James Delingpole beats a Press Complaint from UEA

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Guest Post by Barry Woods

The University of East Anglia has made complaints to the Press Complaints Commission about three blog posts by James Delingpole (photo at left) in the Telegraph about Professor Phil Jones and the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia (UEA, UK).

James Delingpole (The Telegraph, Spectator) is one of only a few MSM  journalists to persistently criticise the science and politics of man-made global warming in the UK not just after the climategate emails (he was the first in the UK – 20th November 2009) but for a long time prior to the leak from CRU at the University of East Anglia.  His blog post on the Press Complaints appears here

I imagine that UEA may now be regretting making these complaints to the Press Complaints Commission, as it is now officially upheld in James Delingpole’s and the Telegraphs favour, with the reasons visible to any other journalist that may take an interest (my bold).

The first complaint from UEA was this:

“In particular, the complainants were concerned that the blog posts described Professor Phil Jones as “disgraced, FOI-breaching, email-deleting, scientific-method abusing”.  They explained that Professor Phil Jones had been exonerated of any dishonesty or scientific malpractice by a series of reviews” – Press Complaints Commission

The Press Complaints Commission ruling explains it’s decision on the first blog post with evidence provided by the Telegraph:

Through its correspondence the newspaper had provided some evidence in support of the statements under dispute, and the columnist had included some of this evidence in the second blog post under discussion.

In relation to the columnist’s description of Professor Jones as “FOI-breaching, email-deleting”, the newspaper had provided extracts from an email from Professor Jones in which he had written “If they ever hear there is a Freedom of Information Act now in the UK, I think I’ll delete the file rather than send to anyone”, and another email in which he had written

“Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith re AR4?”. – Press Complaints Commission ruling

The threat of, or taking legal action against critics of ‘climate science’ does appear to be on the rise, this is a concern as few bloggers have any means to defend themselves legally. If actions like this are not fought and won, all perhaps it would take is a lawyer’s letter from a complainant with deep pockets (like UEA) for the blog owner to have to make a difficult personal and financial decision.  Additionally, these actions may result in a form of self censorship with blogger and journalists not daring to comment.

“Basically the UEA were trying to use the PCC as a way of gagging this blog from speaking unpalatable truths about the shoddy goings-on in its notorious Climatic Research Unit.” – James Delingpole

How many blog owners or other journalists without the backing of an experienced legal team and the Telegraph would have been able to take this case on? James explains the help and support he had with this Press Complaint and I imagine the case was the cause of some stress and concern for him, (he perhaps has had cause to make his own complaint recently, see his BBC experience) as not winning could have potentially damaged his livelihood as a writer and journalist.

“I’m hugely grateful to my legal advisers, as well as to experts including Steve McIntyre, Andrew Montford, Richard North and Christopher Booker.” – James Delingpole

I hope that James Delingpole and the Telegraph winning this complaint will make ‘climate scientists’ think more carefully about  trying to use legal means to gag the right to fair comment. James Delingpole sounds mightily relieved and is off on holiday for a couple of weeks surfing (in the UK, so a brave soul)

“To its enormous credit the PCC stuck up for fair comment and freedom of speech. This is a massive victory not just for me and Telegraph blogs, but for bloggers everywhere – especially those doughty souls around the world who are battling against Establishment lies, bullying and cover ups to try to reveal the truth about the corrupt, mendacious Climate Change industry.

If it sounds like I’m overdoing it, consider this: the PCC’s ruling must be among the first by any quasi-official body anywhere in the world to take the side of a Climate Change sceptic rather than that of the Warmist establishment” – James Delingpole

I was completely unaware that this case was going on until I read about in James Delingpole’s latest blog post and it did make me think what I would have done if a lawyer’s letter found its way to my blog with a threat of legal action.  So hopefully now, before ‘climate scientists’ and politicians rush to the courts they will now think more carefully of the potential outcomes. If only because it may backfire on them and that they realise as he won the complaint, others in the media might pay more attention to the reason why he won the complaint.

Press Complaints ruling in full (my bold):

Commission’s decision in the case of

University of East Anglia v The Daily Telegraph

The complainants, acting on behalf of the University of East Anglia (UEA), complained that three blog posts by James Delingpole were inaccurate and misleading and contained distorted information in breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code.

In particular, the complainants were concerned that the blog posts described Professor Phil Jones as “disgraced, FOI-breaching, email-deleting, scientific-method abusing”.  They explained that Professor Phil Jones had been exonerated of any dishonesty or scientific malpractice by a series of reviews.

They were concerned that a second blog post repeated accusations that had been demonstrated as untrue, concluding that the University’s scientists were “untrustworthy, unreliable and entirely unfit to write the kind of reports on which governments around the world make their economic and environmental decisions”, and a third blog post referred to the scientists’ work as “shoddy” and “mendacious”.

The Commission emphasised that the articles in question were blog posts and were clearly identifiable as such to readers generally, as they were posited in the ‘Telegraph Blogs’ section of the website and written under the columnist’s prominent by-line.  The Commission was satisfied that readers would be aware that the comments therein represented the columnist’s own robust views of the matters in question.  Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code permits the publication of such comment provided it is clearly distinguished from fact and does not contain significantly inaccurate, misleading or distorted information.

The Commission has previously ruled [North v The Guardian] that “In the realm of blogging (especially in cases touching upon controversial topics such as climate change), there is likely to be strong and fervent disagreement, with writers making use of emotive terms and strident rhetoric.  This is a necessary consequence of free speech. The Commission felt that it should be slow to intervene in this, unless there is evidence of factual inaccuracy or misleading statement.”

Through its correspondence the newspaper had provided some evidence in support of the statements under dispute, and the columnist had included some of this evidence in the second blog post under discussion.

In relation to the columnist’s description of Professor Jones as “FOI-breaching, email-deleting”, the newspaper had provided extracts from an email from Professor Jones in which he had written

“If they ever hear there is a Freedom of Information Act now in the UK, I think I’ll delete the file rather than send to anyone”,

and another email in which he had written

“Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith re AR4?”.

With respect to the columnist’s assertion that Professor Jones was “scientific method-abusing”, the newspaper had provided an extract from an email from Professor Jones in which he had written

“I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline”.

In view of this, the Commission considered that there were some grounds for the columnist’s opinion – which readers would recognise was subjective – on these points. The complainants emphasised that Professor Phil Jones and the other scientists discussed in the blog post had been cleared by a number of independent reviews.  The Commission noted that the columnist had referred to these reviews, and that readers would therefore have been aware that they had taken place.

In the first blog post complained of the columnist had referred to “unconvincing attempts to clear the Climategate scientists”, and noted that one scientist, Mike Hulme, had “managed to emerge from the Climategate scandal smelling of violets”.  He had also noted in the first blog post that Professor Jones had granted interviews “presenting himself as a man far more sinned against than sinning”.

The columnist in the second blog post complained of had expanded on his comments and made clear that the scientists had “apparently… been ‘exonerated and cleared of all malpractice by a series of independent reviews’”, although he made clear that he did not consider these reviews to have been “independent”, citing a report by Andrew Montford which was critical of the reviews.

While the complainants had expressed concern that the Montford report was “partisan”, the Commission considered that the columnist was entitled to agree with the report. The Commission was satisfied that readers would be aware of the context of the columnist’s robust views – clearly recognisable as his subjective opinion – that the scientists were “untrustworthy, unreliable and entirely unfit to write the kind of reports on which governments around the world make their economic and environmental decisions”, and that their work was “shoddy” and “mendacious”.  In the circumstances, it did not consider that there had been a breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Code.

The Commission noted that the newspaper had offered the complainants an opportunity to respond on the blog post.  It considered that this would inform readers of the full context of the dispute and the complainants’ position.  The Commission welcomed this offer, and hoped it would remain open to the complainants.

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April 9, 2011 2:32 pm

Nick Stokes,
Isn’t WUWT’s free speech great? If I posted a comment like yours on realclimate or climate progress, it would never get past the moderation censors. I know, I’ve tried many times.

April 9, 2011 2:47 pm

Congratulations go to James for his victory. I especially enjoy James’ “robust” opinions. James, keep it up! Love your column, love your attitude.

RockyRoad
April 9, 2011 3:01 pm

Welcome back, Ms. Skywalker. Have missed your pithy and concise comments of late.
Regarding Google–I refuse to use it. Regarding the UEA, they invoke my disdainful laughter. And regarding James D., I’m mighty glad he’s won this round. I do believe Dr. Ball will benefit in the long run from this pronouncement. Mann’s as clueless about his chances in court as he was when constructing certain fictitious graphs.
Finally, regarding “realclimate” and “climate progress”, I use quotation marks to emphasize the meanings of those words are NOT at all accurate in the current context.

Editor
April 9, 2011 3:14 pm

Lucy Skywalker,
you make a really excellent point. What words of wisdom will emerge through the lense of history (even ten years) as a legacyof this battle?

Crispin in Johannesburg
April 9, 2011 3:27 pm

Nick Stokes says:
April 9, 2011 at 2:16 pm
I liked this little phrase:
“Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code permits the publication of such comment provided it is clearly distinguished from fact”
Apparently he succeeded.
++++++++
What would have thought of a win by the UEA in this case? What is it they would have succeeded in accomplishing?
I think it would have been a successful suppression, with costs, of an expression of opinion. You surely didn’t mean to tell us you support that, did you? I agree with Delingpole’s assessment, similarly thousands of others who bother to find out the facts and circumstances.
The Facebook thing is desperation to the point of farce.

1DandyTroll
April 9, 2011 3:40 pm

That Jones fart should count himself lucky he don’t live in France, since French work ethics and moral laws concerning everything bullying in the work place is a criminal offense with 3-10 million euro in fines and up to several years in prison, even if he just was the boss of the ones committing the offenses.

MartinGAtkins
April 9, 2011 3:43 pm

Richard111 says:
In particular a course showing how IR radiation from cold greenhouse gases in the atmosphere can increase the heat in the already warmer ground below?
It absorbs Radiative energy from the black body and radiates half back and half away. With a constant input of 1 watt, the black body will eventual radiate 2 watts to the molecule which will radiate 1 watt back and 1 watt away.
Don’t confuse this with the second law of thermodynamics which refers to thermal energy or temperature/heat. Thermal energy is kinetic by nature whereas radiative energy is electromagnetic.

Andrew30
April 9, 2011 4:58 pm

So what are the chances of getting this on to the Wikipedia ‘climategate’ page?
Related, check.
Reputable source, check.
Verifiable source, check.
Legal to print, check.
Not libelous, check.
True, check.
Any takers…

Scottish Sceptic
April 9, 2011 5:17 pm

It sounds to me as if the Press Complaints Commission having read the same evidence the inquiries were supposed to appraise, have effectively saod that the inquiries could not honestly justify the vindication they gave the UEA.
Or am I reading too much into it?

Richard111
April 9, 2011 10:35 pm

MartinGAtkins says:
April 9, 2011 at 3:43 pm

It seems you believe CO2 GAS is a BLACKBODY!!??
Looking forward to seeing you on the course. 🙂

Jack Savage
April 10, 2011 12:44 am

I fail to see this as a victory. The Press Commission has grudgingly admitted that James Delingpole has not transgressed. That is it.
To win a hard fought battle for the right to be able to say something that is blindingly obvious on the most cursory inspection is not much of a victory.
If anything, it shows how much of a battle still remains.
That does not stop me from rejoicing on Mr.D’s behalf and congratulating all involved.

Editor
Reply to  Jack Savage
April 10, 2011 1:34 am

Jack Savage
Indeed. As James Delingpole says:

This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.

Martin Brumby
April 10, 2011 1:49 am

@Holbrook says: April 9, 2011 at 1:52 pm
“And climate is just one area where the “science” leaves many of us wondering….on 9/11 high rise steel framed buildings collapsed to fire when aviation fuel burns at circa 1800f but steel does not melt until it gets to around 2750f.”
C’mon! And what does exposure to 1800f do to the tensile and shear strength of structural steel?
It doesn’t have to melt to fail.
If the twin towers had been built to UK structural codes they would likely still be standing. But of course we’ve had to allow for terrorist attacks for many years.
Just because the promotion of cAGW has conspiracy elements doesn’t mean that it is primarily a conspiracy. The dogma, incompetence, malice and greed are actually the main drivers.
And 9/11 conspiracy theories?
Well, whatever floats your boat.
But I don’t think Anthony will welcome them being aired here. And (being qualified in Structural Engineering) I can tell you that your point on steel’s melting point is nonsense.

MartinGAtkins
April 10, 2011 2:12 am

Richard111 says:
It seems you believe CO2 GAS is a BLACKBODY!!??
No Richard, I don’t. You said:-

In particular a course showing how IR radiation from cold greenhouse gases in the atmosphere can increase the heat in the already warmer ground below?

The warmer ground below is the black body and the gases are the molecules. The 1 watt constant input is solar radiation received by the black body and it is that, that is radiated too the gas. “Cold” is relative condition. A molecule that has lost some energy through collision can still radiate back a lesser energy value than it is receiving.

Lars P
April 10, 2011 3:01 am

MartinGAtkins says: “With a constant input of 1 watt, the black body will eventual radiate 2 watts to the molecule which will radiate 1 watt back and 1 watt away.”
Hm to me, you are on the best way to describe a perpetuum mobile, a source of countinuous energy out of nothing. And the 1 watt comes back again and again and again? Duplicating, triplicating, heat etc?
It does not work like this, please re-think your greenhouse gas theory, there are several good explanations on the web, or you may want to read “Slaying the sky dragon”.

Kate
April 10, 2011 5:06 am

Strangely, nothing of the ruling has appeared on the BBC, the Independent, the Guardian or the UEA’s websites. To date, this has not been mentioned anywhere in the British MSM.
…Had the ruling gone the other way, it would have been plastered all over the British media and no doubt given wall-to-wall coverage on the BBC with the usual demands for inquiries, suitably groveling apologies, resignations, and heads-on-platters all round.
Notice also that a careful reading of the PCC’s statement destroys all the credibility of the findings of the inquiries into the Climategate fraud, which have now been officially proved to have been nothing more than establishment whitewashes.

Kate
April 10, 2011 5:20 am

Excuse me, but I thought perfectly legitimate comments were allowed on this site. Clearly, a sense of fascist censorship has become established here when a word like fr@ud can’t be used without getting the whole post deleted. Shame on all censors. Tell me, are you censors really moonlighting from the Guardian’s cif operation?
[If you are going to accuse someone of committing a crime, you need to show evidence, not just your opinion, else its defamation, which is against WordPress’ Terms Of Service. – MikeL]

Richard111
April 10, 2011 5:47 am

MartinGAtkins, pop over to http://www.globalwarmingskeptics.info/forums/
and start a guest post or register, all are welcome. Would be happy to
continue this chat in more detail. Always something new to learn.
“”A molecule that has lost some energy through collision can still radiate back a lesser energy value than it is receiving.””
I agree with that statement with reservations. A starting point for discussion? 🙂

MartinGAtkins
April 10, 2011 6:26 am

Lars P says:
April 10, 2011 at 3:01 am
Hm to me, you are on the best way to describe a perpetuum mobile, a source of countinuous energy out of nothing. And the 1 watt comes back again and again and again? Duplicating, triplicating, heat etc?
Your not reading what I said properly. I said with a constant input of 1 watt. The constant input is the solar radiation transformed by the black body into LWR and radiated out toward the molecule. The molecule absorbs the 1 watt and radiates half away and half back. In the next instant the black body receives 1 watt from the solar input and half a watt back from the molecule so the black body now has an energy value of 1 and a half watts which is propagated too the molecule and so on. This is known as reverberation and is part of the wave theory of electromagnetic energy propagation. I have simplified it into “instances” but it happens over a short time span with the energy between the black body and the molecule increasing until the energy output of the molecule away from the black body is equal to the solar energy input too the black body.

MartinGAtkins
April 10, 2011 7:55 am

Richard111 says:
April 10, 2011 at 5:47 am
MartinGAtkins, pop over to http://www.globalwarmingskeptics.info/forums/
and start a guest post or register, all are welcome. Would be happy to continue this chat in more detail.
I’ll be happy to discuss these concepts in detail but I won’t make a guest post. Sceptics need to have a greater understanding of science than the politically driven frauds that infest our universities. Use my post to Lars P for a more detailed discussion on the concepts of radiative feed back. I’ll look in and see if we can’t learn from each other.

RockyRoad
April 10, 2011 9:28 am

Ayn has a few pertinent sections from Atlas Shrugged that apply here. On page 176 of my copy it says:

It was Dr. Robert Stadler who had once corrected a student: “Free scientific inquiry? The first adjective is redundant.”

Then on page 178 comes this exchange between Dagney Taggart and Dr. Stadler:

“Dr. Stadler,” she asked slowly, “you know the truth, yet you will not state it publicly?”
“Miss Taggart, you are using an abstract term, when we are delaing with a matter of practical reality.”
“We are dealing with a matter of science.”
“Science? Aren’t you confusing the standards involved? It is only in the realm of pure science that truth is an abolute criterion. When we deal with applied science, with technology–we deal with people. And when we deal with people, considerations other than truth enter the question.”

The UEA is burdened with a significant contradiction and Delingpole has pointed it out for the whole world to see. Ayn continues on page 188 of my copy:

“I’ll give you a hint. Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think that you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong.”

We’ll see how the UEA squirms out of this contradictory mess.

Lars P
April 10, 2011 10:37 am

MartinGAtkins says:
April 10, 2011 at 6:26 am “This is known as reverberation and is part of the wave theory of electromagnetic energy propagation”
Martin, what you describe is very interesting. Let me try to think further. Supposing we have a 1 Watt source of energy in the mid of CO2 gas. When we send 1 Watt to the right, it comes back as 0.5 Watt (+ 0.5 Watt goes further). It goes past our source to the left as 1.5 Watts and comes back as 0.75Watt, (0.75 goes further). It goes now as 1.75 to the right and 0.875 is reflected back, 0.875 goes further. After full reverberation chain we have an effective source of 2 Watt in the middle that heats the gas. If we think now up and down, back and forth we get 6 Watt instead of 1 Watt. Wow! If we put the heating bulb in C02 we get 6 times more energy out!

MartinGAtkins
April 10, 2011 3:05 pm

Lars P says:
April 10, 2011 at 10:37 am
Supposing we have a 1 Watt source of energy in the mid of CO2 gas.
No we don’t! We have only the source at the black body. You don’t get to set the rules. We don’t have convection nor evaporation or the flying spaghetti monster.
The perfect black body has no mass, it is a legitimate theoretical construct. We are looking at a thin one dimensional plane so there is no scatter and no bypassing the wave propagation.
Now re-consider your idiotic extrapolations.

Roy Everett
April 10, 2011 3:23 pm

MartinGAtkins, Richard111. Nitpicking maybe, but I quibble over “Thermal energy is kinetic by nature whereas radiative energy is electromagnetic”. Surely it’s not the electromagnetic versus kinetic “nature” that distinguishes work from heat, but the predictability versus randomness? A radio transmitter delivers work into its antenna, some of which does work on my receiver’s antenna. The Sun delivers heat into space, some of which does heat on my backyard. Both are electromagnetic radiation.

MartinGAtkins
April 10, 2011 9:38 pm

Roy Everett says:
April 10, 2011 at 3:23 pm
The Sun delivers heat into space, some of which does heat on my backyard. Both are electromagnetic radiation.
No…the sun radiates a broad spectrum of electromagnetic waves at high energy levels. Only when these waves are absorbed do they become heat. If you were in space and you faced the sun, the front of your body would rapidly burn whereas the back of your body would be very rapidly cool. As for your back yard, yes it will re-radiate electromagnetic energy because all matter has an electric field and so when it stretches bends or vibrates it sends out pulses. Heat and temperature are the actual movement of the gases components and have kinetic energy due to the mass of the atom or molecule.
Electromagnetic energy has no mass or at least none to speak of.

Lars P
April 11, 2011 9:52 am

MartinGAtkins says:
April 10, 2011 at 3:05 pm
“No we don’t! We have only the source at the black body. You don’t get to set the rules. We don’t have convection nor evaporation or the flying spaghetti monster.
The perfect black body has no mass, it is a legitimate theoretical construct. We are looking at a thin one dimensional plane so there is no scatter and no bypassing the wave propagation.
Now re-consider your idiotic extrapolations.”
No, Martin, there is no use to continue discussion with you.