The IPCC can't learn from past mistakes – wants more grey literature

Dr. Rajenda Pachauri, IPCC chairman, pushing his racy romance novel Return to Almora

You’d think that after the drubbing they got last time around from the InterAcademy council for citing mentions of climate effects in travel brochures, climbing magazines, and the Himalayan glacier’s melting by 2035 fiasco, and other blunders, they’d want less grey literature. But apparently this is the anything goes in co-opted climate science beating out reason again. I’m beginning to wonder if the people running the IPCC don’t suffer from some sort of mental affliction. Or, maybe they are going for the insanity defense in case the climate doesn’t cooperate in the future?

I wonder if we’ll see citations from Return to Almora in the next IPCC report?

From the New Scientist:

The IPCC decided for the first time to impose strict geographical quotas on the scientists who author its major assessment reports. There will also be a push to increase the representation of women among its authors.

Controversially, it also voted to increase the role in those assessments of “grey literature”: publications not subject to peer review. Using such material in the last assessment is what led to the “glaciergate” scandal in 2010, when the report was found to have vastly overestimated the rate at which Himalayan glaciers are losing ice. […]

Krug told New Scientist this would correct an imbalance in the assessments as it is harder for people in developing countries to get research findings into the major peer-reviewed journals.

“There is a lot of information available in [the grey literature of] developing countries that would balance IPCC literature,” she said.

The IPCC is an intergovernmental body, but its reports are written by scientists. In the past these have been chosen largely on their scientific merit, but from now on the 30-person IPCC bureau – which oversees all publications – will have geographical quotas. For instance Africa will have five members and North America four. In addition, each of its three working groups must now include at least one person from every continent in their eight-person bureaux.

Full story at: http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn21940-climate-panel-adopts-controversial-grey-evidence.html

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Looks like none of this took hold, from the Register

Report recommends UN climate panel shakeup

Rearrange the chairs please

By Andrew Orlowski

The InterAcademy Council, led by Dr Harold Shapiro, an economist at Princeton University, also said the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had “gone beyond its mandate to be ‘policy relevant’ not policy prescriptive” – for which it recommended a new “communications policy”. The IPCC was also criticised for “confirmation bias” with lead authors placing “too much weight on their own views relative to other views”. It recommended working group co-chairs be limited to one assessment.

The (IAC) report is an indirect criticism of the part-time chairman Dr Rajendara Pachauri. The IAC Panel recommends a full-time chairman limited to a shorter term.

The investigation was prompted by criticisms of the IPCC’s fourth assessment report (AR4) published in 2007 – specifically the output of Working Group 2 (WGII), set up to examine the “Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability” and which produced a report ran to almost 1,000 pages. This was found to lean heavily on “grey literature”, including activist reports and even travel brochures. A prediction that that the Himalayan glaciers could disappear by 2035 was traced to a casual remark by an Indian scientist. Here and elsewhere, the IPCC excluded work that suggested that the impacts of global warming were overstated, or which were critical of the costs of the policy favoured by the UN and activist groups of mitigation, rather than adaptation.

The IAP said the IPCC’s work included headline-catching statements which couldn’t be justified.

Full story here

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Brian H
June 23, 2012 12:59 am

Matthew R Marler says:
June 22, 2012 at 1:06 pm
Controversially, it also voted to increase the role in those assessments of “grey literature”: publications not subject to peer review.
I see an expanded role for skeptical bloggers in that “increase”.

Nope. Specifically provided for (against):

hro001 says:
June 22, 2012 at 1:02 pm
It is worth noting that at the same time Stocker’ and his “task group” recommended that the IPCC “disappear” the flagging rule (because it was “too impractical”), they slipped in another rule to the effect that blogposts and (most) newspaper articles are not acceptable as source material.

I betcha there’s even finer fine print that exempts RC and Desmogblog from the ban …

DEEBEE
June 23, 2012 4:01 am

We are the world….

Ted
June 23, 2012 11:33 am

See the alarmist fandango as the money fades away. His mind squirms with computations, maybe I can invent a new shocking whiter shade of gray.

June 23, 2012 2:02 pm

It’s an unfortunate fact that scientists from countries with a low per capita GNP do not often get a chance to pursue well funded research. It is almost inevitable that the technical quality of IPCC reports will suffer as a result.
In the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation a previous Director General, Edouard Saouma, ensured he was re-elected by handing out jobs to citizens of countries whose vote he was soliciting. I of course have no evidence that something similar is happening within the IPCC.

Joachim Seifert
Reply to  Ron Manley
June 23, 2012 5:11 pm

To Ron….. the IPCC reports are so bad and full of Warmist garbage….
they cannot suffer any more in quality…..
If “less GNP countries” for example China, get more research funds
(they recently did exellent work with studies in Tibet etc.), this will
improve report quality……
JS

DirkH
June 23, 2012 3:28 pm

…”even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is!”…

June 24, 2012 2:18 am

For those interested to learn what is and is not grey literature, you’re invited to:
http://www.greynet.org/greyworks2012.html
http://www.textrelease.com/gl14program.html

Latimer Alder
June 24, 2012 2:20 am

Seems to me that the IPCC got itself into a heap of big trouble last time around by using grey literature ‘under the counter’. Does anyone really believe that formalising the process that let them down will enhance its already battered and tattered credibility?
And if this self-created deliberate own goal is the best idea that the greatest and goodest of the climatology mafia can come up with, then my minimal respect for their common sense drops yet further.
They may be great academics (though I reserve the right to doubt that too) but they are f*****g useless at anything else that matters in public discourse.

J Bowers
June 24, 2012 4:01 am

From New Scientist (Updated 18:02 22 June 2012 by Fred Pearce, Rio de Janeiro):
“From now on, for instance, any grey literature used in an IPCC report will have to be put online so that reviewers can assess its quality.”
So what’s the issue? Seems like an improvement.

Brian H
July 4, 2012 12:26 am

Deconfabulated, the IPCC implicitly admits reviewed literature is inadequate to justify its positions, so relies on and indeed solicits less restrained advocacy pieces from suitably opinioned lay sources.
Gaackk!