Monthly Archive for March, 2011

The Truth, Still Inconvenient

From Paul Krugman, The New York Times

So the joke begins like this: An economist, a lawyer and a professor of marketing walk into a room. What’s the punch line? They were three of the five “expert witnesses” Republicans called for last week’s Congressional hearing on climate science.

But the joke actually ended up being on the Republicans, when one of the two actual scientists they invited to testify went off script.

Prof. Richard Muller of Berkeley, a physicist who has gotten into the climate skeptic game, has been leading the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, an effort partially financed by none other than the Koch foundation. And climate deniers — who claim that researchers at NASA and other groups analyzing climate trends have massaged and distorted the data — had been hoping that the Berkeley project would conclude that global warming is a myth.

Instead, however, Professor Muller reported that his group’s preliminary results find a global warming trend “very similar to that reported by the prior groups.”

The deniers’ response was both predictable and revealing; more on that shortly. But first, let’s talk a bit more about that list of witnesses, which raised the same question I and others have had about a number of committee hearings held since the G.O.P. retook control of the House — namely, where do they find these people?

To Read More…

Alison Anderson to Speak at Climate Change Conference in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

Alison Anderson is Professor of Sociology in the School of Social Science and Social Work at the University of Plymouth UK. She has a BA (Hons) in Sociology from the University of York and a PhD in ‘The Production of Environmental News’ from the University of Greenwich, and has researched and published extensively on media and environmental risks over the past twenty years. Her most recent co-authored book is Nanotechnology, Risk and Communication (Palgrave, 2009) and her forthcoming book is entitled Media, Environment and the Network Society (Palgrave, 2011). She has guest edited a number of special editions of journals including: Health, Risk and Society; Journal of Risk Research; New Genetics and Society and Sociological Research Online. Her Economic and Social Research Council and British Academy funded research on nanotechnologies is among the first on the social aspects of nanotechnologies in the UK. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Associate Founding Editor of the International Journal of Technoethics, editorial board member of Environmental Communication and Sociology and a founding member of the International Environmental Communication Association.

For more information, visit the Climate Change Conference web-site…

A Record-Making Effort

From The Economist

On Thursday March 31st Richard Muller of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory gave evidence to the energy and commerce committee of America’s House of Representatives on the surface temperature record. Without having yet bothered to check, Babbage can say with some certainty that this event will be much discussed in the blogosphere—as, oddly enough, it should be.

Here’s the short version of the reason why: a new and methodologically interesting study, carried out by people some of whom might have been expected to take a somewhat sceptical view on the issue, seems essentially to have confirmed the results of earlier work on the rate at which the earth’s temperature is rising. This makes suggestions that this rise is an artefact of bad measurement, or indeed a conspiracy of climatologists, even less credible than they were before.

Now here’s the much longer version.

There are two topics which, more than any other, can be guaranteed to set off arguments between those convinced of the reality and importance of humanity’s impact on the climate and those not so convinced. One revolves around the question of how reliable, if at all, statements about average global temperatures before about 1500 AD are. This is the so-called “hockey stick” debate. The amount of computer processing power and data storage capacity devoted to endless online discussions of the hockey stick— the subject featured in a great deal of the brouhaha over the “climategate” e-mails—must, by now, have the carbon footprint of a fair-sized Canadian city, which of course would worry one side of the argument not a whit.

To Read More…

Climate Change Journal Associate Editors

climate_frontAs part of the process of publishing The International Journal of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses all submissions are sent for peer refereeing, prior to publication.

Assessment, comments and guidance by the referees are an essential part of the publication process and invaluable to the authors of the submitted papers.

In recognition of the important role of referees, the international advisory board acknowledges all referees who have refereed papers as an ‘Associate Editor’ for the volume of the journal they have contributed to.

The Associate Editors listing for Volume 2 of  The International Journal of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses is now available.

Tree Tape by Nitipak Samse

From dezeen,

Designer Nitipak Samsen has created a measuring tape to translate the amount of carbon stored in a tree into the amount of carbon emitted by activities like breathing and car journeys.

To Read More…