There have been some interesting developments on the subject of which countries are preventing the release of their raw temperature data. You may remember that the Select Committee inquiry into CRU were told that several countries, among them Sweden, Canada and Poland, were refusing to allow him to publish these figures.
Anthony Watts is now reporting a press release by a Swedish pressure group called the Stockholm Initiative, who have obtained the correspondence between Jones and the Swedish Met Office, SMHI. The suggestion is that SMHI weren't in fact preventing release at all, but there has been a very long thread at Climate Audit where several people have disputed this. This posting is my attempt to make sense of it all.
In the weeks after Climategate, Jones wrote a letter to SMHI asking them for permission to release some data:
Given the importance of the global surface temperature series, we would like to make the underpinning data more widely available. CRU therefore requests your permission to release the underlying monthly mean temperature station records we hold - which for some stations go back to the 19th century...
We stress that the data we hold has arisen from multiple sources, and has been recovered over the last 30 years. Subsequent quality control and homogenisation of these data have been carried out. It is therefore highly likely that the version we hold and are requesting permission to distribute will differ from your own current holdings.
What seems clear from this is that what Jones wanted to release
This clearly concerned SMHI, who refused permission for CRU to publish this adjusted data on the grounds "that the version of the data from the SMHI stations that you hold are likely to differ from the data we hold".
This refusal was then reported to the parliamentary inquiry into CRU. The relevant quote is this one from UEA vice-chancellor Edward Acton:
Professor Acton: Unfortunately, several of these countries impose conditions and say you are not allowed to pass it on, so there has just been an attempt to get these answers. Seven countries have said "No, you cannot", half the countries have not yet answered, Canada and Poland are amongst those who have said, "No you cannot publish it" and also Sweden. Russia is very hesitant. We are under a commercial promise, as it were, not to; we are longing to publish it because what science needs is the most openness.
However, among the papers released by the Stockholm Institute is a more recent letter, [update: dating from after the hearings] in which SMHI object to this characterisation:
It has never been our intention to withhold any data but we feel that it is paramount that data that has undergone, for instance, homogenisation by anyone other than SMHI is not presented as SMHI data. We see no problem with publication of the data set together with a reference stating that the data included in the dataset is based on observations made by SMHI but it has undergone processing made by your research unit. We would also prefer a link to SMHI or to our web site where the original data can be obtained.
Questions are being raised over the probity of the behaviour of Jones and Acton as revealed by these letters and I will try to make sense of these here.
It seems clear to me that Jones does not actually require permission from SMHI to release the adjusted data. This, by his own admission, is different to what SMHI holds and there can therefore be no issues of intellectual property. In this light, the refusal by SMHI looks odd, because it was not their place to prevent release of Jones' adjusted data. The question then becomes whether the UEA statements to the Parliamentary inquiry were reasonable. They indeed had a refusal from the Swedes, but this didn't relate to the data that everyone wanted to see - the raw data as used. We might note that it is not clear from the transcript which data is being discussed by the committee, although the exchange is in the context of a discussion of replication of findings, when the only relevant data is the raw data as used. I would therefore suggest that it was misleading of UEA to present SMHI's refusal as a barrier to making the data public.
Of course, later on, we can see that SMHI's refusual was in fact no such thing anyway. Having being asked for permission to release, SMHI felt they were being asked to endorse Jones' adjusted figures. Quite properly, they refused. It is clear that they had no objection to Jones releasing his adjusted data provided he made it clear that it was just that: adjusted. But to reiterate, this is a red herring. What is required is the raw data as used.
This doesn't look good to me.