At his BBC blog Andrew Neil
lays out the itemized fraud from the 2007 UN IPCC report that
has been rolling out in recent days, previously reported by the
BBC and other formerly
mainstream media as “sound” and “consensus” science. So many
“Gates,” and so many discredited reporters:
But the flood gates really opened after
the IPCC had
to withdraw its claim that the Himalayan glaciers would likely
all have melted by 2035, maybe even sooner.
This turned out to have no basis in scientific fact, even
though everything the IPCC produces is meant to be rigorously
peer-reviewed, but simply an error recycled by the [World
Wildlife Fund], which the IPCC swallowed whole….
Then at the weekend another howler was exposed. The IPCC
2007 report claimed that global warming was leading to an
increase in extreme weather, such as hurricanes and floods.
Like its claims about the glaciers, this was also based on an
unpublished report which had not been subject to scientific
scrutiny — indeed several experts warned the IPCC not to rely
on it.
Now after Climate-gate,
Glacier-gate and
Hurricane-gate — how many “gates” can one report
contain? — comes
Amazon-gate. The IPCC claimed that up to 40 percent of the
Amazonian forests were risk from global warming and would
likely be replaced by “tropical savannas” if temperatures
continued to rise.
This claim is backed up by a scientific-looking reference
but on closer investigation turns out to be yet another
non-peer reviewed piece of work from the WWF. Indeed the two
authors are not even scientists or specialists on the Amazon:
one is an Australian policy analyst, the other a freelance
journalist for the Guardian and a green activist.
Yep, this is the “scientific consensus” that Al Gore based his
post-VP life upon; the imagined groundswell that so many
politicians used to justify government growth; the nonexistent
evidence that journalists
cited to justify their
alarmism activism. It’s the two words that every global
warmist (whether lying or deceived themselves) threw in the face
of skeptics in an attempt to intimidate. Didn’t work!
No wonder why
hardly any of them wanted to debate and those who did
got slaughtered. We tried to
explain that the
“consensus” was
an illusion. You — yes, I’m talking about you, Society of Environmental
Journalists — would have none of it.
Now you’re stuck in the shoes of the environmental equivalent of
Jayson Blair as your newspapers and television stations fall
apart, and while what’s left of your audience
doesn’t care about the
issue you
hold so precious. But it’s your good fortune that you still
qualify for the do-nothing flack positions that are plentiful in
both government and nonprofit arms of the environoia industry.