Here’s a collection of excerpts and links from the UK. The ones at the very end are quite telling. h/t to Benny Peiser of the GWPF for their newsletter. – Anthony

MPs Slam ‘Secretive’ Climategate Probes
Two inquiries into claims that scientists manipulated data about global warming were yesterday condemned by MPs as ineffective and too secretive. MPs on the Science and Technology Committee have now concluded that both probes into the scandal had failed to “fully investigate” claims that scientists had deleted embarrassing emails. –John Ingham, Daily Express, 25 January 2011
…
Graham Stringer, a Labour MP on the Committee, said there are questions over how the scientists chose the figures they used to back up the case for global warming. He said the ‘missing email’ may refer to how researchers tried to further influence how their science is accepted by the scientific community. He said both reports had failed to answer these questions. “It is not a whitewash, it is the establishment looking after their own. They are not looking hard enough at what went wrong.” — Louise Gray, The Daily Telegraph, 25 January 2011
…
The release of the e-mails from CRU at the University of East Anglia and the accusations that followed demanded independent and objective scrutiny by independent panels. This has not happened. No reputable scientist who was critical of CRU’s work was on the panel, and prominent and distinguished critics were not interviewed. The Oxburgh panel did not do as our predecessor committee had been promised, investigate the science, but only looked at the integrity of the researchers. This leaves a question mark against whether CRU science is reliable. We are now left after three investigations without a clear understanding of whether or not the CRU science is compromised.—Graham Stringer, MP, Member of the Science and Technology Committee, 17 January 2011
Mr Stringer is saying what many critical observers think. The inquiries were inept, biased and have not closed this affair. The MPs’ report says we should move on but you cannot if you have unfinished business.—Benny Peiser, Daily Express, 25 January 2011
…
“We find it unsatisfactory that we are left with a verbal reassurance from the vice-chancellor [of UEA] that the emails still exist,” the committee says.
The Russell panel was also remiss for not holding its evidence sessions in public and for allowing UEA to read its report before it was published – a move that left the inquiry open to allegations that it was not sufficiently independent.
The committee calls on researchers to release “sufficient detail of computer programs, specific methodology or techniques used” to allow others to check their analysis of data. This will “help guard against not only scientific fraud but also the spread of misinformation and unsustainable allegations”.
The Information Commissioner’s Office should also release “clear guidance” on how FoI legislation should be applied to scientific research by the start of the next academic year.
But the committee endorses the UEA reports’ “clear and sensible” recommendations. “It is time to make the changes and improvements recommended and, with greater openness and transparency, move on,” the committee concludes. Paul Jump, Times Higher Education, 25 January 2011
…
How Two Tory MPs Saved CRU
In the formal minutes that appear at the end of the SciTech report, it is possible to read a paragraph that was proposed as an amendment by Graham Stringer. This is important:
“There are proposals to increase worldwide taxation by up to a trillion dollars on the basis of climate science predictions. This is an area where strong and opposing views are held. The release of the e-mails from CRU at the University of East Anglia and the accusations that followed demanded independent and objective scrutiny by independent panels. This has not happened.
The composition of the two panels has been criticised for having members who were over identified with the views of CRU. Lord Oxburgh as President of the Carbon Capture and Storage Association and Chairman of Falck Renewable appeared to have a conflict of interest. Lord Oxburgh himself was aware that this might lead to criticism. Similarly Professor Boulton as an ex colleague of CRU seemed wholly inappropriate to be a member of the Russell panel.
No reputable scientist who was critical of CRU’s work was on the panel, and prominent and distinguished critics were not interviewed. The Oxburgh panel did not do as our predecessor committee had been promised, investigate the science, but only looked at the integrity of the researchers. With the exception of Professor Kelly’s notes other notes taken by members of the panel have not been published. This leaves a question mark against whether CRU science is reliable. The Oxburgh panel also did not look at CRU’s controversial work on the IPPC which is what has attracted most [serious] allegations. Russell did not investigate the deletion of e-mails. We are now left after three investigations without a clear understanding of whether or not the CRU science is compromised.”
This was voted down by the Tories Stephen Mosley and Stephen Metcalfe and the Labour MP, Gregg McClymont.
In other news:
Totally Uncool: Young Britons Least Concerned About Global Warming –
The survey revealed that young people were least concerned about climate change which came last in the average rating of issues, with one in four rating it as the “least important” and 7.1% saying it was the most important issue for them. Only 12% of all respondents believed they had been “adversely affected” by climate change in 2010.
Peter Sissons: ‘The BBC Has Completely Lost It’ –
The BBC became a propaganda machine for climate change zealots, says Peter Sissons… and I was treated as a lunatic for daring to dissent.
This attitude was underlined a year later in another statement: ‘BBC News currently takes the view that their reporting needs to be calibrated to take into account the scientific consensus that global warming is man-made.’ Those scientists outside the ‘consensus’ waited in vain for the phone to ring.
It’s the lack of simple curiosity about one of the great issues of our time that I find so puzzling about the BBC. When the topic first came to prominence, the first thing I did was trawl the internet to find out as much as possible about it.
Anyone who does this with a mind not closed by religious fervour will find a mass of material by respectable scientists who question the orthodoxy. Admittedly, they are in the minority, but scepticism should be the natural instinct of scientists — and the default setting of journalists.
Yet the cream of the BBC’s inquisitors during my time there never laid a glove on those who repeated the mantra that ‘the science is settled’. On one occasion, an MP used BBC airtime to link climate change doubters with perverts and holocaust deniers, and his famous interviewer didn’t bat an eyelid.
Meanwhile, Al Gore, the former U.S. Vice-President and climate change campaigner, entertained the BBC’s editorial elite in his suite at the Dorchester and was given a free run to make his case to an admiring internal audience at Television Centre.
His views were never subjected to journalistic scrutiny, even when a British High Court judge ruled that his film, An Inconvenient Truth, contained at least nine scientific errors, and that ministers must send new guidance to teachers before it was screened in schools. From the BBC’s standpoint, the judgment was the real inconvenience, and its environment correspondents downplayed its significance.
Bottom line: critics accused climate scientists of being secretive and misleading. UEA was asked to investigate itself. The investigation that UEA performed has been found to be secretive and misleading. QED.
Great post, but can someone introduce a policy of stopping references to greenhouse zealots as ‘religious’ figures? I’m a protestant and I wish emerods upon the house of global warming alarmism simply on empirical grounds. The term ‘religion’ should be replaced here with ‘pseudo-religion’ or ‘cult’.
“His views were never subjected to journalistic scrutiny, even when a British High Court judge ruled that his film, An Inconvenient Truth, contained at least nine scientific errors, and that ministers must send new guidance to teachers before it was screened in schools. ”
I have never seen any evidence that this instruction was ever followed through. Can anyone out there confirm that it was? If it was not, surely any lack of action would rate as contempt of court?.
Or is it, move along there, nothing to see.
david elder says: “… can someone introduce a policy of stopping references to greenhouse zealots as ‘religious’ figures? I’m a protestant and I wish emerods upon the house of global warming alarmism simply on empirical grounds. The term ‘religion’ should be replaced here with ‘pseudo-religion’ or ‘cult’.”
Maybe you should read this…
Global Warming ruled “a religion” in Britain
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/7672/
David Elder
Sorry, but belief in climate change has been ruled as akin to a religion
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/6494213/Climate-change-belief-given-same-legal-status-as-religion.html#
Katabasis wrote:
Tradeable Energy Quotas
http://www.appgopo.org.uk/documents/TEQ_18Jan2011.pdf
“Sorry to keep mentioning it. However, this is as far as I’m concerned, the most important story for the UK of the month, but it is getting almost no coverage (the only mention I’ve seen is in the Daily Express, and most people would just dismiss it as a result).”
I agree with Katabasis. The document published in association with the All Party Parliamentary Group on Peak Oil (APPGOPO) clearly promotes the idea of limiting access to energy by plebs like you and me so that our movements would also be limited as in war time.
The idea is intolerable in a democracy in peace time.
Dr T G Watkins says: “Mike Haseler:- Complaint to BBC re. Horizon’s scandalous attack on cAGW dissenters, lack of scientific content and extraordinary bias already sent, although how much good it will do is a moot point.”
Dr T, whilst I have to agree with you (I may have made as many as 100 complaints without once getting anything approaching a considered response), unfortunately, if you don’t complain they will just assume that the world agrees with the inward-looking group think at the BBC.
Also, you have to remember this is a numbers game. The more people who complain, the higher up the “problem” list the global warming issue will come and the more they will be forced to do something.
I’ve absolutely no doubt that if enough people complain the BBC will start broadcasting sceptic material. The problem is not convincing the BBC … the problem is convincing global warming sceptics that it really is worth complaining.
sHx says:
January 25, 2011 at 11:05 am
Thanks for the bow but obviously Anthony is the real star by providing this platform and content. I happened to be watching the right channel at the right time. 🙂
I tried at the time to locate a recording and wrote the BBC to play it again on one of their review programmes but they obviously had other ideas. 🙂
The second interview by Peter Sissons is available here. Not quite so dramatic but has its own value.
http://tinyurl.com/6yq6342
Mike says; “….and the world’s climate and oceans continue to change. ”
Yeah, just like they did prior to the industrial revolution. Just like they did prior to the middle age warm period. Just like they did prior to the onset of human civilization. Just like they did prior to…
The best bit is the massive lump of Expanded Polystyrene floating down the Thames in the video. If that’s not green, then nothing is. Don’t forget to sweep up all those bits of foam on the factory floor, boys!
I’m hoping for a re-eruptive plume – a reversal of Iapetus closure*. Somewhere along that southern highland border / Roman line. Some terranes are just ill-fitted.
*’62 Austin Atlantics welcome
😉
UK residents – do not dispair.
In past years, there were a number of enquiries into the NSW police force.
Each enquire found that there was NO institutional corruption.
Still there was disquiet in the community.
Eventually there was yet another enquity.
This time with a judge with an enquiring mind, properly funded with forensic researchers and under cover police to do the leg work.
That enquiry came to a different conclusion.
End of story.
Eventually there will be yet another enquiry into climate science and the results will be different.
It just need perserverence.
Keep on, keeping on.
Too true blue.
The truth will always out, but some of us may not have sufficient puff in us to see it happen.
Remember folks, the BBC’s naturalist Chris Packham (from BBC Spring Watch) delivered a 1-hour programme last year about the catastrophic effects upon natural habitats and wildlife as the world heats up to unprecedented levels due to CO2. I mentioned this wonderful propaganda on one of the WUWT threads at the time, but no one picked up on it. Can anyone still find the web link to this programme?
Until they begin to see our side of the debate, maybe the BBC might consider a some other programme suggestions:
Unifizzy Challenge
Boffins from PepsiCo, Schweppes & Coke compete to see who produces the most man-made CO2 from their global sales of carbonated drinks.
The Emissions Factor Part 3 – The Bakery
If you enjoyed the first two episodes (Part 1 – The Winery, Part 2 – The Brewery), you’ll love this. From yeast to bicarbonate of soda, we lift the lid on how much CO2 rises up annually from the entire world’s bread, cake and snack foods manufacture. The statistics are food for thought. Don’t miss next week’s instalment; Part 4 – Descaling Kettles.
Pardon Me
A fast-paced elimination quiz where contestants get to eat as many deliberately cultivated brussel sprouts and baked beans as possible. Amazingly, 55% Nitrogen, 20% of flammable oxygen/methane/hydrogen & 25% Carbon Dioxide ensues. Armageddon.
Drown, Crash & Burn
A controversial documentary about removing all the world’s manufactured CO2 from self-inflatable life jackets, car air bags and as used in all propellants for every fire extinguisher in order to prevent the Earth from warming up.
Has anyone got any other programme suggestions?
Brilliant thread Anthony. Thanks.
GeeJam
So 12% of young British folk thought they had been ‘adversely affected’ by climate change in 2010?
I’d lay odds that most of that 12% were referring to the arctic conditions of Nov/Dec rather than any sort of warming BS, either that or the brainwashing is worse than I thought.
CET record should tell Brits all we need to know about our little bit of the climate, and that’s the bit that is likely to ‘adversely affect’ us atm.
Yes there were two investigations plus that by the Royal Society which came to the same conclusions as the other two. None of the investigations looked at the science and all said that one of the others would look at the science.
crossopter 10:36
They stopped making Austin Atlantics in 1952. 🙂
david, that word is bugging me. I can’t find it or any near-homonym or plausible misspelling in my personal vocabulary, or the online dictionary. What is it?
P.S. You get to capitalize Protestant, just like Catholics and Jews and Muslims do. It’s only fair.
The inquiries were inept, biased and have not closed this affair.
I think the word they are looking for is “predetermined”.
@GeeJam
“Remember folks, the BBC’s naturalist Chris Packham (from BBC Spring Watch) delivered a 1-hour programme last year about the catastrophic effects upon natural habitats and wildlife as the world heats up to unprecedented levels due to CO2. I mentioned this wonderful propaganda on one of the WUWT threads at the time, but no one picked up on it. Can anyone still find the web link to this programme?”
I watched this risible apology of an analysis by Packham. I still have it on my PVR, and would be happy to copy it to an appropriate repository for others to view.
It will be too long in 1 piece for Youtube, but I could chop it into pieces, if necessary.
I will have a go later today….
Man got smart, stood up, and wished emerods on himself.
=================
Good old Peter Sissons. I’d really like to see that Lucas eco-fascist lose her rag. Does any one have a copy of the interview that they can upload to the Internet?
Thanks for the response and good luck Tony B.
First broadcast 17 May 2010 on BBC2
In the meantime, if you Google ‘Signs of Change with Chris Packham’, in between all the references to TV listings, there’s a few links and clips, such as . . . .
“As global warming becomes more of a problem, this may pose a real risk to the mountain hare. The on-average warmer winters we are having in the UK means there is less snow and . . . .”
er right, ok then.
In recent months the BBC has been airing high profile partisan propoganda disguised as impartial scientific comment by members of the UK Science establishment.
First there was the Huw Wheldon lecture by Brian Cox, arguing that anyone who didn’t accept that Climate Change was driven by humans was crazy, and that skeptical views should not therefore be reported.
Now there has been the outrageously slanted Horizon programme by Sir Paul Nurse, pretending independant thought but not allowing skeptical views to be properly explained or backed up while warmists were given a sympathetic hearing.
In both cases the line was: this is the consensus, anybody challenging it is wrong and a crank, we know best.
That is a fundamentally unscientific approach to any scientific problem.
Somewhere out there in the Main Stream Media of the World a young reporter/writer missed a chance to cash in on the Fraud of the Century. Climate-Gate and the subsqeuent CYA shenanigans of its culprits continue to this day. A reasoned, neutral, non-political writer, with the support of a reasoned Editor would be in the 15th month of a lucrative career.
This coming Monday, there’s a Storyville programme about climate sceptics (http://www.tvguide.co.uk/detail.asp?id=84470095). The director, Rupert Murray, previously produced the informative End Of The Line documentary (http://endoftheline.com/film/the_team/). It’ll be interesting to discover whether “Meet the Climate Sceptics” is yet another biased BBC production.