Lindzen libeled by Nuccitelli

Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Dana Nuccitelli of Unskeptical Science has written a characteristically spiteful piece in the Guardian about Professor Lindzen. The piece constitutes a grave libel.

Britain, still to some extent a free country, is one up on the U.S. in allowing anyone – even a public figure – to sue for libel, especially where, as here, he is libeled in his profession. That typically triples the damages.

Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, here are Nuccitelli’s allegations, in bold and in order of appearance, followed in each instance by the truth.

Lindzen “is one of the approximately 3% of climate scientists who believe the human influence on climate is relatively small”.

Yet the data file attached to a paper Nuccitelli co-authored last year marked only 64 papers out of 11,944 – or just 0.5% – as stating they believed the human influence on climate is not “relatively small”, in that they agree with the IPCC that more than half of the global warming since 1950 was manmade. Nuccitelli knew there was no consensus.

Lindzen’s iris hypothesis that changes in water vapor would dampen global warming “have been refuted”, in that measurements show water vapor increasing in the atmosphere and amplifying global warming.

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Figure 1. Column water vapor, showing a decline from 1984-2012 at the crucial mid-troposphere pressure altitude.

Water vapor is not a well-mixed greenhouse gas and cannot be reliably measured. There are some measurements that purport to show column water vapor increasing in the atmosphere, and others, equally reputable (Fig. 1), that purport to show it decreasing.

In any event, Professor Lindzen’s iris hypothesis is concerned less with column water vapor and more with the occurrence and influence of a specific cloud type at altitude.

Lindzen was wrong to say climate change in the past 100 years has been minimal, in that “the current rate of warming is unprecedented over the past 11,000 years”.

The world warmed by 0.72 Cº in the past 100 years (HadCRUt4, December 1913 to November 2013). This rate of warming is far from “unprecedented over the past 11,000 years”. In Central England, warming at a rate equivalent to 4.33 Cº/century (Fig. 2) was measured over the four decades 1694-1733. That rate, six times the rate observed in the past 100 years, occurred before the Industrial Revolution even began.

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Figure 2. Central England temperature anomalies and trend, January 1694 to December 1733.

The Central England record is a reasonable proxy for global temperature change because the region is at an appropriate latitude. To verify this, I compared the Central England regional temperature record and the mean of the HadCRUt4, GISS, and NCDC global temperature datasets over the 120 years December 1893 to November 2013. The 120-year period was chosen because it is a multiple of 60 years, canceling out any distorting effects of the 60-year cycles of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

Results (Fig. 3) show that the Central England record, which began in 1659, is indeed a respectable proxy for global temperature change in the period before the global instrumental record began in 1850.

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Figure 3. The global temperature anomaly record (above) shows warming at a rate equivalent to 0.74 Cº/century. The Central England record (below) shows much the same: 0.78 Cº/century equivalent.

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The warming of the 20th century was not “unprecedented”. On the evidence of the warming of 1694 to 1733 in central England, it was well within natural variability.

The “15-year pause myth” is “completely debunked … surface warming over the past decade turns out to be more than double previous estimates”.

Once again, it is necessary to look at the actual data. The mean of all five principal global temperature datasets shows no global warming for almost 13 years; the RSS satellite dataset shows no global warming for 17 years 4 months; and the Central England dataset shows no warming for 25 full years (Fig. 4).

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Figure 4. Zero global warming for 13, 17, and 25 years respectively.

Given the unanimity of the global temperature records demonstrating The Pause, it cannot be credibly stated that it has been “completely debunked”: and still less was it appropriate for Mr. Nuccitelli viciously to attack Professor Lindzen on this ground.

The climate “continues to accumulate heat at a rate equivalent to 4 Hiroshima bomb detonations per second”.

That statement is tendentiously political, not scientific, and it has no scientific basis. Since the outer boundary of the Earth-atmosphere system is outer space, the appropriate measure to determine whether radiant energy is in net terms accumulating in the atmosphere is the time-integral of total solar irradiance. On that basis, even if one were to believe the IPCC’s now-discredited estimates of climate sensitivity, it is possible – indeed, quite likely – that a net loss of energy from the Earth-atmosphere system is now underway. If so, global temperature may even fall, in which event the “4 Hiroshimas per second” meme is still more clearly demonstrable nonsense.

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Figure 5. The IPCC abandons the models’ more extreme projections.

“The accuracy of climate models” has been “much better than Lindzen claims”.

Even the IPCC no longer buys that one. For the first time in its undistinguished history, it has explicitly accepted that the models are unreliable and has substituted its “expert judgment” for the models’ output. It is worth repeating the two graphs (Fig. 5) showing the IPCC’s startling but universally-unreported climbdown.

The first graph shows, in pink, the IPCC’s 0.4-1.0 Cº projection for the next 30 years, visibly in line with the models, from the pre-final draft of the 2013 Fifth Assessment Report. The second graph shows, in green, the drastically-revised projection of 0.3-0.7 Cº, with a best estimate below the mid-range and hence in the region of 0.4 Cº. Thus, the former mid-range estimate becomes the high-end estimate, and the former low-end estimate becomes the best estimate – a drop of almost half compared with the previous mid-range estimate.

Even this new, drastically-reduced estimate may well be excessive. The monthly Global Warming Prediction Index (Fig. 6), now adjusted to show the lower IPCC projections, still shows the prediction running hot compared with observed reality.

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Figure 6. The Global Warming Prediction Index, showing the IPCC’s predicted temperature change in the nine years 2005-2013 overshooting observation by an eighth of a Celsius degree, equivalent to 1.5 Cº/century.

Lindzen was wrong to say that the likelihood over the next century of greenhouse warming reaching magnitudes comparable to natural variability seemed small.

Since natural variability has yielded warming at 4.33 Cº/century within the past 350 years, Professor Lindzen is very likely to prove correct in saying that warming by 2100 will be unlikely to exceed natural variability. Here Nuccitelli is blaming Professor Lindzen for exercising his professional judgment, which is very likely to prove a great deal closer to the mark than the amateur prejudice of Nuccitelli.

There is “much more [warming] to come over the next century”.

Nuccitelli is entitled to his no-doubt profitable opinion, but on the evidence there could be as little as 1 Cº global warming between now and 2100.

Hansen’s prediction of future warming made in 1988 has proven closer to reality than a prediction based on statements by Lindzen in 1989

Mr. Nuccitelli’s chief evidence for this claim is Fig. 7, which purports to show the global temperature record compared with James Hansen’s 1988 temperature projection and with an imagined projection by Professor Lindzen.

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Figure 7. Nuccitelli’s graph purporting to show that Hansen’s global warming projection of 1988 proved closer to outturn than Lindzen’s supposed projection of 1989.

However, Nuccitelli’s graph is gravely defective at the four points labeled A to D in Fig. 6:

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Figure 6. The four defects A-D in Nuccitelli’s graph.

The four defects in Nuccitelli’s graph are as follows. A jury would take a dim view:

A: Before the U.S. Senate on 23 June 1988, Hansen said that his Scenario A, which predicted 0.5 Cº/decade warming to 2060, was the “business-as-usual” case; yet Nuccitelli has only shown Hansen’s less exaggerated Scenario B.

B. Nuccitelli talks of Professor Lindzen having made a prediction in 1989: yet his fictitious graph of Lindzen’s imaginary “prediction” is fully half a Celsius degree below the observed temperature in 1989.

C: Nuccitelli carefully omits to show the last few years of no global warming, concealing the fact that the observed outturn is now well below even Hansen’s Scenario B.

D: Nuccitelli assumes negligible natural variability, when it is not less than 1 Cº/century.

The major difference between Lindzen and Galileo was that Galileo was right.

Actually, Galileo was wrong. The Church, as well as informed scientific opinion, had long agreed that the Earth orbits the Sun and not the other way about. However, Galileo had drawn inappropriate theological conclusions from heliocentricity, perpetrating the notorious non sequitur that since the Earth was not the centre of the Universe the Incarnation and Crucifixion were of less importance than the Church maintained. It was Galileo’s theological conclusion the Church objected to, not the scientific conclusion that the Sun is at the center of the solar system. Galileo had persisted in a curmudgeonly refusal to recant his non sequitur. Seven of the ten cardinals who tried him offered him a compromise: if he would recant his assertion that the Earth went round the Sun his theological conclusion would fall away and there would be no need for him to recant it. He agreed to this: but three of the Cardinals, to their credit, refused to sign this nonsensical agreement, to which neither the majority of the Bench nor the accused ought ever to have assented.

Professor Lindzen is “an outlier whose arguments have been disproved time and time again, including about the link between smoking and lung cancer”.

Not one of Professor Lindzen’s arguments has been “disproved”, though several have not been fashionable and have been opposed, on various generally shaky grounds, in the literature. It is a serious libel to suggest that his arguments have been “disproved” when they have merely been disagreed with in some quarters.

And, as far as I know, Professor Lindzen does not dispute the well-established link between smoking and lung cancer, though he would be within his rights to dispute the imagined link between passive smoking and lung cancer. There is a 1:10 million risk that a non-smoker will contract lung cancer, and a 1:8 million risk that a passive smoker will contract lung cancer. The difference between the two risk rates is statistically insignificant.

The EPA’s decision to regulate passive smoke as though it were a class A carcinogen was vacated by a U.S. Federal District Judge in North Carolina in 1998. The judge said: “The court is faced with the ugly possibility that EPA adopted a methodology for each chapter, without explanation, based on the outcome sought in that chapter.” The court also noted an EPA internal document admitting that the evidence was insufficient to classify passively-inhaled smoke as a class A carcinogen, and that the EPA had not followed its own classification guidelines. The court found evidence that the EPA had cherry-picked its data, and used the term “cherry-picked” in its judgment. The court held that EPA’s exclusion of nearly half the available studies violated its own guidelines, which required it to review all the available evidence. EPA was also held to have fallen foul of the law by explicitly refusing to research all aspects of indoor air quality.

Interestingly, the court also found that EPA, in switching from the usual 95% to a 90% statistical confidence interval, “to increase the likelihood that its meta-analysis would appear statistically significant”. That is exactly what the IPCC did in 2007. Even then, the EPA found a relative risk of only 1.19, which is only “weakly associative”; and, if it had included the studies it had excluded, it would not have been able to demonstrate a relative risk greater than unity at all. EPA had adopted an a priori position and had then adjusted the statistical methodology and sampling in an attempt to confirm that position.

The court concluded that, “Using its own methodology and its selected studies, EPA did not demonstrate a statistically significant association between ETS and lung cancer. … EPA changed its methodology to find a statistically significant association.”

If, therefore, Professor Lindzen challenges the EPA’s self-justifying association between passive smoking and lung cancer, he is in excellent company.

Gentlemen of the jury, those are the facts. You have heard Mr. Nuccitelli’s arguments, and you have heard the response of science to them. Briefly, let us consider the law.

At many points, Nuccitelli has flagrantly misrepresented the scientific position with intent to harm Professor Lindzen’s reputation, and at some point it can be shown that he knew the truth but chose to suppress or misstate it. At many other points, he has presented the science as though it were settled when in fact Professor Lindzen’s position remains undisproved, even though some may disagree with it. And Nuccitelli’s attempt to smear him by falsely accusing him of repudiating the link between lung cancer and smoking was calculated still further to damage his reputation, at the point of his retirement, by suggesting – incorrectly – an entire disregard of the scientific method on his part.

Gentlemen of the jury, you are also entitled to take into consideration the unpleasant, malicious, spiteful tone of Mr. Nuccitelli’s article, its wide circulation on the website of a substantial national newspaper, and Mr. Nuccitelli’s failure to consult Professor Lindzen to verify the facts before what you may well regard as a malevolent and wholly unjustifiable attempt at professional and character assassination for purely partisan political reasons, and without a shred of scientific justification at any point.

What is your verdict? From my own knowledge of the Professor and his distinguished work, I find Nuccitelli’s piece misleading, offensive, and cruel. Damages will be huge.

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January 14, 2014 1:44 am

I thought the new UK Defamation Act of 2013 requires the website to allow the maligned person, when the author is identifiable, to rebut the author’s accusations.

jones
January 14, 2014 1:47 am

Another gem…Lots of the D word he categorically denied ever using in the Guardian….
“DanaNuccitelli commented on Attacks on climate science by former NASA staff shouldn’t be taken seriously.
13 Apr 2012 8:40pm
22
As far as I know there is nobody on either side of this argument that does not accept that CO2 has a warming effect
There are a lot of climate denialists who deny that CO2 has a warming effect. Many argue that the greenhouse effect violates the Second Law of Thermodynamics, for example. Others argue that CO2 is heavier than air and thus can’t contribute to the greenhouse effect – most recently Joe Bastardi on Fox News. There’s a whole group of people writing about ‘Slaying the Sky Dragon’ who believe this ‘CO2 can’t cause warming’ nonsense. Quite a few ‘contrarians’ (i.e. Roy Spencer, Fred Singer, Anthony Watts) have been trying to distance themselves from these hardcore deniers recently.
As we’ve seen in this comment thread, there are a lot of different things that climate denialists deny. If you put any two climate denialists in a room together, odds are very good that their beliefs on the subject will contradict each other.
.
http://discussion.theguardian.com/comment-permalink/15635126

Kon Dealer
January 14, 2014 1:57 am

I’m afraid it doesn’t matter what the truth is.
Nut-job-celli has his “truth” down in print in “The Guardian”- which informs the BBC and the left-wing liberal “elite” that govern in the UK.
Ergo it will be believed and has served its purpose.
The only way to counter it is for Professor Lindzen to sue for libel.

January 14, 2014 2:00 am

Excellent article as usual, Lord Monckton.
[For the record, William Connolley tucked tail and ran when I suggested a debate over global warming at Oxford between you and him. Not surprising, since he is the one person who I believe has even less integrity and ethics than Nuccitelli.]
Plese keep these articles coming. Exposing the banruptcy of the MMGW clique is important — and they make it so easy.

Txomin
January 14, 2014 2:03 am

The drama is entertaining. A big thanks to the Guardian for giving Nuccitelli a chance to bless the world with his genius.

January 14, 2014 2:06 am

PJ Clarke,
You are the FAIL here. The quote, as you admitted, was of the instrumental record.
If you have a better proxy of 1600’s England temperatures, why don’t you post it for us?

Bertram Felden
January 14, 2014 2:17 am

I would imagine that Lindzen has rather more productive things to do with his time than to swat a gnat.

Bugs Man
January 14, 2014 2:21 am

@negrum
negrum says:
January 14, 2014 at 1:14 am
Bugs Man says:
January 13, 2014 at 11:22 pm
” ” …Even if Lord Monckton’s assertions are correct, the time and effort needed to support them are not justified, ….”,
—-l
” Not even a single citatation? The matter is clearly more complex than I originally thought :),
” As a rule, CAGW supporters are filetted here when stating contentious views without adequate backup or reasoning. I feel that this sceptical method should apply to everyone, no matter how noble their cause or educational their post.”
I am not at all sure that I understand the point you are making. Please clarify, and I’ll do my best to answer you.

January 14, 2014 2:23 am

If I were Professor Lindzen, I’d test the strength of the potential libel case by approaching a canny firm of lawyers (such as those who recently heavily defeated the Scottish “government” on my behalf) and asking them to decide whether they’d be willing to take the case on a contingency basis – no foal, no fee.
To those who say the piece is not libel, I reply that I have never lost any libel suit that I brought, for as a former professional journalist I am trained in libel law. The piece is plainly and gravely defamatory of Professor Lindzen in his profession; it was published on the website of a substantial national newspaper; it was calculated to damage him; and, contrary to one commenter’s impression that the Defamation Act 2013 would make the case harder to prove, it would actually make it easier to prove.
Since Professor Lindzen has nothing to lose by quietly briefing a firm of lawyers and asking whether they will take the case on a contingency basis, at no cost to him in any event, that is what I should recommend.
As to Galileo, the papers in the trial case are available. Those who disagree with my account may like to read them. One commenter asserts that the doctrine of transubstantiation had only recently been declared in Galileo’s time. On the contrary, it had been declared by Christ Himself, Who said, “This is my body”, without ifs or buts. Some years ago, reading the letters of Pliny to the Roman Emperor Trajan, I came across Pliny’s account of these strange creatures the Christians. Pliny wrote, “They make their God and then they eat Him”. This is one of the earliest independent testimonies to the fact that the early Church indeed believed in what later came to be called transubstantiation.
That said, I should not be inclined to found the case on the Galileo episode, which I mentioned in passing only for interest. The case should be founded on the wilful misrepresentations of the science perpetrated by Nutticelli. To those who say it is not the place of a judge to decide questions of science, I say that – for instance – a judge is perfectly capable of deciding that Nutticelli was inaccurate when he denied The Pause, or when he pretended that there was a 97% “consensus”. One commenter has provided useful evidence to establish that Nutticelli’s attention had been drawn to the falsity of the basis for his belief that The Pause had been “completely debunked” but had chosen to suppress it in the comment thread at Unskeptical Science.
The plaintiff in a libel case has the right to choose whether the case should be heard by a judge or by a jury. If anything, a jury would be even more shocked than a judge by Nutticelli’s simply making up a supposed “prediction” by Professor Lindzen. That, because the evidence is visual, and because it is quite clear that Lindzen never drew any curve such as the blue curve in Fig. 7, The curve is a fiction, and a serious one.
As Lord Birkenhead, then F.E. Smith, wrote in the Unilever libel case (and this was his entire written Opinion): “The libel is grave. Damages will be extensive.”

January 14, 2014 2:49 am

M Courtney says:
January 14, 2014 at 1:25 am
Are you saying your comments had sections removed and then were answered? If you are this is a very good story. I think Chris Booker would go with that. Something similar happened before on the Guardian Monbiot blog re Pauchauri. We could tie the two stories together.
Nutty is not the story, the story is the editorial policy of the Guardian.

January 14, 2014 3:10 am

I am saying that the comments were in a sequence referring back to each other as their is a limit to how large a comment can be.
The comments that linked to the IPCC AR5 were not displayed.
The comments that referred to those comments with the link were displayed and Nucitelli just said “you are wrong”.
He was lying and he knew it.
An example:
This comment:
http://discussion.theguardian.com/comment-permalink/30510968
Only makes sense because I had earlier linked to the IPCC AR5 saying that:

However, an analysis of the full suite of CMIP5 historical simulations (augmented for the period 2006–2012 by RCP4.5 simulations, Section 9.3.2) reveals that 111 out of 114 realisations show a GMST trend over 1998–2012 that is higher than the entire HadCRUT4 trend ensemble (Box 9.2 Figure 1a; CMIP5 ensemble-mean trend is 0.21 ºC per decade). This difference between simulated and observed trends could be caused by some combination of (a) internal climate variability, (b) missing or incorrect radiative forcing, and (c) model response error. These potential sources of the difference, which are not mutually exclusive, are assessed below, as is the cause of the observed GMST trend hiatus.

Dana replied “Sorry, this comment is total BS. Nothing more to say about it. Try reading the above article again (or perhaps for the first time).”
I was not the person spouting Bad Speech.

negrum
January 14, 2014 3:11 am

Bugs Man says:
January 14, 2014 at 2:21 am
” …I am not at all sure that I understand the point you are making. Please clarify, and I’ll do my best to answer you. ”
—-l
My apologies. I did not express myself clearly.
I feel that the unusual statement : ” …Actually, Galileo was wrong. The Church, as well as informed scientific opinion, had long agreed that the Earth orbits the Sun and not the other way about.” deserves a discussion. It seems to run counter to what I thought was accepted as historic fact, and as such I find it surprising that there is no citation (all the other points seem very well backed up).
My point was that we would not let such a statement pass from a CAGW supporter, and as such it would be best to clarify the matter. I see that trial papers have been mentioned. That is what I was looking for.

PJ Clarke.
January 14, 2014 3:15 am

db Stealey
SO you really are saying it is legitimate to equate modern temperatures in Central England as measured in weather stations, with pre-mercury measurements in unheated rooms in an entirely different country? The curators of the data themselves warn that no daily series truly representative of CET can begin before about 1770
Fascinating.

harrywr2
January 14, 2014 3:45 am

Fortunately for Mr Nuccitelli, in US Libel law, the person committing the libel must be a ‘credible’ source.
I.E. The mentally retarded ,mentally ill and others deemed to be incapable of distinguishing between fact, fiction and delusions can not be charged with libel.
IMHO As we are talking about people who seriously believe that people who disagree with climate alarmism must also deny the moon landing I think the case can be made that they are incapable of distinquishing between fact and fiction.

ozspeaksup
January 14, 2014 3:52 am

looks like others agree re the Nutter..
Visualizing How Big Dana’s Lies Are
by stevengoddard
Hansen’s 1988 BAU forecast for scenario A was a complete disaster. They weren’t even in the ballpark. Popular Science – Google Books This is what Dana shows in his 100% fraudulent graph.

alacran
January 14, 2014 4:30 am

Who the heck is Dana Nullicetti?
When a wise man sometimes gives “The Fool”,- he plays,
more difficult is it inverse ways!

January 14, 2014 4:47 am

My question/comment was on how easy suing for Libel in the UK was, but Lord Monckton answered that in one of the comments. I sincerely hope Lindzen sues Nuccitelli. Disagreement is one thing. name calling is even mild compared to attempting to destroy a person’s professional reputation due to your own petulance and ignorance. Nuccitelli is a bully. But a very weak one. He should be thumped for his lying, and malevolence.

January 14, 2014 5:02 am

M Courtney says:
January 14, 2014 at 3:10 am
RE Guardian manipulating evidence they do not like, this is an account of what happened to me:
http://www.bishop-hill.net/blog/2010/9/18/george-monbiot-scrubbing-the-record-clean.html
“About midday the inconvenient evidence that I provided at the Guardian forum, along with discussions of that evidence with aghast Monbiot fans were removed from the thread. The thread was closed down.
Every single comment about the accounts was removed.”
Booker and North were thinking of using it, but other stuff crowded the topic out. What has happened to you has similarities. It is about manipulating bad news to pull teh wool over teh eyes of their readers.

January 14, 2014 5:05 am

I agree with Scottish Sceptic that it is important that someone finally sues an alarmist for this sort of libelous behaviour. It is the next wall to break down – to establish in court exactly what a ‘d–ier’ does and does not really think, and to expose the vitriol and lies of people like Dana.
Having said that, I would understand completely why Prof. Lindzen may not want to take such a step in this case.

Charles.U.Farley
January 14, 2014 5:07 am

Send him to the antarctic, he can go dig out an ice breaker or two.

jones
January 14, 2014 5:16 am

Julian in Wales,
Exactly the same has happened to me and I have never been abusive or threatening nor incited others.
I have also had whole swathes of comments actually removed in their entirety.
I have even had comments removed in toto in which I have simply linked to another article in the G itself!? (I have a screengrab of that one)…not O/T link either, just contradictory to the narrative on that particular day/week….
It really would be funny if the real world implications of what’s going on weren’t so serious.
The G also alters text in comments too to alter meaning.
It really has turned into a reactive gutter rag…

sherlock1
January 14, 2014 5:17 am

Just sorting out ‘the study’ with my lady wife, as a feeble precusor to putting our house on the market in the spring, came across Richard Lindzen’s Wall Street Journal article in June 2006, no less, entitled: “There is no ‘consensus’ on global warming”…
Just musing on the fact that the ‘alarmists’ are still shouting at full volume seven years later…
Still a lot of work to do, folks…

January 14, 2014 5:18 am

Julian in Wales says at January 14, 2014 at 5:02 am….
Interesting. I found that comments were allowed and a diverse opinion welcomed durung the Peter Gleick affaiir. In fact, I only noticed a change in censrship policy when Dana joined the Enviroinment section.
Maybe they have special rules for their named columnists sos a their brands can deliberately deceive.

January 14, 2014 5:28 am

Threatening legal action against clearly fraudulent warmist claims has had results in one case I was involved in.
The case was a report to the ASA in the UK about claims made in a political document linked to a local council publication.
The ASA ruled that political documents were ultra vires for its actions, but the resultant kerfuffle at the council resulted in in all references to renewable energy and climate change vanishing from the article, and never reappearing in subsequent ones.
I think the skeptic cause is well served by some legal action being prosecuted, and this may well be the place to start.

ConTrari
January 14, 2014 5:34 am

The last quote about smoking is a bit outspoken, but the other quotes are not in my view bad enough to justify the word “libel”. I had expected something far worse. And who cares about Nucci anyway? The worse the ranting, the better for all who oppose the climate hysteria.
Nuccitelli and his friends can quietly start backpaddling, or go down screaming. The latter is far more satisfying, so I hope he will stick to his “libel” policy.

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