Do Leaked Emails Undermine the Scientific Consensus?
Start with the official statement from the University of East Anglia. While I'm naturally sympathetic to their concerns about the breach itself and the resulting release of sensitive personal information of university employees, it is also worth recalling that the institution in question is funded by UK taxpayers and is not exactly covered by the Official Secrets Act. If laws have been broken, the perpetrators should be pursued and prosecuted. However, if university officials believe they can confine their response to the theft of data and easily dismiss the content of the material that was revealed, they are getting poor advice. I'm sure that the items that have been published so far have indeed been taken out of context, as they contend, but is that not the standard claim by nearly everyone who has suffered a similarly embarrassing exposure in the last couple of decades? The response of the University of East Anglia to date is simply inadequate in the modern era of information, and if I were in their shoes I'd at least announce a full and immediate academic inquiry into whether the emails have unearthed practices that were contrary to university policies and the normal standards of data integrity and peer review. They'd be much better off tackling this proactively than waiting for it to be forced upon them, or taken out of their hands as a result of a Question asked in Parliament--however unlikely that might be in the current political climate.
Next, consider email as a medium of discussion. In my career I have seen many emails that their senders would have subsequently preferred to see deleted from all systems, and I have probably written one or two myself. But that's not the reality of a world in which anything you write on a networked system can be divulged later as part of the discovery phase of a lawsuit or in a government investigation. The best advice I've heard on the subject is the lesson some of the authors of the Hadley emails have just learned the hard way: "Don't write anything you'd be embarrassed to see printed on the front page of the New York (or in this case the London) Times."
That doesn't mean I'm naive about how people--even scientists--interact with each other. Anyone who has spent five minutes peering behind the veil of academic politics wouldn't be terribly surprised at some of the caustic, small-minded, and downright vindictive comments that pepper the Hadley emails that have turned up around the Internet. Nevertheless, most of us aren't involved in work that is integral to a global effort to understand and avert the worst outcomes of something on the scale of climate change. These folks are expected to hold themselves to a higher standard, and if they don't, it jeopardizes not just their own reputations but the public's perception of the findings of the larger body of climate science. When I read an email in which one noted climate researcher asks another not to refer to a particular subject in his reply, but just say yes or no, or another indicating the author would delete some data points from a graph showing a recent change in the trend, I'm reminded of some precautionary advice I received at the very beginning of my oil trading career: "Avoid even the appearance of evil."
The basic issue here that many of those responding from the climate change community seem unable or unwilling to grasp is that their real problem is not how particular individuals or groups might exploit this information, but how the information itself could undermine the faith of the public in the integrity of climate science. I use the word faith deliberately, because for most of us it boils down to that. The number of people actually equipped to read the scientific papers in question and ascertain whether the manipulation of charts and data implicated in some of the leaked emails is serious or not is vanishingly small, compared to the much larger number of us who must simply take it on faith that the scientists studying the climate and reporting on alarming changes in it are behaving in a fair, transparent, and unself-interested way, to the greatest extent humanly possible. It would be hard for most of us to read the emails in question objectively and not have that faith shaken, at least a bit.
Now, it's possible this entire episode could blow over in a news cycle or two and have no impact on the impending negotiations in Copenhagen or on the Congressional debate on climate legislation. I wouldn't bet on that, because what little has come out so far fits neatly into the preexisting view by some of climate science as a conspiracy, or at least a process that has been politicized by the funding and bureaucratic power that large sums devoted to climate research have bestowed. If the climate science community wants to put this episode behind it without derailing the public's trust in the scientific consensus on global warming, then the researchers and institutions that are leading this effort should be calling loudly for a full airing of Hadley's linen, and an assessment of the center's practices by an unbiased panel, preferably one well-staffed with scientists from other disciplines. Any perception of a cover-up will only reinforce suspicions that conduct at Hadley wasn't what it should have been, and that at least one pillar of the climate change argument looks shakier than it did just a week ago.
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RobertMoen said:
The purloined emails underscore the need for the United States to convene our own objective, transparent Climate Truth Commission. The emails strongly suggest that at least some of the science behind man-made global warming is not rock solid and that the scientific consensus is at least in part the product of silencing or marginalizing those who might upset it.
BTW I totally support your push for nuclear power.
- Robert Moen, http://www.energyplanUSA.com
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Tue, 2009-12-01 20:20 — Robert MoenSenatorLamarAlexand said:
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Tue, 2009-12-01 20:01 — Senator Lamar Ale...BrianFH said:
arxiv.org/pdf/0707.1161v4
Read it and weep. Or laugh. Or both.
If the math is too thick to follow, just read the text. It's more than enough.
Spoiler: the entire "greenhouse" analogy is insupportable, as is the IR reflectance / re-emission assumption. It doesn't even work for glass greenhouses, much less an atmosphere.
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Wed, 2009-11-25 18:53 — Brian HallGeoffrey Styles said:
Michael,
If that's the case--and I can see that it might be--then is that the accepted form that such reviews should take, instead of a polite and collegial response to the authors pointing out the shortcomings of their analysis, so that it can either be corrected or the whole paper revised? The problem I have with this situation as a non-scientist but with a solid background in science and engineering is that the behavior that has been revealed, however selectively, looks suspicious on the face of it, and it just doesn't measure up to the standard expected of good, professional science. Apply Occam's Razor, and what do you get?
As a consumer of these findings for the last decade it does not give me a warm feeling.
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Tue, 2009-11-24 20:47 — Geoffrey StylesGeoffrey Styles said:
Karen,
Unfortunately, however reasonable those appear, they can't overcome the fact that in this instance Realclimate.org has a disqualifying conflict of interest. How many of their contributors were authors or recipients of the emails in question? I haven't done the tally, but it is more than zero.
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Tue, 2009-11-24 17:35 — Geoffrey StylesKarenStreet said:
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Tue, 2009-11-24 17:04 — Karen StreetGeoffrey Styles said:
I think we need to be clear about what questions the leaked emails raise. They don't put the entire phenomenon of global warming back in play. Forget all the fancy charts; a quick look at the temperature anomaly data makes it very clear that the planet has been warming by 0.2 deg. C per decade, even if the annual increases have more or less stalled since 1998. And there's no indication of global cooling in these numbers. However, climate forecasts depending on complex models and long-term historical temperature data derived from proxies might be a different matter. I would want to know a lot more about whether researchers actually followed up on apparent suggestions involving screening out data and papers that conflicted with the consensus interpretation.
At the very least, all this creates an image problem. No one should expect climate scientists to be like Albert Schweitzer, but when you peel back the lid on their discussions, we certaintly don't expect to find comments and "tricks" that would make Enron traders feel right at home. As I've commented elsewhere, if similarly embarrassing emails had been leaked from a big oil company or bank, few would be focusing on the niceties of the invasion of privacy involved. Someone needs to figure out whether the scientists involved were merely blowing off steam or actually manipulating their results, and I suspect that only other scientists are competent to ascertain that.
Geoff Styles
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Tue, 2009-11-24 13:36 — Geoffrey StylesRobertMoen said:
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Tue, 2009-11-24 01:26 — Robert MoenPost new comment