Australian Senator Steve Fielding has attracted quite a bit of media attention with his series of stunts aimed at building doubt over the scientific basis for anthropogenic global warming.  The core of his campaign has been a carefully constructed graph which shows no clear rise in temperatures while CO2 continues to rise since 1995.  The implication is that the world is not warming and CO2 is not (directly) related to temperature.

Trouble is, he (apparently) thinks he’s looking at climate – but he’s not.  He’s looking at the weather.

Climate is defined as the long-term average weather, where “long term” is generally accepted to mean at least 30 years.   Anything on a shorter time scale is dominated by short term variability: weather.

The graph Fielding cites shows year-by-year data: annual average global surface temperatures.  So each data point is the average of a one-year period.  That’s a nice picture of the weather; but why don’t we take a look at the climate?

Here’s a graph from the same data set (Hadley CRUT3) showing the annual average temperature (the brown spiky line, jumping up and down all the time) and the 30-year average temperature (the smooth yellow line).

Annual temperature vs. 30-year average temperature

Brown = weather.  Yellow = climate.

Clear?