It seems reporter David Rose has been cleared of any press ethics issues related to his publication of “The Great Green Con” in the UK Mail on Sunday. It seems his article upset (as the Press Commission described) “an environmentalist and the author of greenerblog.blogspot.com” and a complaint was lodged about the accuracy of the article.
Here’s the decision from the Press Commission (emphasis mine):
=================================================================
Dear Mr Wellington
Further to our previous correspondence, the Commission has now considered the complaint from Dr Lawson. The complainant’s concerns were reviewed within the context of the article as a whole, taking into consideration the requirements of the Editors’ Code of Practice.
After assessment the Commission has decided that no matters have been raised which show a breach of the Code. The more detailed reasons for the decision are below.
We are grateful to you for your co-operation in dealing with this matter.
Yours sincerely
Rebecca Hales
Commission’s decision in the case of Lawson v The Mail on Sunday
The complainant, an environmentalist and the author of greenerblog.blogspot.com, was concerned that the newspaper had published an article on the subject of climate change – both in print and online – which contained a number of alleged inaccuracies, misleading statements and distortions in breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code of Practice.
Under the terms of Clause 1, “the press must take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading, or distorted information”; “a significant inaccuracy, misleading statement or distortion once recognised must be corrected promptly and with due prominence”; and “the press, whilst free to be partisan, must distinguish clearly between comment, conjecture and fact”.
In this instance, the article under complaint formed part of a “four-page special report” entitled “The Great Green Con”. The piece was written from the perspective of investigative journalist David Rose and, in the Commission’s view, readers would have recognised the article as one individual’s analysis of the information provided by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). When reporting scientific findings, publications must often present complex information to a general readership; this may involve an element of interpretation. The newspaper was permitted, under the terms of the Code, to publish such interpretation of scientific data, however strongly disputed.
The Commission considered each of the points raised by the complainant in turn and carefully took note of the supporting material supplied by both parties.
The article was accompanied by a graph showing estimated temperature changes over time alongside the average temperature for the same period. The complainant said the newspaper had misrepresented the nature of computer model hindcasting (where known or closely estimated inputs for past events are entered into a model to see how well the output matches the known results) when it described the earlier temperature records in the graph as having been “plotted in retrospect”. The complainant said that if the graph had been accurately “plotted in retrospect” by hand, it would have displayed a post-1998 levelling off of surface temperatures. The Commission considered that the newspaper was free to rely on a graph produced by computer model hindcasting showing predicted data originating from the IPCC and actual temperatures supplied by the Met Office. While the complainant’s position was that the newspaper could have better explained to readers the processes behind generating such a graph, the Commission could not conclude that the description of predictions “plotted in retrospect” misrepresented what had been done in this instance. There was no breach of the Code on this point.
With regard to the article’s claims that “the graph confirms there has been no statistically significant increase in the world’s average temperature since January 1997” and “the awkward fact is that the earth has warmed just 0.5 degrees over the past 50 years”, the complainant argued that this might possibly be true of the world’s average surfacetemperature, but the phrase “world’s average temperature” implied that all temperature measurements were included. He said that when the continuing increase of ocean temperature is included, a statistically significant increase in the world’s average temperature has continued since 1997. The Commission could not agree that the phrase “world’s average temperature” would automatically be understood to include ocean temperature. It considered that the readers would have understood the figures to represent surface temperature, as experienced in their day-to-day lives. The Commission’s role is to administer the Editors’ Code of Practice and it emphasised that it is not the correct body to test veracity of the scientific data relied upon by the columnist. However, it was able to conclude that the newspaper had not presented those figures to readers in such a way that would have misled them as to what was being shown by the graph.
The Commission noted that, contrary to the complainant’s assertion, the article did not refer to Dr David Whitehouse as an “expert” in the field of climate change. Rather, he was given the broader description of “avowed climate sceptic” and author. In the absence of any complaint from Dr Whitehouse that his position had been misrepresented, the Commission was unable to conclude that the newspaper had breached Clause 1 of the Code on this point.
Although the complainant considered that the newspaper should have explained to readers the background of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, the Commission made clear that the Code does not require newspapers to publish exhaustive information on a particular subject. The omission of details about the political motivations of the Global Warming Policy Foundation did not render the article misleading or significantly inaccurate in such a way that would necessitate subsequent correction under the terms of Clause 1 (ii). In any case, the Global Warming Policy Foundation was mentioned in the context of the report penned by Dr Whitehouse and, as his position as a sceptic was made clear, the Commission considered that it would have been clear to readers that the organisation was not impartial on the issue of climate change.
The complainant was concerned that the article’s reference to the “global cooling” theories of the 1970s was misleading as the idea was only put out by a very small group of scientists at that time. The Commission noted his position that just seven scientific papers from the era suggested cooling, while six times that number suggested warming. He had argued that the prevalence of global warming theories meant that it was wrong for the newspaper to state that “in the Seventies, scientists and policymakers were just as concerned about a looming ‘ice age’ as they have been lately about global warming”. This was plainly a matter of interpretation of scientific papers (which the complainant did not dispute existed) and the Commission considered that the newspaper was entitled to set out its editorial stance that historical concerns about global cooling are comparable to modern day fears about global warming.
The complainant objected to the article’s assertion that “the forecasts have also forced jobs abroad as manufacturers relocate to places with no emissions targets”. He asked the newspaper to provide examples of where more than one manufacturer had relocated to places with no emissions targets where the motivation of “no emission targets” was the primary driving factor. The Commission noted that the during the complaints process the newspaper had supplied material detailing how companies – such as steel manufacturers and oil refineries – have closed or relocated due to carbon constraints. The complainant had accepted the newspaper’s evidence that energy levies may be a factor in some firms relocating and the Commission was satisfied that there was no breach of the Code on this point.
No breach of Clause 1 (Accuracy) was established by the complaint.
Finally, the Commission noted that the complainant had initially expressed concerns about the reporter’s alleged misrepresentation of comments made by Professor Myles Allen in relation to past predictions for temperature change and revisions to those predictions. In regard to complaints about matters of general fact under Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Code – where there are no obvious first parties cited in the article, who might complain – the Commission emphasised that it can indeed investigate complaints from any concerned reader. However, in this instance, the disputed comments were clearly attributed to Professor Allen (who had subsequently clarified his position in an article published in The Guardian newspaper).
During the complaints process the complainant had indicated that he was content to leave it to Professor Allen to complain about these issues, rather than pursue the matter himself. The Commission noted that Professor Allen had written in support of the complainant’s case, but had not submitted his own formal complaint to the PCC. The Commission explained that it had subsequently written separately to Professor Allen, providing him with the information necessary to allow him to make his own complaint, but no reply had been received. The Commission made clear that should Professor Allen decide to complain separately, then it would be happy consider the matter further.
Reference no. 131408
Rebecca Hales
Complaints Officer
Press Complaints Commission
Halton House
20/23 Holborn
London EC1N 2JD
Tel: 020 7831 0022
Website: www.pcc.org.uk
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Isn’t it time for British skeptics to start filing this type of complaint for every newspaper article in Britain that misrepresents the AGW “facts?” Even if they don’t win, they make the warmists spend time and money, generate some publicity, and eventually, the reporters will wince before they hit send on dubious articles.
I am leaping around my studio like a demented kangaroo. The birds on the little rail I erected so they could watch WUWT over my shoulder are twittering in joy. I have been saying for a long time that the global warming scam is dying. It is. I was right. So I am filled with joy.
This ruling is the first where a “main stream” body has slapped down the warmists. Unlike past “whitewashes” this group has considered the facts and found correctly. The significance of this ruling is simple; it may embolden other regularity bodies to rule on the facts and not the emotional appeal from the greens. Oh, joy, joy, joy.
dbstealey says:
July 2, 2013 at 12:08 pm
“I am happy to educate folks like him, using verifiable scientific facts.” You have my unequivocal permission and backing to try, brother, but having seen others doing so, and having tried myself, over and over again, it is a fruitless task, as they are bound to their faith in the CAGW religion to such an extent, that both reason and facts are quite foreign to their thinking. One might as well attempt to convince a dog that it is not a cat! a) It won’t understand you, and b), even if it did, you will find that it has been educated as from puppy-hood, to believe that all puppies are really kittens. Yes it is as ridiculous as that, No, REALLY!!
Well, there is a complaints commission which does it’s work thoroughly!
I am very impressed with that detailed response.
While it’s great to see the PCC take an objective and nonpartisan view of the ‘complaints’ raised by ‘Mr Wellington’ and arrive at an eminently sensible, level-headed conclusion, the whole thing serves as timely reminder to us all that evangelical green zealots will stop at nothing to try and stifle legitimate voices who dare to dissent from their approved CAGW narrative. I thank the PCC, as UK citizen, for basically telling this berk (and his toxic doctrinal nonsense) to ‘get stuffed’. We really do need more that kind of thing. Bravo, PCC.
a rate of 36.5 mK/decade….
a trend of 48.7 mK/decade…..
shows a -8.5 mK/decade cooling…..
is indistinguishable from zero (less than 0.5 K on a century scale).
At the risk of being a “numerical grammar Nazi”, I’d like to urge people not to unnecessarily mix units and scales within a paragraph or post. The impact of the message is lost if the reader must be distracted with mental unit conversions. A lot of political tomfoolery is camouflaged by liberal mixing of trillions, billions, and millions and per year and per 10-year budget window. Why add to that?
The point of using a common set of units was driven home to me by an excellent presentation by Dr. Howard Hayden at April 2009 APS conference from which I recommend his PPT: A Conspectus on US Energy. (2.4 MB PPT) His slides: 15, 17, 18 are:
His slide 33: Solar PV replaces Nuclear? Is not to be missed either.
900 MW Rancho Seco plant (removed from service June 1989) and a
2 MW (peak) PV solar farm next door covering the same size plot of land.
Also slide 24: graphs of Wind Power (% [of nameplate]) 1 – hr intervals [over 4500 hours]
“No breach of Clause 1 (accuracy) was established by the complainant” (aka alarmist moaner).
Therefore there were no inaccuracies, misleading statements or distortions identified in the article.
Your complaint was rubbished. : > )
This is what happens when you put CAGW on trial. The truth seeps out and those with an objective mind are often stunned. This is why they lose most of the debates. LOL.
Of course the “Commission could not agree” because for years they focused mostly on surface temps (while they were rising). LOL.
IPCC
Climate Change 2007: Synthesis Report
Scenarios for GHG emissions from 2000 to 2100 (in the absence of additional climate policies) and projections of surface temperatures
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/syr/en/spms3.html
Political motivations!!!! Haaaa, haaaa, haaaaaaaaaaa.
“Peer into the Heart of the IPCC, Find Greenpeace”
There is so much more to add my friends. LOL.
Too funny. LOL.
Now Professor Allen, please complain. You have the facts and the ‘mountain’s of pal
peer reviewed evidence on your side. The science is with you. The consensus is 97% (or is that 98%?). The world is overheating. It’s hotter than we previously thought. The evidence is compelling. COMPLAIN!Oooops. I only wanted to strike the word ”pal”. On second thoughts….:)
This whole Co2 con job has been driven by:
1) An agenda to shut down the fossil fuel industry. [main aim]
2) Shutting it down would lead to many third world deaths & reduce their populations. [DDT reduction was first strike but failed.]
3) Meeting the agenda of greens to de-industrialize the world, with an emphasis on the West.
4) Remove environmentalists’ pangs of comfortable lifestyle guilt.
5) Raise taxes for governments while hiding behind an imaginary emergency (people more likely to accept).
5) Increased power and control by politicians on their populace.
Once all the above is achieved they then blame sceptics, the fossil fuel industry, the tobacco industry, right wingers, child molesters, George Bush for all the problems experienced as a result of numbers 1 to 5. Wash, spin, repeat.
docrichard says: blah, blah, booo hooo, blah, booo hoo, sob, sob, sob, sniff, sob.
Why complain on WUWT? Go complain to the PCC. Now run along and find something better to do. Observations trump theory every time. Observations are not on your side, so go sob some more. LOL.
The link to the Daily Mail article is not working:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2294560/The-great-green-1-The-hard-proof-finally-shows-global-warming-forecasts-costing-billions-WRONG-along.html
But of course.
Breaking: Phil Jones got to endorse papers for Oxburgh inquiry
docrichard, you know as well as I do that whitewash was extremely hard to find in any of the hardware stores around the inquiry office.
Here is the real Dr. Phil Jones. He is a snake.
Phil Jones was given the all clear by his fellow snake oil salesmen. Do you buy??? 🙂
I would not celebrate the finding of the Commission, principally because the whole process is rather Orwellian. Eventually, as the Commission becomes more and more idealogical, free speech in the UK will be suppressed, as sure as night follows day. This is scary to me.
‘
Tut, tut, tut. Wake up and smell the coffee. They have no intention of doing what they say, but want you to do what they say. They just can’t stop flying. Why??? Because they don’t believe that carbon dioxide will destroy the biosphere. Simple as that.
Further reading:
“The climate campaigners who fly the most” (28 January 2007)
http://www.robedwards.com/2007/01/the_climate_cam.html
WHAT!???
I can’t remember the number of times I’ve been told that climate scientists don’t make predictions but projections / scenarios. Yet I am confused by what they say. Can someone please help me understand how prediction is actually projection? For that matter how warm winters actually means colder winters? Why up is now down? Help!
What a great thread! WONDERFUL comments all you WUWT Truth in Science people!
Loved this sub-theme, especially, LOL:
Lawson (DocRichard): “So … You will of course take this as a scientific vindication of Rose’s original article. … .”
Jimbo: “docrichard says: blah, blah, booo hooo, blah, booo hoo, sob, sob, sob, sniff, sob.” ]
Gail Combs: “Lord Lawson’s climate-change think tank risks being dismantled after complaint it persistently misled public… .”
Lawson: [sniff] “So the PCC has given the all clear to one of its own members… .”
Billy Liar: “You’re the loser that made the complaint, aren’t you?”
JM: No, but one of his cronies DID — Bingo!
**************************
Gail Combs — wasn’t that SO COOL that your post appeared just above Lawson’s? God is on our side! — excellent research.
@ur momisugly Mr. Jimbo, Researcher Extraordinaire — terrific cites to evidence — AS USUAL.
And, Mr. Stendera, your post was THE BEST. A “joy” to read.
And, I just read this — bears repeating and with emphasis:
“They just can’t stop flying. Why??? Because they don’t believe that carbon dioxide will destroy the biosphere.”
[Jimbo 5:11PM]
@David Spurgeon –
Priceless, and oh so true. A hat tippo.
@Janice Moore –
I have a set of songs for voice and piano, of which the lead number is “Government is the Enemy of the People.” You might enjoy the words, bur as you might guess, the music is sufficiently and intentionally dissonant – to fit the subject matter of the texts. These were written more than 30 years ago, but sure seem to fit today.
@Jimbo –
Let’s make Al Gore disclose the carbon footprint of all his jet-setting around. I can smell the hypocrisy and kleptomania form here, can you?
A climate scaremonger flops on his back, flails his arms and shouts and people tell him to get lost. The Times They Are A-Changing. Would this have been the outcome even a year ago?
Jimbo, you made some fine comments here. Kudos.