The Bureau of Meteorology released its 2022 State of the Environment Report last week, and the headline in newspapers and on radio is that the weather is becoming more extreme. This is also consistent with the message out of COP27 in Egypt where all the world’s leaders gathered just the week before to discuss climate change.
As the theory goes more carbon dioxide equals more heat and more moisture in the atmosphere and so there will be more, and more severe, cyclones. That is what is expected.
Cyclones are of course, the most extreme of all the weather events that we experience.
Except. The reality is the number and severity of cyclones is decreasing. That is correct, decreasing. At least since 1971, for the last 50 years. This does not accord with the theory and so the key chart that shows both the number and severity of cyclones to be decreasing (Figure 1) is absent from the key report.
Figure 1. There has been a decline in both the number and severity of cyclones affecting Australia since 1970.
You might think that I am nit-picking – that everything else is as they say. Except that is just not so.
The report explains some of the regional variability in rainfall trends, but tends to the impression that overall, it is getting drier. That has been the mantra from the Bureau for years. Remember the dams were never going to fill again.
In fact, the second half of the 20th Century was a lot wetter than the first half that included The Federation Drought and the depression years of the 1930s when much of south-eastern Australia became a dust bowl. Then there were the bushfires. My late father grew up near Pyramid Hill and shot rabbits to feed the family back then as a seven-year-old, he used to tell me what drought and heat and hunger felt like and how to skin a rabbit. The situation in the 1930s in Australia was not that different to the situation in the USA as described in John Steinbeck’s famous novel The Grapes of Wrath. The data showing the heat waves of the 1930s is still available at the US Environment Protection Agency website, click here and see Figure 6.
Figure 6.
The managers at the BOM like to go on about declining rainfall, however, the overall rainfall trend is only one of decline if you begin in about 1970, which is when the most influential of the early climate change reports began – remember Nicolas Stern’s report: Review on the Economics of Climate Change? I still remember back in June 2006 waking up to journalist Fran Kelly sounding like she was having an orgasm on morning radio as she enthused about Nicolas Stern and his new report that claimed declining rainfall across eastern Australia.
I remember getting out of bed, turning on my computer, and clicking across that morning to the BOM website, finding the relevant chart (see Figure 2b) and sending it across to Fran Kelly’s producer, explaining that there was only decline in rainfall because the Stern Review cherry picked a start date, beginning in 1970 when there was good data available all the way back to 1900.
Of course, since then there has been repeated flooding along the East coast. In fact, 2010 ended up a record wet year, even wetter than 1956 and 1974 that are generally associated with terrible flooding. The totals for all those years could be exceeded this year, when daily rainfall totals are finally tallied. So much for the predictions and advice in Nicolas Stern’s Review on the Economics of Climate Change that caused governments to invest in desalination plants instead of levy banks and reservoirs.
Figure 2. Annual rainfall for all of Australia.
Figure 2b. Annual rainfall for Eastern Australia.
The mantra this last week, never mind the data, has been that there is an overall drying trend in rainfall across Australia, but with more intense downpours. I can’t find the data that supports a greater intensity of rainfall. I made a submission to the NSW flood inquiry after crunching the numbers with Chris Gillham. This data showed that the 1970s were not only the wettest years in terms of total rainfall for Australia, but also had more extreme daily rainfall totals when considering the places that have experienced the worst of the recent flooding. You can read our submission here.
Mention is made in the new 2022 State of the Environment Report of the decline in rainfall in the south-east of Western Australia. That decline appears to be real and not just for the period April to October, see Figure 3 that provides annual totals for different part of Australia. The reason for the local decline may have more to do with the historical clearing of large areas of forest to plant wheat – than atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide.
Figure 3. Rainfall trends for different parts of Australia.
Then there is the issue of temperature, and all the associated who-ha about exceeding the 1.5°C tipping point. It has already been exceeded if we begin in the 1970s – when the deceitful experts, like Sir Nicholas Stern who so excited influential journalists like Fran Kelly, liked to begin the rainfall series.
I’ve chosen Perth to show you what some of the temperature increases look like since the 1950s, Figure 4. I’ve chosen Perth simply because I’m heading off there on Tuesday.
Figure 4. Annual mean maximum temperatures Perth airport. This chart includes data from different types of measuring equipment, both mercury thermometer and electronic probe and only begins in 1940s.
Longer temperature series for many places across the landmass of Australia that begin much earlier, for example Coonabarabran than begins in 1880 (Figure 5), tend to show a cooling trend, followed by warming.
Figure 5. Average annual temperatures for Coonabarabran indicate cooling and then warming. Temperatures at this site are still measured with a mercury thermometer, while these thermometers at most weather stations have been replaced with electronic probes.
The temperature increases for Perth, for the last few decades, far exceeds the dreaded 1.5°C tipping point. Annual mean maximum temperatures at Perth airport fluctuated around 23.5°C in the 1970s, but more recently temperatures have been a full 2.5°C warmer, at around 26°C, as shown in Figure 4. This may be because of a change in instrumentation, or because of the urban heat island effect.
We don’t know because since the BOM transitioned from using mercury thermometers to electronic probes to measure temperatures, the temperature readings may be up to 0.3°C warmer for the same weather. I’ve shown how this works for the parallel data that I was fortunate to obtain for Mildura when Josh Frydenberg was the Minister responsible for the Bureau.
The only way we can have confidence in the historical temperature record for Australia is if more of the parallel data is made public, that is the data that compares the recordings from mercury thermometers and electronic probes for the same weather stations.
This data was collected from about 38 different weather stations that had electronic probes and mercury thermometers in the same Stevenson screens. For some of these 38 stations, for example Giles in Western Australia, there is parallel data for about 25 years potentially giving a good indication of how electronic probes versus mercury thermometers respond under different conditions.
I will be in court, at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal on 3rd February 2023, as an expert witness trying to get this parallel data released – made public. That court hearing has been five years in the making. During the last two years, with various meetings in an attempt at conciliation, I have been unable to publicly comment or blog on the issue because of restrictions imposed by the court.
I will be writing more about this in the new year. Much thanks to John Abbot for his efforts in progressing the issue, initially through the Freedom of Information process.
Even with the electronic probes generally recording hotter for the same weather, providing temporary spikes because of their shorter response time to changes in temperature, the hottest day in Australia ever recorded at an official weather is still 3rd January 1909 at the Bourke post office with 125°F written down, the equivalent of 51.7°C. This record has been removed from the official database of Australia’s temperatures, scratched by Blair Trewin and David Jones at the BOM.
If we are to be honest to our history, then the record hot day at Bourke of 51.7°C (125°F) must be re-instated, and further the very hot 50.6°C (123°F) recorded for Brewarrina on the same day must be entered into the official database. Also, the temperature of 51.1°C (124°F) recorded at White Cliffs on 12th January 1939 must be recognised as the second hottest ever.
For these temperatures to be denied by the Bureau is a travesty – a terrible lie.
The same Australian journalists that write about the Chinese communist party removing books from Libraries in Hong Kong will not touch this story, they won’t critics the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. They will not investigate how inconvenient temperatures have been scratched from important archives.
If global warming is indeed the greatest moral issue of our time, then every Australian regardless of their politics and their opinion on greenhouse gases and renewable energies, should be honest to this data. There are no excuses.
The issue of scratching hottest days on record and the non-equivalence of recordings from electronic probes may be unique to Australia. The issue of homogenisation, however,occurs at meteorological offices in other countries. Homogenisation is of course where the Bureau cools the past making the present appear hotter for the same weather. You can read about how this is done in so many of the chapter in Climate Change: The Facts 2017. And then there is also my chapter in Climate Change: The Facts 2020.
If you scroll to the very bottom of my blog post ‘Australia’s Broken Temperature Record: Part 2’ you can find an interactive table that shows exactly how the Australian Bureau has cooled the past at the 112 ACORN-SAT weather stations, click here.
The new 2022 State of the Environment Report mentions the number 1.47°C as though this is a definitive statistic accurately representing how much Australia has warmed since 1910. In fact, when the Bureau first published this number, it was for a couple of years ago, and then they published it again at the beginning of this year, claiming it as the extent of warming since 1910 to the present. But, the BOM had in fact omitted to include the data for last year, for 2021. When the data for 2021 is included, the official statistics actually show Australia is already at the dreaded 1.5 °C tipping point, as I explained in a blog post back in March.
But who cares?
If we care about something, we should want to know everything about it.
That is what I say at the end of the film Finding Porites that will screen in Perth, at the Windsor Cinema Nedlands on 1st December. It will actually be a double screening with my new film Bleached Colourful. (Tickets here: https://perthbleachedcolourful.eventbrite.com.au)
In a radio interview promoting the new State of the Environment Report, Australian scientist Jaci Brown makes mention of the dying Great Barrier Reef. Perhaps for good measure. As though, well, if the statistics are somewhat contrived, that the Great Barrier Reef is dying from rising temperatures, that justifies everything – all the obfuscation I mean. Her radio interview was full of it, obfuscation. Jaci Brown presumably knows that the cyclone statistics show neither an increase in the number nor severity of these extreme weather events, so she comments about how they are expected to. One day, apparently, there will be an increase in the number and severity of cyclones.
I have no idea whether Jaci Brown has ever visited the Great Barrier Reef. In the radio interview she mentions being newly returned from Egypt and that the Great Barrier Reef is suffering from climate change. Almost all in the one breathe.
Except, as someone who has been snorkelling the Great Barrier Reef for fifty years, I continue to find it impossible to reconcile the coral wonderland that still exists with claims from aerial surveys – essentially flybys from 150 metres altitude purportedly accurately assessing corals to 5 metres under the water – that conclude 95% of it is bleached.
There is now an official trailer for my new film Bleached Colourful, that includes Terry Hughes in an airplane at 150 metres altitude and also me in Scuba under-the-water at John Brewer Reef. Watch the official trailer here.
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The feature image (top banner of this blog post) shows me floating above Pixie Reef. This is what you can see from a drone at 5 metres altitude with the corals 2-3 metres under the water.
The front of Pixie Reef from 40 metres altitude. Drone shot showing me holding a metre long strip of plastic.
To see the corals at this spot from under-the-water, scroll down to the table (Table 3.1) that shows the transects from the reef front here: https://jennifermarohasy.com/coralreefs/pixie2021/
That includes this coral that I’ve written a story about (so far unpublished) entitled Who ate the Green Plate.
This coral was photographed at the Reef Front, Pixie Reef, 22 February 2021 at about 3 metres depth. This coral is invisible from 150 metres in the air, out an airplane window that is how Terry Hughes and Neil Cantin do the official surveys of reef health.
This is the front of Pixie Reef from 120 metres altitude. The aerial surveys concluding the Great Barrier Reef to be dead and dying are undertaken at 150 metres altitude. The scientists just make it up, and then obfuscate.
via Jennifer Marohasy
November 27, 2022, by jennifer
A Note on Obfuscation, the 2022 Climate Report, and my Latest Film — Jennifer Marohasy