interesting article from the BBC on this controversy:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8396035.stm

 Expert slams 'tabloid' e-mail row

A colleague of the UK professor at the centre of the climate e-mails
row says "sceptics" have embarked on a "tabloid-style character
assassination".

Professor Andrew Watson rallied to the defence of climate scientist
Phil Jones, whose e-mail exchanges prompted claims that data had been
manipulated.

There was no evidence of attempting to mislead people, Professor Watson added.

The University of East Anglia has commissioned an independent inquiry
into the affair.

"Despite the best efforts of the sceptics, there is no instance in
these e-mails that anyone has found so far - and there are millions of
people looking - that suggests the scientists manipulated their
fundamental data," Professor Watson, from the university's School of
Environmental Sciences, stated.


'CLIMATEGATE' TIMELINE
# 19 Nov - Rumours appear on blogs that a hacker had obtained emails
from CRU computers
# 20 Nov - UEA confirms emails and documents from CRU had appeared
illegally on the internet
# 23 Nov - Climate "sceptics" say the e-mails show that data is being
manipulated and call for an inquiry
# 1 Dec - Man at centre of row, Professor Phil Jones, stands down
while inquiry is conducted
# 3 Dec - Saudi chief negotiator says row proves climate change is not
caused by humans
# 3 Dec - UEA commission Sir Muir Russell, a former civil servant, to
chair an independent inquiry
# 4 Dec - Head of UN climate science body says matter cannot be swept
"under the carpet"


The row broke out last month when hundreds of messages between
scientists at the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit
(CRU) and their peers around the world were put on the internet along
with other documents.

Some observers allege that one of e-mails suggested CRU head Professor
Phil Jones wanted certain papers excluded from the UN's next major
assessment of climate science.

Professor Jones, who has stood aside from his job pending the results
of an internal review, strenuously denies this was his intention and
says other e-mails have been taken out of context.

Critics of the scientific consensus have claimed that the e-mails
undermine the case that greenhouse gas emissions from human activities
are causing global warming, and have dubbed the issue "ClimateGate".

Professor Watson added: "The climate sceptics would have us believe
the e-mails invalidate the CRU data set, but they don't.

"They would have us believe that the warming that has occurred during
the 20th Century is a construct entirely in the minds of a few climate
scientists.

"But this point of view surely has some difficulty in explaining why
Arctic sea ice is declining so rapidly, mountain glaciers around the
world are retreating so rapidly, and Spring is coming much earlier now
than it did 50 years ago."

'Serious issue'

Earlier, the head of the UN's climate science body said the issue
should be investigated. HAVE YOUR SAY
Paul Price, Carmarthen, UK

Dr Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC), said the matter could not be swept "under the carpet".

"We will certainly go into the whole lot and then we will take a
position on it," he said.

Saudi Arabia's lead climate negotiator told BBC News that the e-mail
row will have a "huge impact" on next week's UN climate summit in
Copenhagen.

Mohammad Al-Sabban said that he expected it to derail the single
biggest objective of the summit - to agree limitations on greenhouse
gas emissions.

"It appears from the details of the scandal that there is no
relationship whatsoever between human activities and climate change,"
he suggested.

However, the UK's Energy and Climate Change Secretary, Ed Miliband,
said the idea that the e-mail row would derail the Copenhagen summit
was "nonsense".

"One string of e-mails does not undermine the global science on
climate change," he told BBC News.

"There will be people who want to use it to say that this somehow
casts doubt on Copenhagen or the scientific evidence; frankly, I think
that is nonsense and I think we need to resist listening to those
siren voices."

The University of East Anglia has commissioned an independent review
into how the e-mails ended up on the internet, in addition to a police
investigation into how the material was obtained.

The review will cover a number of areas, including whether there is
evidence of suppression or manipulation of data, and make
recommendations about the management of its data.
Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/8396035.stm

Published: 2009/12/04 16:25:55 GMT




-- 
Larry C. Lyons
web: http://www.lyonsmorris.com/lyons
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/larryclyons
--
The real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do.
 - B. F. Skinner -

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