Global
Warming Consensus: Garbage In, Garbage Out
by
Michael Barone
TownHall.com
As Air Force One heads to Copenhagen for the climate summit Dec. 9, it will
presumably not make a U-turn while flying over the Climate Research Unit (CRU)
at University of East Anglia near Norwich, England. But perhaps it should.
The 61 megabytes of CRU e-mails and documents made public by a hacker cast
serious doubt on the ballyhooed consensus on manmade global warming that the
Copenhagen summit was called to address.
The CRU has been a major source of data on global temperatures, relied on by
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. But the e-mails suggest that CRU
scientists have been suppressing and misstating data and working to prevent the
publication of conflicting views in peer-reviewed science periodicals. Some of
the more pungent e-mails:
"I can't see either of these papers being in the next IPCC report. Kevin and
I will keep them out somehow -- even if we have to redefine what the peer-review
literature is!"
"Can you delete any e-mails you may have had with Keith re AR4?"
"I've just completed Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each
series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith's to
hide the decline."
"The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment and
it is a travesty we can't."
"I'm getting hassled by a couple of people to release the CRU temperature
station data. Don't any of you three tell anybody that the UK has a Freedom of
Information Act!"
You get the idea. The most charitable plausible explanation I have seen comes
from The Atlantic's Megan McArdle. "The CRU's main computer model may be, to put
it bluntly, complete rubbish."
Australian geologist Ian Plimer, a global warming skeptic, is more blunt. The
e-mails "show that data was massaged, numbers were fudged, diagrams were biased,
there was destruction of data after freedom of information requests, and there
was refusal to submit taxpayer-funded data for independent examination."
Global warming alarmist George Monbiot of the Guardian concedes that the
e-mails "could scarcely be more damaging," adding, "I'm dismayed and deeply
shaken by them." He has called for the resignation of the CRU director. All of
which brings to mind the old computer geek's phrase: garbage in, garbage out.
The Copenhagen climate summit was convened to get the leaders of nations to
commit to sharp reductions in carbon dioxide emissions -- and thus sharp
reductions in almost all energy usage, at huge economic cost -- in order to
prevent disasters that supposedly were predicted with absolute certainty by a
scientific consensus.
But that consensus was based in large part on CRU data that was, to take the
charitable explanation, "complete rubbish" or, to take the more dire view, the
product of deliberate fraud.
Quite possibly the CRU e-mailers were sincere in their belief that they were
saving the planet. Like Al Gore, they wanted to convince the world's elites that
the time for argument is over, the scientific consensus is clear and those who
disagree can be dismissed as cranks (and should be disqualified from receiving
research grants). If they had to cut a few corners, well, you have to break eggs
to make an omelette.
For those of us who have long suspected that constructing scientific models
of climate and weather is an enormously complex undertaking quite possibly
beyond the capacity of current computer technology, the CRU e-mails are not so
surprising.
Do we really suppose that anyone can construct a database of weather
observations for the entire planet and its atmosphere adequate to make confident
predictions of weather and climate 60 years from now? Predictions in which we
have enough confidence to impose enormous costs on the American and world
economies?
Copenhagen, despite Barack Obama's presence, seems sure to be a bust -- there
will be no agreement on mandatory limits on carbon emissions. Even if there
were, it would probably turn out to be no more effective than the limits others
agreed to in Kyoto in 1997. In any case, China and India are not going to choke
off their dazzling economic growth to please Western global warming alarmists.
The more interesting question going forward is whether European and American
governmental, academic and corporate elites, having embraced global warming
alarmism with religious fervor, will be shaken by the scandalous CRU e-mails.
They should be.
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