Shocking evidence has emerged that points to the U.K. Met Office
inventing temperature data from over 100 non-existent weather stations.
The explosive allegations have been made by citizen journalist Ray
Sanders and sent to the new Labour Science Minister Peter Kyle MP.
Following a number of Freedom of Information requests to the Met Office
and diligent field work visiting individuals stations, Sanders has
discovered that 103 stations out of 302 sites supplying temperature
averages do not exist. “How would any reasonable observer know that the
data was not real and simply ‘made up’ by a Government agency,” asks
Sanders. He calls for an “open declaration” of likely inaccuracy of
existing published data, “to avoid other institutions and researchers
using unreliable data and reaching erroneous conclusions”.
In
his home county of Kent, Sanders charges that four of the eight sites
identified by the Met Office, namely Dungeness, Folkestone, Dover and
Gillingham – which all produce rolling temperature averages to the
second decimal place of a degree – are “fiction”. Sanders notes that
there has been no weather station at Dungeness since 1986. The Daily
Sceptic is able to confirm that none of the four stations appear in the
list of Met sites with a classification from the World Meteorological
Organisation (WMO). The Met Office directs online inquiries about Dover
to the ”nearest climate station” at Dover Harbour (Beach) and provides a
full set of rolling 30-year averages. According to Met Office
co-ordinates, the site is on Dover beach as the Google Earth photo below
shows. It seems unlikely that any scientific organisation would site a
temperature monitoring station that is likely to be submerged on a
regular basis. Who is running this station on the beach, have accurate
records been kept for 30 years and why is it not listed under the 380
sites that are given a WMO rating?
Of the 302 sites quoted,
Sanders notes that the Met Office “declined to advise me” exactly how or
where the alleged ‘data’ were derived for these 103 non-existent sites.
The practice of ‘inventing’ temperature data from non-existent
stations is a controversial issue in the United States where the local
weather service NOAA has been charged with fabricating data for more
than 30% of its reporting sites. Data are retrieved from surrounding
stations and the resulting averages are given an ‘E’ for estimate. “The
addition of the ghost station data means NOAA’s monthly and yearly
reports are not representative of reality,” says meteorologist Anthony
Watts. “If this kind of process were used in a court of law, then the
evidence would be thrown out as being polluted,” he added.
In
its historical data section, the Met Office lists a number of sites with
long records of temperature data. Lowestoft provides records going back
to 1914 but it closed in 2010. Since that date the figures have been
complied on an estimated basis. The stations at Nairn Druim, Paisley and
Newton Rigg are similarly closed but still reporting estimated monthly
data. “Why would any scientific organisation feel the need to publish
what can only be described as fiction?” asks Sanders. “No scientific
purpose can possibly be served by fabrication,” he suggests....<<<Read More>>>...
Welcome to "A Light In The Darkness" - a realm that explores the mysterious and the occult; the paranormal and the supernatural; the unexplained and the controversial; and, not forgetting, of course, the conspiracy theories; including Artificial Intelligence; Chemtrails and Geo-engineering; 5G and EMR Hazards; The Global Warming Debate; Trans-Humanism and Trans-Genderism; The Covid-19 and mRNA vaccine issues; The Ukraine Deception ... and a whole lot more.