Doubts about how much humans are contributing to changes in the climate have had an increasing number of things in their favor: a leveling off and even cooling of global temperatures over the past decade; the fact that Anthropogenic Global Warming theory (AGW) doesn’t account fully for a number of natural effects on the climate; admissions that the likes of Al Gore have trumped up the potential consequences of global warming in order to gain public attention; serious questions about the accuracy of the data that AGW proponents cite, and the scientific rigor with which the data have been collected.
What was missing was a paper trail indicating that warmists were manipulating the exchange of information and attempting to silence skeptics. Until now.
The recent release of several dozen megabytes of information from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia has struck a huge blow against the politics, and perhaps the science, of AGW. It’s unclear whether these data — including thousands of emails (UPDATE: sorry, make that “emails and other documents”) from some of the world’s most prominent warmists — were hacked by an outsider or leaked by a whistleblower on the inside. But the people who wrote and received the emails have verified their veracity.
Lest you doubt the impact of these emails, know that one of AGW’s greatest fanatics, George Monbiot of London’s Guardian newspaper, has described them as “a major blow” that “could scarcely be more damaging.” The fact that Monbiot tries to play down their impact on the science of AGW by concocting an over-the-top fake email, saying that only this kind of email would prove an over-arching conspiracy among warmists, merely shows that this crowd can do nothing but deal in hyperbole.
Science writer Ron Bailey — who, perhaps surprisingly for a staffer at uber-libertarian Reason Magazine, is convinced by the science of AGW, or at least was 18 months ago when I met him in Copenhagen — was compelled to write:
Hmmm. Data not agreeing with model predictions. Very interesting. And of course, Flannery is right, science does work through “a robust interchange and testing of ideas.” But interchanging ideas about how to hijack some aspects of peer review and by trying to suppress the work of researchers with whom one disagrees? Messy indeed.
Now, on to the emails.
I haven’t read through even a fraction of the emails, so I will only pass on what others, who have spent more time looking at them, have found.
One good summary is at Powerline blog, which includes emails suggesting that the CRU scientists tried to eliminate inconvenient “blips” in the data; complained about journalists, specifically Andrew Revkin of The New York Times, who were “not as predictable as we’d like”; and mused about ways to make sure the grant money from green-friendly corporations kept coming (while complaining about companies that funded alternative viewpoints). More from Powerline here, here and here.
Perhaps the most damning email threads describe the lengths to which the CRU crew went to silence debate. Pajamas Media has done a great job compiling messages along these lines. The PJM articles include: Charlie Martin on how the men violated the social contract of science; Rand Simberg on scientists as politicians; and Christopher Monckton, a British lord who gave an incredibly informative and entertaining talk this summer at a Georgia Public Policy Foundation event, and whose offer to debate Al Gore on the science of global warming has gone unaccepted, on why the CRU scientists are criminals.
A longtime thorn in the side of the AGW crowd, Steve McIntyre, hosts several discussion threads on some of the implications of the emails, including some back-and-forth about computer coding that I frankly do not understand in the least, here.
This undoubtedly won’t end the debate about global warming, but then again the only people who were trying all along to end the debate were the AGW crowd. What it ought to do, though, is provide real impetus for these supposed scientists to follow the normal procedures of science — including revealing their data so that others can test their hypotheses, a staple of scientific research that the CRU crew had until now avoided with all their might.
And at the very least, this ought to be reason enough for Congress, and the poo-bahs at next month’s U.N. climate change conference in Copenhagen, to back off any dramatic new anti-carbon measures until we know whether the scandal goes deeper than this.
***
Find me on Facebook.
162 comments Add your comment
dewstarpath
November 25th, 2009
7:00 am
- Never Trust a Republican –
- You could do a lot worse than Reader’s Digest.
It’s a great magazine.
More on those climate emails | Kyle Wingfield
November 25th, 2009
10:14 am
[...] get up to speed if you haven’t been following this story closely, here’s my post on it yesterday. Short version: A large batch of data from one of the world’s leading climate [...]
Bowfin
November 25th, 2009
9:31 pm
I’m not into politics, I just want the climate back to normal…say 11,000 years ago, when Northern Indiana was under a hundred feet of ice, and we could hike to Siberia from Alaska, using the Bering foothills:-)
Dawilla
November 25th, 2009
11:26 pm
This story should be front page headlines on the AJC but except for this blog post there is not a peep from them. The hacker released emails and documents expose one of the biggest scams in world history. The university has already acknowledged that the emails and documents are legitimate and there are now calls from government officials in the UK for the firing (and possible prosecution) of the “scientists” involved in this scam. That’s it AJC, come Monday I am going to cancel my subscription. Your lack of true journalism and professionalism has left a very bad taste in my mouth and I am finally through with you.
dewstarpath
November 27th, 2009
2:28 pm
- Killing deer out of season would probably be
controversial, even to a hunter.
A Glance at Climategate… | Political News | Annuit Coeptis
November 28th, 2009
10:51 am
[...] From the Atlanta Journal Constitution we have an article that begins by discussing the contradictory evidence of the last decade and [...]
John A. Jauregui
November 29th, 2009
9:49 pm
Stop bitching, take responsibility and take action. Stop all donations to the political party(s) responsible for this fraud. Stop donations to all environmental groups which funded this Global Warming propaganda campaign with our money, especially The Environmental Defense Fund. START donations to Oklahoma’s Senator Inhofe. Write your state and federal representatives demanding wall to wall investigations of government sponsored funding and coordination of this and related propaganda campaigns and demand indictments of those responsible. Write your state and federal Attorneys General demanding Al Gore and others conducting Global Warming/Climate Change racketeering and mail fraud operations be brought to justice, indicted, tried, convicted and jailed. That’s what I have done in response to this outrageous violation of the public trust. Think of the consequences if you do nothing! For one, the UK is becoming the poster child for George Orwell’s “1984” and the US government’s sponsorship of this worldwide Global Warming propaganda campaign puts it in a class with the failed Soviet Union’s relentless violation of the basic human right to truthful government generated information. Given ClimateGate’s burgeoning revelations of outrageous government misconduct and massive covert misinformation, what are the chances that this Administration’s National Health Care sales campaign is anywhere near to the truth?
Mike
December 1st, 2009
8:33 am
To Icarus: Is there not a big difference between hacking into the private account of a public personality (i.e. Ms. Palin) and getting information, paid for with public taxes, which should have been available under the F.O.I.?
Climategate: Ethical Hacking « 0DayNews.org
December 9th, 2009
8:06 pm
[...] On the Climategate emails [...]
More inconvenient truth for Al Gore | Kyle Wingfield
December 15th, 2009
9:24 am
[...] go, this one transcends the good science vs. bad science debate that heated up with the release of the East Anglia emails. Only in the realm of government can a person make such a wildly exaggerated claim and expect to [...]
PeterDeprogram
January 13th, 2010
7:39 pm
“Everything on earth is under control of god.” As far as I’m concerned that is about intellectual level of global warming contrarians. Many of you don’t even accept the theory of evolution, yet unfortunately it seems that we need to get you on board an in order to get anything done before it’s too late. And you need to get your lies straight: are you still actually denying the reality of siginificant climate change, or, like Sarah Palin, are you admitting it but insisting that we still don’t know why it’s happening, and therefore can’t do anything about it? At this point the global warming debate is between science and superstition.
Food Recipes
May 9th, 2010
7:49 am
This is very good site. Food Recipes
I like it very much.