McIntyre's Mission: An Obsessive Quest to Disprove Michael Mann's Hockey Stick

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There is no better way to describe self-appointed climate auditor Steve McIntyre than โ€˜determinedโ€™. Highly determinedย even.

And you would have to be pretty obstinate to try and poke holes in peer-reviewed climate science given that McIntyre claims he does not receive a salary signed by Big Oil. As author of the sceptic blog Climate Audit, all of McIntyreโ€™s work is funded on his ownย dime.

Of course, his hotel accommodation while in London this August, where our interview was conducted, was paid for by Lord Lawsonโ€™s Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF).

โ€œI donโ€™t have a big objection to think tanks sponsoring things โ€ฆ I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s enough support for sceptics or critics as it is,โ€ says the Ontario-based retired mining consultant whose blog inspired a hacker to break into servers at the University of East Anglia (UEA) and steal emails and data shared between the worldโ€™s leading global warmingย scientists.

โ€œIf I wanted to make money, Iโ€™d have stayed in the mining business, rather than try to get money from Climategate,โ€ heย adds.

โ€œIโ€™m much more effective [on my own] than if I was depending on them,โ€ McIntyre, 67, tells us. โ€œI think thatโ€™s actually been important to my staying power inย this.โ€

In an ironic twist, McIntyre actually lost out on millions of dollars because his almost obsessive pursuit of climate researcher Professor Michael Mann meant he missed out on โ€œthe deal of a lifetimeโ€ when his old company literally struckย gold.

For most, this would be a powerful dissuasion. But not forย McIntyre.

While he obsessively continues to try and find mistakes in Mannโ€™s work, he is unwittingly providing newโ€”freeโ€”material for the oil-funded neoliberal think tanks to spin into a substantive attack on climateย science.

So deep is McIntyre in his mission to audit Mannโ€™s climate data that itโ€™s unclear whether he truly understands his role in this bigger attack on climateย science.

The Hockeyย Stick

McIntyreโ€™s quest began in 2002 when he started questioning Mannโ€™s โ€˜hockey stick graphโ€™. It was during this time that the Canadian Government was promoting the Kyoto Protocol, claiming 1990 was the hottest year of the decade. And, in fact, it was. The following year, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) featured the graph prominently in itsย report.

Mannโ€™s Hockey Stick graph (Mann 1999)

Sceptical of the graphโ€™s conclusions, McIntyre felt he had adequate mathematical skills to audit the graph himself, having studied Mathematics at the University of Toronto. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 1969. McIntyre then went on to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, graduating inย 1971.

However, McIntyreโ€”a surgeonโ€™s son who grew up among Canadaโ€™s Liberal eliteโ€”turned down a graduate scholarship to study Mathematical Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) due to his parentsโ€™ ugly divorce, and so returned home to become aย businessman.

For the next 30 years McIntyre worked in the mineral business. He was the president and founder of Northwest Exploration Company Limited and a director of its parent company, Northwest Explorations Inc. This was taken over in 1998 by CGX Resources to form CGW Energy, an oil and gas exploration company. McIntyre was no longer a director but remained a strategic advisor from 2000 to 2003, when his obsession over climate dataย began.

Shifting gears from mining minerals to data mining, his initial inquiry into climate change required โ€œlittle more than free time, effort, knowledge of some statistics and linear algebra, and some software,โ€ Macleans Magazine has previously described.

McIntyre meetsย McKitrick

As McIntyre investigated the hockey stick graph, he posted comments criticising Mannโ€™s data on internet discussion group climateskeptics. These comments were subsequently picked up in 2003 by the climate sceptic editor of a little known social science journal, Energy & Environment. It was at this time that McIntyre joined up with Canadian Economics professor Ross McKitrick.

A senior fellow of the Fraser Institute, a Canadian free-market public policy think tank, and a member of the GWPFโ€™s academic advisory board, McKitrick proved integral to McIntyreโ€™sย mission.

The two drafted an article critiquing Mannโ€™s hockey stick graph, claiming that the way the data was handled ensured that whatever data gets input, it will always produce a hockey stickย shape.

Their article was published in Energy & Environment, which avoids standard peerย review.

The two also tried, without success, to get their findings published in the highly regarded Nature magazine, so they decided to publish a second piece in Geophysical Research Letters. Initially, both of their papers received very little attention outside climate-scepticย circles.

But thanks to a powerful PR campaign and strategic timing, their unsubstantiated criticisms landed on the front page of the Canadian newspaper the National Post and the Wall Street Journal.

As it turns out, Energy & Environment editor Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen had rushed their first paper into publication for โ€œpolicy impact reasonsโ€ prior to the COP9 climate talks in Milan. McIntyre was then flown to Washington D.C. to brief US business leaders and the staff of well-known climate denier Senator James Inhofe, who was at that timeโ€”and is once again current frontrunner choiceโ€”chair of the Environment and Public Worksย committee.

Adding more fodder to the pseudo-fire, McIntyre also later presented his findings to the Marshall Instituteโ€”an organisation with ties to the oil industry and whose board of directors includes William Oโ€™Keefe, a registered ExxonMobilย lobbyist.

This is all despite the fact that Mannโ€™s original hockey stick was never scientificallyย disproven.

Itโ€™s all about the tree rings. Or isย it?

Then in February 2004, a person known only as โ€˜John Aโ€™ offered to help McIntyre set up his Climate Audit blog where McIntyre continues to question Mannโ€™s data. Johnโ€™s identity remains a mystery to this day; McIntyre refused to give his real name, simply stating โ€œhe is a computerย scientistโ€.

Among other types of data, tree rings feature prominently throughout Climate Audit. This stems from McIntyre and McKitrickโ€™s original hockey stick critique which looked at its temperature reconstructions dating before 1600. The two claimed this data was flawed due to problems with dendrochronology, the use of tree rings to estimate past temperatures, and issues with statisticalย calculations.

However, these claims have since been disproven. In 2008, Mann showed you donโ€™t even need to use tree-ring data. This has resulted in many joking that climate scientists have more hockey sticks than an NHL lockerย room.

Using historical dataโ€”or proxy recordsโ€”from ice cores, coral, lake sediments, glaciers, boreholes and stalagmites, it is possible to reconstruct the same hockey stick curve for Northern Hemisphere temperatures going back 1,300 years. If you add the tree-ring data, the same result holds for the past 1,700ย years.

(Mann 2008)

It is fair to say then, that if Mannโ€™s hockey stick was wrong, the world would know by now. Twelve years later, McIntyre still has not disproved it. Yet, climate sceptics continue to focus their crosshairs onย Mann.

โ€œFrom an intellectual point of view, these contrarians are pathetic, because thereโ€™s no scientific validity to their arguments whatsoever,โ€ Mann told the Scientific American. โ€œBut theyโ€™re very skilled at deducing what sorts of disingenuous arguments and untruths are likely to be believable to the public that doesnโ€™t knowย better.โ€

And it was exactly this scrupulous and targeted criticism of temperature data and statistical analysis by McIntyre that inspired one Climate Audit reader to hack the emails of climate scientists at the UEA inย 2009.

It began with McIntyre asking readers to submit FOI requests for information on the universityโ€™s confidentiality agreements in a sideways attempt to get his hands on the researchersโ€™ climate data. The logic was that โ€œif theyโ€™d sent it to other peopleโ€ฆ they had waived any confidentiality rights and on several counts they could not selectively send it to their pals and not send it to me,โ€ McIntyreย explains.

A few days later, McIntyre revisited the universityโ€™s website only to discover the very data he was after: โ€œI noticed a file that was about the right size of a tree ring data setโ€ฆ so I opened it up and read it and thought โ€˜this is funny, this is the same data theyโ€™reย refusingโ€™.โ€

McIntyreโ€™s miracleย mole

So McIntyre downloaded the data and decided to have someย fun.

โ€œI then wrote a post at Climate Audit where I had some fun with itโ€ฆ a mole, I didnโ€™t actually say a mole [provided] this data but I kind of made it. I edited a mole and then I announced that I was in possession of the version that they wouldnโ€™t send to me,โ€ heย explains.

โ€œIt caused quite a commotion,โ€ McIntyre recalls. Dozens of readers started looking through the website themselves, some of them even discovering exposedย passwords.

Then, around midnight on 17 November, McIntyreโ€™s phoneย rang.

At the time, McIntyre was in his study next to the bedroom in his detached Toronto townhouse where he lives with wife Nola. Still in his jeans, he sat by the PC, surrounded by pictures of his children, Geoffrey, Emily and Graham, as well as his fourย grandchildren.

โ€œI donโ€™t get a lot of calls at midnight, except when one of the kids calls. Usually, calls at midnight are not something I welcome,โ€ McIntyreย says.

The call came from Steven Mosherโ€”an open-source software developer, crucial in the initial dissemination of the leaked climate dataโ€”asking him about a series of leaked emails from UEA which contained McIntyreโ€™s name more than 100 times. It was only a couple of days later that anyone noticed the now-infamous comment โ€œa miracle hasย happenedโ€.

โ€œMy first reaction [to the leaked files] was one of shock,โ€ McIntyre describes. โ€œI felt no vindication, [but] tremendous disappointment, and I thought it upsetting that people had acted thisย way.โ€

โ€œI felt that I had tried to behave politely. Iโ€™d done things the right way, and to have caused this, you know, intense animosity was much worse than I thought, you know, and the coarseness of language and conduct I found appalling,โ€ he continues. โ€œAnd I just kind of lost, my interest sagged and I didnโ€™t comment on the blog veryย much.โ€

McIntyre has been known for his more measured take to the climate change debate. Speaking at the Heartland Instituteโ€™s fourth international conference on climate change in 2010โ€”probably much to the dismay of conference attendees hoping for something more spiritedโ€”heย said:

โ€œThere is far too much angriness in my opinion on both sides of the debate. People are far too quick to yell โ€˜fraudโ€™ at the other side. I think such language is self-indulgent andย counterproductive.โ€

McIntyre tells us he doesnโ€™t like to use the word conspiracy on his blog because he doesnโ€™t find it โ€œconducive to a polite discussion, and most of the people who use those words are tooย angryโ€.

So, rather than responding immediately to the leaked information, McIntyre went to play squash the next day at the Badminton Racquet Club for some tensionย relief.

The pursuitย continues

But his interest was not lost for long. Almost 10 years later, his relentless pursuit continues. He says he doesnโ€™t have much animosity towards Mann, but this doesnโ€™t mean McIntyre willย stop.

โ€œI think itโ€™s entirely possible for somebody to be right about the big picture and wrong about the tree rings,โ€ heย argues.

This is despite nine separate investigations vindicating the climate science and climate scientists on the hacked UEA emails and the UK Government formally stating โ€œthe information contained in the illegally disclosed emails does not provide any evidence to discreditโ€ฆ anthropogenic climateย change.โ€

Yet, five years on, McIntyre and the climate denial community continue to harp on about tree rings and the debunked hacking scandal.

With reporting by Brendanย Montague

Photos: Michaelย Mann

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Kyla is a freelance writer and editor with work appearing in the New York Times, National Geographic, HuffPost, Mother Jones, and Outside. She is also a member of the Society for Environmental Journalists.

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