/1429108539960745994?s=20 …
.@BjornLomborg asked about heat waves instead of just the raw number of hot days.
Here's the times series of occurrence heat waves warmer than the 95th percentile of heat waves for heat waves of 2-5 days (where the temperature of a heat wave is the minimum daily temperature).pic.twitter.com/cce8JhwcOu
Here's the occurrence heat waves warmer than the 95th percentile, where the temperature of a heat wave is the average temperature. For the last two tweets, the y-axis is the sum of days over all grid boxes over the (approx.) continental US.pic.twitter.com/vxHuxZNjvM
It's clear that Lomborg's defense will be "I was just using a plot off the EPA website." But there are lots of plots on that page and he picked the *one* that presented the message he likes.https://twitter.com/BjornLomborg/status/1429122271009021954?s=20 …
That's a weak response. If you know anything about climate then you know the plot looks off and you owe your audience a minimal amount of due diligence before tweeting it out.
just for completeness: here are the multi-day heat waves for the entire NH mid-lats. This plot uses the minimum Tmax during a time span as the temp of the heat wave. Plotted here is the occurrence of heat waves > 95th percentile.pic.twitter.com/AbhFwFqfgp
This plot uses the average temperature of the time span as the temp of the heat wave. Again, plotting time series of occurrence of heat waves > 95th percentile. Y axis is grid cells times days.pic.twitter.com/6Oo3vVJPN8
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