How the GW myth is perpetuated

Walter

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Decision-based evidence making

Terence Corcoran, Financial Post Published: Wednesday, June 17, 2009
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The Obama administration yesterday released its blockbuster global-warming propaganda document, Global Climate Change Impacts on the United States. It's a doozy, filled with colour graphics, maps and dramatic pictures. The message: We're all going to climate hell. Action needed now.
Scrolling through the 200-page output reminded me of a funny phrase a policy-wonk friend invented to describe the current state of policy research around the world. He called it, jokingly, "decision-based evidence making." Everybody who hears the phrase cracks up.
The joke, obviously, is a flip version of the slogan "evidence-based decision making," which has been all the rage for years in other fields, notably health care. Google produces thousands of hits for the idea that decisions should be evidence-based.
But the art of policy making has moved on, led by the global warming crusade, which daily produces science reports that turn the original slogan on its head. The new Obama report yesterday joins the Global Humanitarian Forum's recent claim to have found evidence for up to 300,000 annual deaths from global warming or the recent MIT climate projections.
Decision-based evidence making isn't a joke. It's part of the plan, the policy, the way things are done.
In 2005, the U. S. National Academy of Sciences, which advises the U. S. Government on science policy, published a book, titled Decision Making for the Environment: Social and Behavioral Science Research Priorities.
The advice in the book is pretty clear: "By focusing scientific efforts increasingly on decision relevance, such a program of measurement, evaluation, and analysis would increase the influence of empirical evidence and empirically supported theory in environmental decisions relative to the influences of politics and ideology .... Processes for determining which research is most decision-relevant should be participatory."
So there we have it. Decision and policy first, evidence later. That, in our book, is pure junk science.
 

Walter

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Peter Foster for Junk Science Week: 300,000 non-deaths
Posted: June 16, 2009, 8:11 PM by NP Editor

New climate projections are based on a lot of things, just not on scientific data
By Peter Foster

The Global Humanitarian Forum — former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan’s personal, Geneva-based NGO — will next week convene a conference devoted to “the significant and rapidly growing human impact of climate change.” We may be sure that Prof. Roger Pielke of the University of Colorado will not be among the invitees. That’s because he dubbed the alarmist report on which the conference is based “a methodological embarrassment and poster child for how to lie with statistics.”

The GHF report and conference are part of the relentless diplomatic push ahead of the Copenhagen meetings in December at which a successor to Kyoto is meant to be hatched. Mr. Annan predicted “mass starvation, mass migration and mass sickness” unless there is agreement.

The GHF’s report, titled “The Anatomy of a Silent Crisis,” claims that predominantly man-made climate change is already killing 300,000 people a year, and causing suffering to hundreds of millions, at an annual cost of US$125-billion. The impact is projected to get much worse, killing half a million annually by 2030.

These claims have no basis in fact or science.

Prof. Pielke pointed out that the report’s assertions fly in the face of even those meant to support it. He noted that the Geo-Risks group at Munich Re insurance (on some of whose projections the GHF report is based) earlier this year acknowledged that human-caused impact on natural disasters simply could not be seen. Moreover, no clear link was likely to be observed in the near future. The GHF report meanwhile itself acknowledges that “there is not yet any widely accepted global estimate of the share of weather-related disasters that are attributable to climate change.”

So make one up. And emotionalize the issue with lots of colour pictures of poor people. Also, claim validation in the fact that “The frequency and intensity of weather-related disasters is often associated with climate change in public debate and common perceptions.” Even if those “perceptions” are entirely based on the type of alarmist junk peddled by the GHF.

The figure of 300,000 is arrived at, according to Prof. Pielke by “an approach that is grounded in neither logic, science or common sense.”

The report relies for most of its death projections on material from the World Health Organization (which has also admitted deep in the footnotes that the impact of anthropogenic climate change can’t be accurately measured). Nevertheless, using the WHO’s pick-a-number modelling approach, the GHF attributes 4%-5% of diarrhea deaths, 4% of malaria deaths and 4%-5% of dengue fever deaths (in 2010) to greenhouse-gas emissions. These percentages render absolute numbers that, more than suspiciously, exactly double the number of deaths projected in a 2003 WHO report.

The remainder of deaths are attributed to bad weather, but again the figures are misleading. The report compares the number of “loss events” reported from earthquakes vs. weather disasters from 1980 through 2005 (the year of Hurricane Katrina). Then it draws nice straight trend lines (see graphic), notes that weather disaster loss events have increased relative to those due to earthquakes, and attributes the difference to climate change (since earthquakes obviously have nothing to do with climate change).

But how much of the increased losses relate to increased insurance, and to increased building in weather-prone regions vs. earthquake-prone ones? More fundamentally, why should there be any correlation at all between earthquakes and the weather? Obviously, the notion that there are three times as many floods (as opposed to flood-related “loss events”) today than in 1980 is ridiculous, but that is the impression created by the report.

The report also relies (almost inevitably) on the widely criticized Stern Review for its mammoth economic loss projections. However, not content with Lord Stern’s grossly doctored estimates of doom, the GHF report takes his assumptions about the adverse impact of a rise of 2.5C on GDP and doubles it!

Prof. Pielke concludes that you can’t counter the GHF’s claims “because there is no data on which to adjudicate them. We can rely on hunches, feelings, divine inspiration, goat entrails or whatever, but you cannot appeal to the actual data record to differentiate these claims. So when people argue about them they are instead arguing about feelings and wishes, which does not make for a good basis for science.”

That, nevertheless, is a very human way to look at things. For many people, climate change is a moral issue and thus the facts and the science are beyond question. Man-made climate change is unquestionably real, unquestionably bad and will hurt poor people most. That is all the platform needed by those motivated to posture on the side of the angels (and receive massive government funding, along with high personal status and power, for doing so).

This alleged moral imperative ensures a drumbeat of worst-case scenarios, such as those presented yesterday in yet another — even more dangerous — report from the Obama White House, which is designed to influence Congress as it debates climate-change legislation.

This moralistic approach ignores not merely the enormous uncertainty surrounding the science but the undoubted damage that will be caused by growth-destroying climate-change policies of the kind being cooked up for Copenhagen, and in the U.S. Congress.

For many True Believers, the important part is to ship funds to developing countries under whatever pretext. Others, such as President Obama, appear to actually believe that there will be economic benefits from massive “green” restrictions and subsidies. But promoting further huge transfers when development-promoting aid has already proved to be such a failure, and adopting fantasies of industrial strategy despite manifests historical evidence of its non-viability, further threatens an already severely weakened global economy. They amount to piling junk political economy atop junk climate science.

The GHF study received respectful coverage all the way from New Scientist to al-Jazeera (which in this case may not be such a great distance), along with much thumb-sucking about Third World victims of First World greed. Nevertheless, The New York Times, to its credit, covered Prof. Pielke’s harsh critique, as, less surprisingly, did The Wall Street Journal.

Two prominent climate skeptics, Prof. David Henderson, former chief economist for the OECD, and Dr. Benny Peiser, who puts together the excellent CCNet climate news service, wrote to the Financial Times complaining of the paper’s coverage, and noting that well-founded criticism was likely to disappear without trace. “This chronic bias,” they wrote, “is characteristic of all too many newspapers.”

The Financial Times printed their letter under the headline “Climate study is open to criticism.” But this missed the point that the letter was not about the GHF study’s manifest flaws but the FT’s all-too-typically credulous coverage. Thus does junk science run rampant, embedding itself in “public debate and common perceptions.”
 

Walter

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New Evidence the Earth Is Cooling


Tuesday, June 16, 2009 2:35 PM

By: Philip V. Brennan



It was hailed as a breathtaking scientific discovery: two ancient skulls of an apparently primitive hominid, an ancestor of man. Dubbed "Piltdown man," (Eoanthropus dawsoni) it was unearthed in Britain in 1912 by Charles Dawson.

Here, excited scientists declared, was the long sought "missing link" part human, part ape, a primitive Brit sporting the noble brow of Homo sapiens and an ape's primitive jaw.

Here at last was proof that we are Bongo's evolutionary descendants. Science was agog. Sounding like Al Gore, gullible scientists assured the world that the science was settled. Darwinian evolutionary theory was a proven fact.

It wasn't.

It took 41 years for the truth to emerge — Piltdown man was a scam. In 1953, the roof fell in: Piltdown man was not our ancestor; nor was it a case of mistaken identity. It was, as Richard Harter wrote in "The Bogus Bones Caper," a case of outright deliberate fraud.
We’d been had.

I thought of this old scam when I read this morning of a document being peddled by the Obama administration and touted by global warming alarmists. We are, this panic-ridden report produced by a bevy of 30 scientists on the payrolls of 13 Obama administration government agencies responsible for dealing with the effects of alleged climate change, facing unimaginable horrors as a result of global warming.

These climate hucksters pull no punches, providing what Suzanne Goldenberg of Britain's Guardian newspaper describes as " the most detailed picture to date of the worst case scenarios of rising sea levels and extreme weather events: floods in lower Manhattan; a quadrupling of heat waves deaths in Chicago; withering on the vineyards of California; the disappearance of wildflowers from the slopes of the Rockies; and the extinction of Alaska's wild polar bears in the next 75 years."

"Today's release," she writes, "is part of a carefully crafted strategy by the White House to help build public support for Obama's agenda and boost the prospects of a climate change bill now wending its way through Congress," the notorious "Cap and Trade" bill now in trouble because if enacted it would all but destroy the U.S. economy.

"It's a clarion call for immediate action," said Amanda Staudt, a climate scientist at the alarmist National Wildlife Federation which keeps warning us that the healthy and growing population of polar bears in the Arctic is somehow endangered and shrinking despite their record numbers.

Shrieks Staudt, "This report basically describes a state of emergency. It says we need to act quickly and decisively. Every state is going to be affected, and every sector of the economy."

Goldenberg writes, "For many Americans, the report released today, entitled ‘Global climate change impacts in the U.S.,’ provides the most tangible evidence of the economic costs of climate change — from the need to relocate airports in Alaska built on permafrost, to the increased need for pesticides in agriculture, to an electrical grid straining to meet the increased demand for air conditioning in summer and ageing sewer systems brought to bursting point by heavy run-off in 770 American cities and towns."

Wow! Scary, huh?

Well, not really. In order for all that nasty stuff to happen, the planet has to keep warming at an alarming rate. If we deal with climate change now, the report warns, "the average US temperature will rise 0.4C-1.83C (4-6.5F) by the end of this century." If we don't, "average temperatures could rise by about 2.1C-4.3C (7-11F) with catastrophic consequences for human health and the economy."

A lot of ifs, totally unsupported by reality.

Let's get this straight. The planet is not warming.

What warming there was stopped over 10 years ago. Moreover, it is now apparent that the proof that the planet was warming comes from largely from temperature readings which meteorologist Anthony Watts warns are unreliable.

He photographed and visually inspected 850 stations in the U.S. and extrapolated their findings globally and learned that fully 89 percent failed to meet the National Weather Service's location requirements.

Many of the locations, wrote Watts, "were located next to the exhaust fans of air conditioning units, surrounded by asphalt parking lots and roads, on blistering hot rooftops. And near sidewalks and buildings that absorb and radiate heat."

But let's not argue. The planet was warming since the end of the little ice age. It stopped in 1998, and over the past decade, it's been getting cooler.

In some places, a lot cooler.

Springtime weather is getting harder to distinguish from winter weather. It snowed in Britain in June. Kids built snowmen. Temperatures here in the northern tier of states have cooled substantially.

As Robert Felix just reported in his authoritative iceagenow.com, on various days is June of 2009 there were record low temperatures in 18 states; record low temperatures in 15 states; record low temperatures in 24 states; record low temperatures in 11 states; record low max temperatures in 20 states; record low temperatures in seven states; and record low temperatures in 10 states.

Despite all this, with a straight face, the Obama administration prattles on about a disastrous global warming that just plain isn't happening.

The timing of this Piltdown-man-style report is more than suspicious, coming at a time when the planet is cooling. It seems that what they are asking us is just who are we to believe, their bought-and-paid scientific hucksters or our lying eyes, focused on piles of snow in Britain in the month of June?
 

darkbeaver

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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
The water table is down where I live for the third summer in a row I think. When it starts to pack up on the polls it drys some places out to do it. So it looks like a little ice age maybe. The last one wasn't so bad if you lived in the right places.
 

Walter

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Warmists deny Copenhagen access to polar bear scientist

27 06 2009
From the UK Telegraph 26 June 2009
Christopher Booker
POLAR BEAR EXPERT BARRED BY WARMISTS
Over the coming days a curiously revealing event will be taking place in Copenhagen. Top of the agenda at a meeting of the Polar Bear Specialist Group, set up under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature/Species Survival Commission, will be the need to produce a suitably scary report on how polar bears are being threatened with extinction by man-made global warming.
This is one of a steady drizzle of events planned to stoke up alarm in the run-up to the UN’s major conference on climate change in Copenhagen next December. But one of the world’s leading experts on polar bears has been told to stay away from this week’s meeting, specifically because his views on global warming do not accord with the views of the rest of the group.
Dr Mitchell Taylor has been researching into the status and management of polar bears in Canada and around the Arctic Circle for 30 years, as both an academic and a government employee. More than once since 2006 he has made headlines by insisting that polar bear numbers, far from decreasing, are much higher than they were 30 years ago. Of the 19 different bear populations, almost all are increasing or at optimum levels, only two have for local reasons modestly declined.
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/polar_bears480.jpg

Dr Taylor agrees that the Arctic has been warming in the past 30 years. But he ascribes this not to rising levels of CO2 – as is dictated by the computer models of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and believed by his PBSG colleagues – but to currents bringing warm water into the Arctic from the Pacific and the effect of winds blowing in from the Bering Sea.
He has also observed, however, how the melting of Arctic ice, supposedly threatening the survival of the bears, has rocketed to the top of the warmists’ agenda as their most iconic single cause.
The famous photograph of two bears standing forlornly on a melting iceberg was produced thousands of times by Al Gore, the WWF and others as an emblem of how the bears faced extinction – until last year the photographer, Amanda Byrd, revealed that the bears, just off the Alaska coast, were in no danger. Her picture had nothing to do with global warming and was only taken because the ‘wind-sculpted ice’ they were standing on made such a striking image.
She just wanted a photograph more of the “wind-sculpted ice” than of the bears. Byrd writes:
“[You] have to keep in mind that the bears aren’t in danger at all. It was, if you will, their playground for 15 minutes. You know what I mean? This is a perfect picture for climate change, in a way, because you have the impression they are in the middle of the ocean and they are going to die with a coke in their hands. But they were not that far from the coast, and it was possible for them to swim.”
]
Dr Taylor had obtained funding to attend this week’s meeting of the PBSG, but this was voted down by its members because of his views on global warming. The chairman, Dr Andy Derocher, a former university pupil of Dr Taylor’s, frankly explained in an email (which I was not sent by Dr Taylor) that his rejection had nothing to do with his undoubted expertise on polar bears: ‘it was the position you’ve taken on global warming that brought opposition’.
Dr Taylor was told that his views running ‘counter to human-induced climate change are extremely unhelpful’. His signing of the Manhattan Declaration – a statement by 500 scientists that the causes of climate change are not CO2 but natural, such as the radiation of the sun and changing ocean currents – was ‘inconsistent with the position taken by the PBSG’.
So, as the great Copenhagen bandwagon rolls on, stand by this week for reports along the lines of ‘ scientists say polar bears are threatened with extinction by vanishing Arctic ice’. But check out also on Anthony Watt’s Watts Up With That website for the latest news of what is actually happening in the Arctic. Average temperatures at midsummer were still below zero – the latest date this has happened in 50 years of record-keeping – and after last year’s recovery from its September 2007 low, this year’’s ice melt is likely to be substantially less than for some time, The bears are doing fine.
 

Tonington

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Republican talking points on clean energy written by Energy Lobby

House GOP circulating anti–climate bill document created by coal lobby

It’s no secret that the fossil-fuel industry produces many of the talking points Republicans use to scare voters about energy legislation. Usually, though, dirty energy execs don’t literally sign on as authors.

House Republicans are circulating a PowerPoint document that purports to show the regional breakdown of costs for energy consumers under the Waxman-Markey climate and energy bill (ACES). The header: “Most States Lose Under the Pending Climate Bill.”

The catch? It appears to have been authored by the coal giant Peabody Energy. [Note: It was actually authored by the National Mining Assocation; see updates below.]

The document was discussed on a conference call held by the “Rural America Solutions Group” within the GOP caucus on Thursday, hosted by group co-chairs Frank Lucas (R-Okla.), Sam Graves (R-Mo.), and Doc Hastings (R-Wash.). According to a press release, the call was meant to “highlight how the Democrats’ National Energy Tax will make it more expensive for rural Americans to fertilize the crops, put fuel in the tractor and food on the table.”

The document’s map (see below) shows most of the country losing out under the climate bill and facing higher energy costs, while just a handful of states on the West Coast and in the Northeast would benefit. Texans, for example, would lose $1.16 billion in 2012, while Californians would gain $385.6 million.

A line at the bottom of the document reads, “Based on Energy Information Administration (EIA) and Congressional Budget Office (CBO) data”—but there’s no indication of the particular studies used. (The CBO numbers likely come from a report that the CBO itself says is not about Waxman-Markey and almost certainly overstates costs, since it only quantified costs, not benefits.)

Dig a little deeper by looking at the “properties” of the PowerPoint document and you learn that it was produced by Peabody Energy—with CEO Greg Boyce listed as the “author” and communications services manager Chris Taylor listed as the “manager.” Yes, the world’s biggest coal producer is literally writing Republican talking points. Oops!

Here’s the map:


UPDATE: Roll Call ran a story ($ub req’d) on June 18 on Democratic infighting over the ACES bill, noting that one Democrat has been touting a map that sounds a whole lot like this one:

Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio) has been passing out maps contending that most states would lose out under the cap-and-trade bill crafted by Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Energy and Environment Subcommittee Chairman Ed Markey (D-Mass.).
Multiple requests to her office for confirmation of whether it is the same map were ignored, but Roll Call reporter Steven T. Dennis says it is. So it appears Republicans aren’t the only ones circulating Peabody’s talking points. UPDATE TO THE UPDATE: Kaptur’s spokesperson, Steve Fought, says this is a “case of mistaken maps.” The representative has been handing out two different maps dealing with jurisdictional boundaries of power-marketing authorities, but not this map, Fought says.

UPDATE 2: Closer inspection of the PowerPoint document indicates that Boyce created it originally on September 29, 1998, and it was updated in July 2004 for a “2004 Investor & Analyst Forum.” But it was last edited by an Amelie Hereford on June 17, 2009, and an email address is listed for her at Arch Coal, another coal industry giant. Hereford is a legislative assistant at Arch Coal, according to her LinkedIn profile. Grist called Arch Coal’s corporate offices to confirm, but a receptionist said she did not recognize the name. We’ve dropped her an email requesting comment. Stay tuned. UPDATE TO THE UPDATE: Hereford told Grist she had nothing to do with this map. “Neither Arch Coal, Inc. nor I was involved in the development of the map,” she wrote in an email.

UPDATE 3: Tamara Hinton, spokesperson for the Republicans on the Agriculture Committee, says that the PowerPoint document they are circulating came from the National Mining Association. The association is currently touting the document on the front page of its website, so it’s no big secret who’s distributing these data points. Hinton doesn’t see a problem with circulating the industry’s data. “If the coal industry wants to provide information to show how it will impact people, we’re just letting people know that that information exists,” said Hinton. “There is no conflict of interest.”

More interesting, however, may be the fine print at the bottom of the National Mining Association’s version of the PowerPoint document, which includes an extra page of data. At the bottom of that page is a note that says the document does not accurately reflect the Waxman-Markey legislation as it currently stands. The footnote:

These rough calculations DO NOT represent a precise indicator of the actual allocation of allowances to electricity distribution companies under sections 782 and 783 of the ACES legislation (5-29-2009 version). First, power can and does move across state lines, so the share electricity-related of carbon dioxide emissions associated with power generation within a state may differ from the share of carbon dioxide emissions associated with power sales within that state—it is the latter that is used in the ACES formula as we understand it, but the former that is calculated here. Second, the distribution under ACES is done on a utility-by-utility basis rather than a state-by-state basis, and there can be significant differences across utilities within a given state. Third, these calculations are made based on data for 2006 through 2008 (2008 data is unpublished preliminary data), while the ACES legislation allows the affected electricity sellers the option of choosing a different period within a specified range of dates. Finally, the calculations do not cover many of the detailed legislative provisions dealing with allocation.
UPDATE 4: Luke Popovich, vice president of external communications for the National Mining Association, confirms that the PowerPoint presentation was put together by his organization. He explained that the document appears to come from Peabody because NMA used a template the company created in 2004. But the map and the data it’s based on were produced entirely by NMA staff, he said.

Peabody Energy and Arch Coal are both members of NMA, so in a sense they are indirectly involved. “Did Peabody, the big coal company, have a role in it? Yeah. So did every other coal company that paid us dues,” said Popovich. “But it’s NMA’s math. What it displays are NMA’s calculations. Peabody had nothing to do with those.” Popovich couldn’t explain why Arch Coal’s name would appear in the document’s history.


source: House GOP circulating anti–climate bill document created by coal lobby | Grist
 

Walter

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Toeing Obama line

EPA experts who deviate on climate change get muzzled
By LORRIE GOLDSTEIN

Where are all the "green" media pundits who used to scream bloody murder about the George W. Bush administration censoring expert opinion on climate change, now that the Barack Obama administration has been accused of doing it?
Most appear to be ignoring the controversy, or assuring the public: "Nothing to see here, folks, just move along," in the wake of the story reported by CBSnews.com last week.
It raises concerns the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency tried to suppress the opinions of two of its own researchers -- an economist and an environmental scientist -- that the EPA was unwisely rushing into declaring carbon dioxide a pollutant, based on outdated and disputed scientific research on climate change.
According to e-mail records, these conclusions, contained in a 98-page report by 38-year EPA veteran Alan Carlin, an economist and lead author, and 26-year employee John Davidson, an environmental scientist, appear to have sent the EPA into a panic.
On March 12, in response to their concerns, Carlin and Davidson received an e-mail from their boss, Al McGartland, director of the EPA's National Centre for Environmental Economics, that due to tight timelines and "the turn of events," they were not to have "any direct communication with anyone outside of NCEE on endangerment (declaring carbon dioxide a pollutant). There should be no meetings, e-mails, written statements, phone calls, etc." It added all future communication should go through McGartland and other EPA officials.
Time passed
On March 17, McGartland e-mailed Carlin that he had decided not to forward his concerns because: "The time for such discussion of fundamental issues has passed for this round. The administrator (Obama appointee Lisa Jackson) and the administration has decided to move forward on endangerment, and your comments do not help the legal or policy case for this decision ... I can only see one impact of your comments given where we are in the process, and that would be a very negative impact on our office."
Eight minutes later, McGartland again e-mailed Carlin, saying, "you need to move on to other issues and subjects. I don't want you to spend any additional EPA time on climate change. No papers, no research, etc. ..." He told Carlin to work on a "grants data base" problem.
A few days later, the EPA recommended to the White House that carbon dioxide be declared a pollutant under the Clean Air Act.
Carlin told CBSnews.com he believes McGartland was pressured from higher up.
"It was his view that he either lost his job or he got me working on something else," Carlin said. "That was obviously coming from higher levels ... I was told for probably the first time in I don't know how many years exactly what I was to work on. And it was not to work on climate change ..."
Carlin said EPA officials wanted to rush through their decision on carbon dioxide, adding while regulatory decisions normally take a year or two, this one took mere weeks and EPA staff had only four and a half days to respond to a draft report on the decision.
Due consideration
The EPA said Carlin's and Davidson's concerns were considered in its decision-making process, which appears to contradict McGartland's e-mails, and added Carlin isn't a scientist -- odd because his co-author was and because economists are routinely cited as experts on climate change by governments in relation to the financial costs of attempting to reduce global warming.
As for the silence of most media on this controversy -- who went berserk whenever the Bush administration censored public servants on climate change -- it couldn't be because they're in the tank for Obama ... could it?
 

Tonington

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“Suppressed” Carlin report based on Pat Michaels attack on EPA

A couple of days ago, I posted about economist Alan Carlin’s “suppressed” report on the EPA’s proposed greenhouse gas endangerment finding. Not only was the report a pastiche of warmed over contrarian talking points attacking the scientific consensus on climate change, but at least one entire section had been lifted almost whole from longtime disinformation specialist Pat Michaels’ World Climate Report (WCR).

Now further study reveals an even more shocking connection: the “suppressed” Carlin report appears to have been inspired by, and largely lifted from, an attack on the EPA published last November in climate science disinformation specialist Pat Michaels’ World Climate Report. And all this came without any attribution of the large swathes of copied material to WCR or the original author (presumably either Michaels or sidekick Chip Knappenberger).

There have been some interesting developments since I last wrote. Roger Pielke Jr has weighed in, equating the suppression of the Carlin report with the muzzling of James Hansen in 2007, and even suggesting that the latest U.S. Climate Change Special report shared some shoddy scholarship practices with Carlin’s ouevre. I’ll leave readers to ponder which of these assertions is the more patently ridiculous, but NASA’s Gavin Schmidt’s comments at RealClimate do shed some light on the former one.

Perhaps of greater consequence is the apparent determination of U.S. Senator James Inhofe to hold an investigation of the EPA’s supposed “suppression” of the report, as reported by FoxNews. Inhofe, of course, is a longtime climate contrarian whose Senate committee website was transformed into a climate disinformation clearinghouse under the stewardship of aide Marc Morano (now at Climate Depot).
Meanwhile the same Fox News report makes clear what we had already suspected: Carlin wrote the report on agency time, but under his own initiative.

An EPA official told FOXNews.com on Monday that Carlin, who is an economist — not a scientist — included “no original research” in his report. The official said that Carlin “has not been muzzled in the agency at all,” but stressed that his report was entirely “unsolicited.”
“It was something that he did on his own,” the [EPA] official said. “Though he was not qualified, his manager indulged him and allowed him on agency time to draft up … a set of comments.”

It was against this backdrop that I went looking for more of Carlin’s sources. (If you want to follow along, and don’t mind downloading 4 Mb PDFs, Carlin’s draft is here and the final report is here).

In addition to the section on Greenland that I described before, I quickly discovered another whole lifted section (1.4 on hurricanes), pretty much verbatim from WCR’s blog post on hurricanes from November, 2008.

But then I decided to approach the problem the other way round and look for WCR “reports” on the EPA. And it turned out that there were quite a few:

Obviously, most of these were too late to make it into the report. But then I found one that wasn’t.

Lo and behold, there it was: an epic World Climate Report post from last November 19 with the straightforward title Why the EPA Should Find Against Endangerment. And it immediately became clear that I had found Carlin’s main inspiration and source.

The piece starts with the provocative (not to mention highly dubious) premise that the EPA’s Technical Support Document (TSD) supporting the Endangerment Finding is out of date because it is based on the 2007 assessment report from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

However, the Endangerment TSD is largely a dated document which relies heavily on the Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) of the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCC’s AR4 was published in the spring of 2007, but to meet the deadline for inclusion in the AR4, scientific papers had to be published by late 2005/early 2006. So, in the rapidly evolving field of climate change, by grounding its TSD in the IPCC AR4 the EPA is largely relying on scientific findings that are, by late 2008, nearly 3 years out of date.

And here is Carlin’s very opening salvo in Section 1, “Draft TSD Is Seriously Dated and the Updates Made Are Inadequate”, incorporating that very same premise:

Although a real effort has been made to introduce references to more recent CCSP reports, the draft endangerment TSD is largely a dated document which relies primarily on the Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) of the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). A lot has happened in those intervening three years since the input deadline for AR4. The IPCC’s AR4 was published in the spring of 2007, but to meet the deadline for inclusion in the AR4, scientific papers had to be accepted for publication by early 2006. Given the lag between submission and acceptance the real cut-off for new research was even earlier. So, in the rapidly evolving field of climate change, by grounding its TSD in the IPCC AR4 the EPA is largely relying on scientific findings that are, by early 2009, largely 3 years or more out of date. [Emphasis added]

Carlin did manage to update to reflect current chronology, and added small embellishments of his own to emphasize the supposed “datedness” even more. But the passage is unquestionably cribbed from WCR, as is Carlin’s central overarching premise.

The WCR then moves on to perhaps the most widespread and deceptive of contrarian memes, that of supposed recent “global cooling.” (This has been discussed and debunked innumerable times, but if you must you can look at two of my recent modest efforts here and here, or innumerable posts at RealClimate [e.g here] or Tamino’s Open Mind [here]).

Global temperatures have declined (Figure 1a)—extending the current run of time with a statistically robust lack of global temperature rise to eight years (Figure 1b), with some people arguing that it can be traced back for 12 years (Figure 1c).

Carlin has exactly the same passage in section 1.2 – and he didn’t even have to change the numbering of the figures, which were also lifted straight out of WCR!
Next, WCR moves on to a brief discussion (and misleading interpretation) of the latest research on hurricanes and Greenland ice melt, with links to earlier blog posts. Of course, as noted above, the corresponding WCR posts on hurricanes and on Greenland were incorporated in their entirety into the Carlin opus.
In the last half of the post, WCR moves on to a discussion of the supposed lack of impact of global warming on humans.

But perhaps the most glaring problem of all with the EPA’s Endangerment TSD is the nearly complete disregard of observed trends in a wide array of measures which by and large show that despite decades of increasing anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions (as detailed by the EPA) the U.S. population has triumphed over any changes in “vulnerabilities, risks, and impacts” that may have arisen (to the extent that any at all have actually occurred as the result of any human-induced climate changes).

This part of the WCR post became the pivotal section 3 of the Carlin report, “Contrast between Continuing Improvements in US Health and Welfare and their Alleged Endangerment Described in the draft TSD”, which begins almost identically:

One of the problems with the EPA’s Endangerment TSD is the nearly complete disregard of observed trends in a wide array of measures which by and large show that despite decades of increasing anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions the U.S. population does not seem to have been adversely affected by any vulnerabilities, risks, and impacts that may have arisen (to the extent that any at all have actually occurred as the result of any human-induced climate changes).

The following paragraph is identical in both, except for the figure numbers, of course:

For instance, despite the overall rise in U.S. and global average temperatures for the past 30 years, U.S. crop yields have increased (Figure 2), the population’s sensitivity to extreme heat has decreased (Figure 3), and our general air quality has improved (Figure 4). Further, there has been no long-term increase in weather-related property damage once changes in inflation, population size, and population wealth are accounted for (an essential step in any temporal comparison). All of these trends are in the opposite sense from those described in the EPA’s Endangerment TSD.

And, once again, all the figures are included. In fact the entire section was lifted from WCR, including the concluding graph of life expectancy:

In the conclusion of section 3, Carlin did cut out some WCR verbiage about “just looking out the window”, cutting five paragraphs down to two:

What better measures of human health and welfare are there? In fact, there is no better way to obtain a good picture of how human health and welfare may trend in the future under increases in greenhouse gas emissions than to assess how we have fared in the past during a period of increasing greenhouse gas emissions and ambient levels. True, hurricanes will strike again in the future and cause a great deal of damage and suffering. But that will largely occur because our climate is one which includes hurricanes. The same is true for tornadoes, droughts, floods, heat-waves, cold outbreaks, strong thunderstorms, heavy rains, hail, lightning, snowstorms, blizzards, freezing rain, etc. Those are all aspects of our climate.

Climate change may alter the strength, path, or frequency of these events—lessening some and increasing others. But to the large part, our nation’s climate in the future will be made up of the same characteristics as it is today.

So there you have it. Four key sections of Carlin’s masterpiece, and indeed his central guiding premise, were lifted directly from an intellectually vacuous and misleading attack on the EPA on a blog run by a PR disinformation spinmeister with a long history of links to fossil fuel interests. And, of course, none of this was attributed to World Climate Report or the author (presumably Pat Michaels or Chip Knappenberger), compounding the shoddy misleading “scholarship” with outright plagiarism.

Apparently, some of Carlin’s supporters have complained that he was not given sufficient time to complete his work. If his superiors had not nipped his ill-conceived project in the bud, who knows what Cut-and-Paste Carlin could have achieved: perhaps a complete compendium of all the material found at World Climate Report and the Friends of Science, together with a “best of” selection from Inhofe’s website.

I fervently hope that now real and hard questions will start to be asked about the role of the major particpants in the shameful orchestrated attack on the EPA, starting with the Competitive Enterprise Institute and Carlin himself. And it’s also high time to subject to greater scrutiny the fossil fuel companies and their PR surrogates who are behind the dissemination of so much of the gross misinformation that made up the Carlin report.

As for the EPA itself, it might want to check out some of Carlin’s other past work – who knows what other shenanigans might lurk. The only faintly embarrassing question the EPA needs to answer now is this: How did Alan Carlin ever manage to stay on the payroll for so long?

Source: “Suppressed” Carlin report based on Pat Michaels attack on EPA « Deep Climate
 

ironsides

Executive Branch Member
Feb 13, 2009
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Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
150
63
Do you really think the world is filled with morans.

No, but there are quite a few morons. Anthony Watts included. I think it's hilarious when someone who rails against the temperature record, can't even figure out why different databases with different baselines wouldn't show the same anomaly!
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
115,915
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Low Earth Orbit
I want to know who the leaders of this "global warming hoax/conspiracy theory" are.

What do they want from you? What is their end goal? Money? Power and control? A good sandwich spread?
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,884
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I want to know who the leaders of this "global warming hoax/conspiracy theory" are.

What do they want from you? What is their end goal? Money? Power and control? A good sandwich spread?
All of the above, except the sandwich spread; you can't improve upon Nutella.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,884
125
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G8 must act as warmer temps spur disease: Oxfam

Updated Mon. Jul. 6 2009 6:39 AM ET
The Canadian Press
OTTAWA -- The globe's richest powerhouses must get serious about how First World pollution is spreading disease and hunger in the poorest countries, says a new report.
Oxfam International is calling for drastic action on global warming as Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other Group of Eight leaders gather Tuesday in Italy.
"We need to stop harming and start helping," says the report "Suffering the Science: Climate Change, People and Poverty."
"It is in the tropics where the bulk of humanity lives -- many of them in poverty -- that climate change is hitting now and hitting hardest," it says.
"Almost every observation and prediction about health, food security, water shortage, natural disasters, famine, drought and conflict is worsening at an alarming rate."
The report pairs the latest global-warming science with on-the-ground stories from people behind the statistics. It draws on updates from 2,500 scientists who met in March in Copenhagen to present the latest wide-ranging data on climate change.
Scientific consensus is now firming up to conclude that average global temperatures are indeed rising, says the report.

What utter rubbish.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
115,915
13,769
113
Low Earth Orbit
What utter rubbish.

No doubt. Those are the exact people the UN says need to die. If the poor are gone there goes the future concern of GW and food shortages thus further advancing the white race.

Doesn't anybody read what the UN prints or what gets printed by UN backed eugenics and depopulation groups?
 

YukonJack

Time Out
Dec 26, 2008
7,026
73
48
Winnipeg
Now that it is proven that the world is cooling, it is my patriotic duty to stop it.

My seven year old van is due for replacement. I will buy a gas-guzzling SUV.
Instead of my efficient micro-wave, I will use my CO2 spouting BBQ more often.
I will take more time to excercize. The heavier I breath, the more CO2 in the air.
Instead of water I will drink carbonated soft drinks. Open one: more CO2 in the air.

Can anyone advise me what else can I do to stop the inevitable slide to the new Ice Age? Now that Global Warming has been proven to be total fraud, promoted and believed in by morons.