The Wall Street Journal op-ed asks “If the case for man-made global warming is
really as strong as the so-called consensus claims it is, why do the
climategate emails show scientists attempting to stamp out dissenting points of
view? Why must they manipulate data, such as Mr. Jones's infamous effort
(revealed in the first batch of climategate emails) to "hide the
decline," deliberately concealing an inconvenient divergence, post-1960,
between real-world, observed temperature data and scientists' preferred proxies
derived from analyzing tree rings?”
Climategate 2.0
A new batch of leaked emails again shows some leading scientists trying to smear opponents
www.online.wsj.com |
Wall Street Journal
By JAMES
DELINGPOLE
Last week, 5,000 files of private email
correspondence among several of the world's top climate scientists were
anonymously leaked onto the Internet. Like the first "climategate"
leak of 2009, the latest release shows top scientists in the field fudging
data, conspiring to bully and silence opponents, and displaying far less
certainty about the reliability of anthropogenic global warming theory in
private than they ever admit in public.
The scientists include men like Michael
Mann of Penn State
University and Phil Jones of the University of East Anglia , both of whose reports
inform what President Obama has called "the gold standard" of
international climate science, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC).
The new release of emails was timed to
coincide with the second anniversary of the original climategate leak and with
the upcoming United Nations climate summit in Durban , South Africa .
And it has already stirred strong emotions. To Rep. Ed Markey (D., Mass.), for
example, the leaker or leakers responsible are attempting to "sabotage the
international climate talks" and should be identified and brought "to
justice."
One might sympathize with Mr. Markey's
outrage if, say, the emails were maliciously rewritten or invented. But at
least one scientist involved—Mr. Mann—has confirmed that the emails are
genuine, as were the first batch released two years ago. So any malfeasance
revealed therein ought to be blamed on the scientists who wrote them, rather
than on the whistleblower who exposed them.
Consider an email written by Mr. Mann
in August 2007. "I have been talking w/ folks in the states about finding
an investigative journalist to investigate and expose McIntyre, and his thus
far unexplored connections with fossil fuel interests. Perhaps the same needs
to be done w/ this Keenan guy." Doug Keenan is a skeptic and gadfly of the
climate-change establishment. Steve McIntyre is the tenacious Canadian
ex-mining engineer whose dogged research helped expose flaws in Mr. Mann's
"hockey stick" graph of global temperatures.
One can understand Mr. Mann's
irritation. His hockey stick, which purported to demonstrate the link between
man-made carbon emissions and catastrophic global warming, was the central
pillar of the IPCC's 2001 Third Assessment Report, and it brought him
near-legendary status in his community. Naturally he wanted to put Mr. McIntyre
in his place.
The sensible way to do so is to prove
Mr. McIntyre wrong using facts and evidence and improved data. Instead the
email reveals Mr. Mann casting about for a way to smear him. If the case for
man-made global warming is really as strong as the so-called consensus claims
it is, why do the climategate emails show scientists attempting to stamp out
dissenting points of view? Why must they manipulate data, such as Mr. Jones's
infamous effort (revealed in the first batch of climategate emails) to
"hide the decline," deliberately concealing an inconvenient
divergence, post-1960, between real-world, observed temperature data and
scientists' preferred proxies derived from analyzing tree rings?
This is the real significance of the
climategate emails. They show that major scientists who inform the IPCC can't
be trusted to stick to the science and avoid political activism. This, in turn,
has very worrying implications for the major international policy decisions
adopted on the basis of their research.
That brings us to the motives of the
person calling himself "FOIA" who leaked the emails onto the Internet
last week.
In his introductory notes, he writes:
"Over 2.5 billion people live on less than $2 a day. Every day nearly
16,000 children die from hunger and related causes. One dollar can save a life.
. . . Poverty is a death sentence. Nations must invest $37 trillion in energy
technologies by 2030 to stabilize greenhouse gas emissions at sustainable
levels. Today's decisions should be based on all the information we can get,
not on hiding the decline."
For the service he has performed in
pursuit of this larger end, FOIA deserves not opprobrium but gratitude.
Mr. Delingpole
is a contributing editor of the Spectator and author of "Watermelons: The
Green Movement's True Colors" (Publius Books, 2011).
Looks like Newt Gingrich is w-r-o-n-g again, HA! Check out the latest political video going nuts on youtube Newt Gingrich: Serial Hypocrisy
ReplyDeleteClassic! Can we go ahead and pick the only candidate that can beat O-bummer and be done with it?