Stephen McIntyre Biography

This article is about the Canadian editor of Climate Audit. For the ice hockey player, see Steve MacIntyre.

Stephen McIntyre (born c. 1947) is a Canadian mining exploration company director, a former minerals prospector and semi-retired mining consultant whose work has included statistical *ysis. He is the founder and editor of Climate Audit, a blog which *yses and discusses climate data. He is a critic of the temperature record of the past 1000 years and the data quality of NASA's Goddard Ins*ute for Space Studies. He has made statistical critiques, with economist Ross McKitrick, of the hockey stick graph which shows that the increase in late 20th century global temperatures is unprecedented in the past 1,000 years.

Early life and education

McIntyre, a native of Ontario, attended the University of Toronto Schools, a college-preparatory school in Toronto, finishing first in the national high school mathematics compe*ion of 1965. He went on to study mathematics at the University of Toronto and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1969. McIntyre then obtained a Commonwealth Scholarship to read philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, graduating in 1971. Although he was offered a graduate scholarship, McIntyre decided not to pursue studies in mathematical economics at the M*achusetts Ins*ute of Technology.

Career

McIntyre started work for Noranda and worked for 30 years in the mineral business, the last part of these in the hard-rock mineral exploration as an officer or director of several public mineral exploration companies. He was the president and founder of Northwest Exploration Company Limited and a director of its parent company, Northwest Explorations Inc. When Northwest Explorations Inc. was taken over in 1998 by CGX Resources Inc. to form the oil and gas exploration company CGX Energy Inc., McIntyre ceased being a director. McIntyre was a strategic advisor for CGX in 2000 through 2003. McIntyre says that during his career his skills in statistical *ysis enabled him to *yse mineral prospecting data and out-bet his rivals. He also occasionally worked as a government policy *yst, including a period at the federal Anti-Inflation Board.

Prior to 2003 he was an officer or director of several small public mineral exploration companies. He retired from full-time work, but still sometimes engaged in mining consultancy.He is an active squash player and once won a gold medal in the World Masters Games in squash doubles.

In April 2011, Trelawney Mining and Exploration Inc. of Toronto, Ontario announced the appointment of McIntyre to their board of directors and then later to chairman in June 2011. In September 2011, McIntyre was appointed to the board of directors of Augen Gold Corp., which was shortly acquired by Trelawney Mining and Exploration Inc. in November 2011. In October 2011, McIntyre was appointed to the board of directors of Southeast Asia Mining Corp. and later resigned in May 2012. Trelawney Mining and Exploration Inc. was acquired by Iamgold Corporation in June 2012.

Hockey stick graph controversy

Main article: Hockey stick graph (global temperature)

In 2002, McIntyre became interested in climate science after a leaflet from the Canadian government warning of the dangers of global warming was delivered to his residence. McIntyre states that he noticed discrepancies in climate science papers that reminded him of the false prospectus that had duped investors involved in the Bre-X gold mining scandal.

The Canadian government pamphlets were based on the IPCC Third *essment Report section, which prominently displayed the hockey stick graph based on the 1999 reconstruction by Mann, Bradley and Hughes (MBH99). McIntyre began studying Mann's research, which had produced the graph, and met Ross McKitrick. McIntyre has remarked on how his suspicions of this graph were aroused: "In financial circles, we talk about a hockey stick curve when some investor presents you with a nice, steep curve in the hope of palming something off on you."

McIntyre & McKittrick's papers were cited by Senator Jim Inhofe and Representative Joe Barton to support their political criticisms of the MBH studies, and Representative Sherwood Boehlert requested the National Academy of Sciences in the United States to arrange an investigation. The outcome was the North Report, published in 2006, which endorsed the MBH studies with a few reservations. The principal component *ysis method criticised by McIntyre & McKittrick had a small tendency to bias results so was not recommended, but it had little influence on the final reconstructions, and other methods produced similar results.

ClimateAudit.org

Main article: Climate Audit

McIntyre's blog has as a recurrent topic the struggle to obtain underlying data from peer reviewed papers. McIntyre has stated that he started Climate Audit so that he could defend himself against attacks being made at the climatology blog RealClimate. An earlier website, Climate2003, provided additional information for papers co-written by McIntyre and Ross McKitrick, including raw data and source code, and comments by McIntyre. On 26 October 2004 McIntyre commented on climate2003.com, "Maybe I'll start blogging some odds and ends that I'm working on. I'm going to post up some more observations on some of the blog criticisms." On 1 December Mann and nine other scientists launched the RealClimate website. On 2 February McIntyre set up his Climate Audit blog, having found difficulties with posting comments on the climate2003.com layout.

Climate Audit was co-winner of a 2007 Weblog Award for "Best Science Blog", receiving 20,000 votes in the online poll.

Auditing

Stephen McIntyre has been highlighted by the press, including The Wall Street Journal.

In 2007, McIntyre started auditing the various corrections made to temperature records, in particular those relating to the urban heat island effect. He discovered a discontinuity in some U.S. records in the Goddard Ins*ute for Space Studies (GISS) dataset starting in January 2000. He emailed GISS advising them of the problem and within a couple of days GISS issued a new, corrected set of data and thanked McIntyre for "bringing to our attention that such an adjustment is necessary to prevent creating an artificial jump in year 2000". The adjustment reduced the average temperatures for the continental United States by about 0.15:°C during the years 2000-2006. Changes in other portions of the record did not exceed 0.03:°C; it made no discernible difference to the global mean anomalies.

McIntyre later commented:

My original interest in GISS adjustment procedures was not an abstract interest, but a specific interest in whether GISS adjustment procedures were equal to the challenge of "fixing" bad data. If one views the above *essment as a type of limited software audit (limited by lack of access to source code and operating manuals), one can say firmly that the GISS software had not only failed to pick up and correct fic*ious steps of up to 1 deg C, but that GISS actually introduced this error in the course of their programming. According to any reasonable audit standards, one would conclude that the GISS software had failed this particular test. While GISS can (and has) patched the particular error that I reported to them, their patching hardly proves the merit of the GISS (and USHCN) adjustment procedures. These need to be carefully examined.

Role in the Climatic Research Unit controversy

See also: Climatic Research Unit email controversy

Colby Cosh, writing for Maclean's magazine, believes McIntyre's criticisms of climate science are at the heart of the Climatic Research Unit email controversy in November–December 2009. McIntyre is mentioned over 100 times in the hacked Climatic Research Unit (CRU) emails. In the emails, one climate researcher dismisses him as a "bozo". Others speculate over his funding, and argue about whether to ignore or counterattack him, although, according to Cosh, some unnamed scientists acknowledge that his criticisms have merit.

The *ociated Press *ysis of the CRU e-mails stated: "Some e-mails said McIntyre's attempts to get original data from scientists are frivolous and meant more for har*ment than doing good science. There are allegations that he would distort and misuse data given to him. McIntyre disagreed with how he is portrayed. 'Everything that I've done in this, I've done in good faith,' he said." The independent Science *essment Panel's chair, Lord Oxburgh, said at a press conference that the repeated Freedom of Information (FOI) requests made by Steve McIntyre and others could have amounted to a campaign of har*ment, and the issue of how FOI laws should be applied in an academic context remained unresolved.

In May 2010 BBC environment *yst Roger Harrabin wrote that McIntyre "arguably knows more about CRU science than anyone outside the unit:— but none of the CRU inquiries has contacted him for input." In March McIntyre had submitted evidence to the Independent Climate Change Email Review (chaired by Sir Muir Russell), and points he raised were discussed in the Review report published on 7 July 2010. New Statesman named McIntyre as 32nd of its "50 People Who Matter 2010", citing his role in the email controversy. It said "The influence might not be positive, but there's no doubt he has shaped the debate."

Selected publications

  • McIntyre, Stephen; McKitrick, Ross (2003). "Corrections to the Mann et al. (1998) Proxy Data Base and Northern Hemispheric Average Temperature Series". Energy & Environment. 14 (6): 751–771. Bibcode:2003EnEnv..14..751M. CiteSeerX:10.1.1.168.1461. doi:10.1260/095830503322793632. S2CID:154585461. Archived from the original on 22 June 2013.
  • McIntyre, Stephen; McKitrick, Ross (2005). "The M&M Critique of the MBH98 Northern Hemisphere Climate Index: Update and Implications". Energy & Environment. 16 (1): 69–100. Bibcode:2005EnEnv..16...69M. doi:10.1260/0958305053516226. S2CID:154090879. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013.
  • McIntyre, Stephen; McKitrick, Ross (2005). "Hockey sticks, principal components, and spurious significance". Geophysical Research Letters. 32 (3): L03710. Bibcode:2005GeoRL..32.3710M. doi:10.1029/2004GL021750.
  • McIntyre, Stephen; McKitrick, Ross (2009). "Proxy inconsistency and other problems in millennial paleoclimate reconstructions". PNAS. 106 (6): E10. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106E..10M. doi:10.1073/pnas.0812509106. PMC:2647809. PMID:19188613.
  • McKitrick, Ross; McIntyre, Stephen; Herman, Chad (2010). "Panel and multivariate methods for tests of trend equivalence in climate data series". Atmospheric Science Letters. 11 (4): 270–277. Bibcode:2010AtScL..11..270M. doi:10.1002/asl.290.
  • O'Donnell, Ryan; Lewis, Nicholas; McIntyre, Steve; Condon, Jeff (2011). "Improved Methods for PCA-Based Reconstructions: Case Study Using the Steig et al. (2009) Antarctic Temperature Reconstruction". Journal of Climate. 24 (8): 2099–2115. Bibcode:2011JCli...24.2099O. doi:10.1175/2010JCLI3656.1. S2CID:129553222.
  • McIntyre, Stephen; McKitrick, Ross (2011). "Discussion of: A statistical *ysis of multiple temperature proxies: Are reconstructions of surface temperatures over the last 1000 years reliable?". Annals of Applied Statistics. 5 (1): 56–60. arXiv:1105.0524. Bibcode:2011arXiv1105.0524M. doi:10.1214/10-AOAS398L. S2CID:88511946.

See also

  • Global warming controversy
  • Instrumental temperature record §:Calculating the global temperature

References

    External links

    McIntyre's websites and publications
    • ClimateAudit:— McIntyre's blog
    • Hockey Stick Studies:— McIntyre's compilation of Papers, Presentations etc.
    • Publications by Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick (at McKitrick's site).
    • Article detailing the Wegman and North Reports with links and summarization
    • McIntyre's biography Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine (.doc file, last updated in 2003)
    • The M&M Project: Replication *ysis of the Mann et al. Hockey Stick Archived 12 September 2004 at the Wayback Machine at McKitrick's website
    • "The IPCC, the 'Hockey Stick' Curve, and the Illusion of Experience by McIntyre and McKitrick, Marshall Ins*ute, 18 November 2003
    • Publications by McIntyre at the Marshall Ins*ute's website
    • McIntyre's interview on BBC
    Articles about McIntyre and responses
    • "Kyoto Protocol Based on Flawed Statistics" Archived 27 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine by Marcel Crok with English translation by Angela den Tex, Natuurwetenschap & Techniek, February 2005
    • "In Climate Debate, The 'Hockey Stick' Leads to a Face-Off", Antonio Regalado, The Wall Street Journal, 14 February 2005
    • "Global-Warming Skeptics under Fire", Antonio Regalado, The Wall Street Journal, 26 October 2005.
    • Video of talk by Gerald North (head of the NRC committee) regarding their report.
    • Global warming? Look at the numbers by Lorne Gunther, National Post, 13 August 2007.
    • Red faces at NASA over climate-change blunder by Daniel Dale, Toronto Star, 14 August 2007.
    • Nasa climate change error spotted by blogger, Natalie Paris, Daily Telegraph, 16 August 2007.
    • New York Times article on the NAS report
    • The National Academy of Sciences report: Surface Temperature Reconstructions for the Last 2,000 Years (2006)
    • "Revenge of the Climate Laymen", The Wall Street Journal Europe article on McIntyre & Climate Audit, 18 November 2009.
    • "Climate science's PR disaster", Margaret Wente's column for 30 November 2009, The Globe and Mail
    • Profile of McIntyre at the Toronto Star, 12 December 2009
    • A Superstorm for Global Warming Research, Part 3: A Climate Rebel Takes on the Establishment by Marco Evers, Olaf Stampf and Gerald Traufetter, Spiegel Online International, 1 April 2010.