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The leaked emails do not invalidate the science that underpins our approach to tackling climate change, says Mark Anslow

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Shame on the 'climategate' scientists

Mark Anslow

27th November, 2009

Ecologist Editor Mark Anslow explores the fallout from the leaked email exchanges between climate scientists

Make no mistake: the emails from the University of East Anglia climate scientists which were obtained from a hacked server and posted onto the internet in November paint a shocking picture.

The emails reveal the private conversations of scientists who commanded universal respect amongst environmentalists, politicians and journalists.  And they are not pretty...

The headline revelations have been well bandied-about in the mainstream press.

In one particularly shocking email, Professor Phil Jones, director of the Climate Research Unit at UEA, tells his US counterpart Professor Michael E Mann that he will try to block the inclusion of a controversial scientific paper in the forthcoming IPCC report, even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is.

In another, perhaps even more disturbing exchange, Professor Jones claims that he will delete an unfavourable temperature record from his computer rather than risk it being made public through a Freedom of Information request - the kind of obfuscation that was more usually associated with the early years of the Bush administration.

The fall-out


The fall-out has been extensive: climate sceptic Lord Lawson has called for a public enquiry; US 'shock-jocks' such as Glenn Beck have salivated over the details in lengthy broadcasts; and environmental commentator George Monbiot used his Guardian column to call for Professor Jones' resignation (which was refused).

The defence mounted has been weak at best. Monbiot resorted to satire in his usually rigorous column, the UEA press office has been at best slow to respond, and scientists writing on the 'Real Climate' blog site‚ a much-visited forum for climate science updates‚ dwelt on the fact that the hacking was illegal, and argued, with reference to one particuarly controversial email, that scientists use the word 'trick' all the time to mean 'a good way to deal with a problem'. Really?

Let's be clear what this does and doesn't mean. No, it doesn't invalidate the science that underpins our approach to tackling climate change, which has been verified by dozens of independent research establishments across the globe.

Copenhagen


Neither should it have any real impact on the Copenhagen negotiations, which, even if they succeed, will set targets based on very conservative science at any rate.

But what is does do is to serve as a reminder that science is a business, and is subject to exactly the same pressures and compromises that any business faces.

Many of the emails deal with reputational issues, which have a direct bearing on the likelihood of scientists to receive funding for their work. Some deal directly with the problems of finding funding; others hint at the political difficulties with maintaining a scientific neutrality when dealing with an issue that is so emotionally charged.

But to acknowledge this is not to forgive it. Had these emails been hacked from the accounts of prominent climate sceptics, the Ecologist would have been amongst the first to highlight their nefarious content. Our standards must cut both ways.

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Users Comments

Re: Shame on the 'climategate' scientists
Posted By MrJohnQPublic 1 November 29, 2009 08:34:53 PM

I support your conclusion. If climate scientists do not self-regulate their own, their credibility will diminish. The fact of the matter is that these Climategate e-mails imply: a) obstruction of freedom of information acts b) subversion of the peer review process c) stacking of the UN IPCC membership d) breach of ethics codes e) misuse of public funding This is serious business. If you don't condemn these scientists, you support their misconduct.

Re: Shame on the 'climategate' scientists
Posted By EC008434 1 December 4, 2009 08:12:32 AM

Couldn't agree more, but sleaze now seems endemic in our society. However, has any climate change sceptic thought seriously about the consequences of the current weather change patterns if they are not man made. We can at least make changes to our own behaviour but if the world is on route to Armageddon and its unstoppable, where do we go from here.

Re: Shame on the 'climategate' scientists
Posted By audzi 1 December 7, 2009 12:26:02 AM

It is extremely disappointing to read an editorial like this from The Ecologist journal. Respected scientific journals Nature and Science investigated this scandal and found no reason for concern about scientific integrity. It does not matter what scientists wrote to each other in PRIVATE emails, it matters how they acted. The controversial scientific paper was NOT blocked from the IPCC report, and the controversies were discussed scientifically. And the outcry about the single word 'trick' is simply pathetic - scientists, artists and writers use this word all the time to describe some clever ways of doing things. Yes, scientist have to struggle for funding, but science is not business. The goal of business is profit, the goal of science is knowledge. One pursues a business career in order to become rich, become a scientists with a goal of getting rich is definitely a bad idea. What the hacked emails show is that climate change scientists are normal humans and can lose their temper when being constantly attacked for what they do. It seems The Ecologist now joins the line of those attackers. One more comment. You write: "Had these emails been hacked from the accounts of prominent climate sceptics, The Ecologist would have been amongst the first to highlight their nefarious content". It seems from your comment that you give similar credibility to both climate change scientists and sceptics. There is no need to hack emails from climate change 'sceptics'. They can openly make statements based on absolutely scientifically incorrect data, or no data at all. They can receive funding from big companies. Comparing climate change science with the arguments of sceptics is the same as comparing evolution with creationism. Perhaps one thing The Ecologist should notice - the climate change 'sceptics', not scientists, are usually working in business area. Shame on The Ecologist for joining the gang which only goal is to impede a progress on climate change action by any possible dirty means. Asta Audzijonyte

Emails not necessary obtained by a hacker
Posted By carynorth 1 December 17, 2009 01:50:23 AM

The first sentence of this piece begins, "Make no mistake: the emails from the University of East Anglia climate scientists which were obtained from a hacked server and..." Please, regardless of what one thinks about the documents themselves, or the fact that they were released, there is no evidence that they were obtained by someone "hacking" into UEA servers. That may well have happened, of course, but it is also plausible that the .zip file released was contructed by someone at UEA, for reasons unknown, and the same person or some other person at UEA merely released that file, again for reasons unknown. The release of the documents has been blamed on "hackers" by the media and by all sides of the climate debate, yet there is no evidence of that.

Re: Shame on the 'climategate' scientists
Posted By EC017051 1 January 6, 2010 09:16:08 PM

I'm very disappointed by this column. It did not check what the actual content of the mails was. It just parrots what the thieves said. I'm sorry to be a member of this magazine.

Re: Shame on the 'climategate' scientists
Posted By GregDance 1 April 1, 2010 12:43:10 PM

Why is it that people and organisations working toward dealing with climate change are so severely scrutinised, when those dedicated to the destructive commercial practices of our time, business as usual, enjoy doing so as an unchallenged right of birth? Yes honesty is required of scientists and having their research and careers paid for by vested interests of commercial or political masters is a threat to scientific integrity, it need to stop. So too must be the validity of conducting business that leads to over consumption, particularly of unnecessary consumer tat and wasteful energy hog devices!

Nice post
Posted By kikus 1 June 15, 2010 01:21:19 PM

отлично написано, у автора прям талант
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