Global Warming Email Leak Dampens ‘Hope and Change’ in Copenhagen

November 23, 2009

Just weeks before politicians from around the world come to Copenhagen to come up with an agreement on imposing curbs on economic activity and socialist wealth redistribution schemes, the previously reported release of emails and other documents from the Climate Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia has dealt a major blow to the credibility of scientist promoting man-made global warming as an undisputed scientific fact.

The entire set of leaked documents has now been posted on the internet.

The immediate defense to the incriminating emails was that comments were taken out of context and that terms like “Mike’s nature trick” were scientists’ short-hand for elegant science. These claims continue to be short on specifics.

Even if this were true, comments by programmers in the code of climate change models are revealing. As a former programmer and leader of development projects for 20 years, I know that when programmers document their code with comments they simply document what they are doing so that when they have to come back to the code for future changes they don’t have to rely on their memory on what they did. See here for an example of incriminating programmer comments.

A Wall Street Journal editorial has one of the best summaries of all the information that is emerging:

…even a partial review of the emails is highly illuminating. In them, scientists appear to urge each other to present a “unified” view on the theory of man-made climate change while discussing the importance of the “common cause”; to advise each other on how to smooth over data so as not to compromise the favored hypothesis; to discuss ways to keep opposing views out of leading journals; and to give tips on how to “hide the decline” of temperature in certain inconvenient data.

Some of those mentioned in the emails have responded to our requests for comment by saying they must first chat with their lawyers. Others have offered legal threats and personal invective. Still others have said nothing at all. Those who have responded have insisted that the emails reveal nothing more than trivial data discrepancies and procedural debates.

Yet all of these nonresponses manage to underscore what may be the most revealing truth: That these scientists feel the public doesn’t have a right to know the basis for their climate-change predictions, even as their governments prepare staggeringly expensive legislation in response to them.

Consider the following note that appears to have been sent by Mr. Jones to Mr. Mann in May 2008: “Mike, Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith re AR4? Keith will do likewise. . . . Can you also email Gene and get him to do the same?” AR4 is shorthand for the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change’s (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report, presented in 2007 as the consensus view on how bad man-made climate change has supposedly become.

In another email that seems to have been sent in September 2007 to Eugene Wahl of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Paleoclimatology Program and to Caspar Ammann of the National Center for Atmospheric Research’s Climate and Global Dynamics Division, Mr. Jones writes: “[T]ry and change the Received date! Don’t give those skeptics something to amuse themselves with.”

When deleting, doctoring or withholding information didn’t work, Mr. Jones suggested an alternative in an August 2008 email to Gavin Schmidt of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, copied to Mr. Mann. “The FOI [Freedom of Information] line we’re all using is this,” he wrote. “IPCC is exempt from any countries FOI—the skeptics have been told this. Even though we . . . possibly hold relevant info the IPCC is not part of our remit (mission statement, aims etc) therefore we don’t have an obligation to pass it on.”

It also seems Mr. Mann and his friends weren’t averse to blacklisting scientists who disputed some of their contentions, or journals that published their work. “I think we have to stop considering ‘Climate Research’ as a legitimate peer-reviewed journal,” goes one email, apparently written by Mr. Mann to several recipients in March 2003. “Perhaps we should encourage our colleagues in the climate research community to no longer submit to, or cite papers in, this journal.”

Read the whole article here.

Leave a Comment

{ 2 trackbacks }

Previous post:

Next post: