Nature: The E-Mails Do Not Change the Reality of Human-Induced Warming
Climatologists under pressure
Nature, Dec. 3, 2009
Stolen
e-mails have revealed no scientific conspiracy, but do highlight ways
in which climate researchers could be better supported in the face of
public scrutiny.
The
e-mail archives stolen last month from the Climatic Research Unit at
the University of East Anglia (UEA), UK, have been greeted by the
climate-change-denialist fringe as a propaganda windfall. To these
denialists, the scientists' scathing remarks about certain
controversial palaeoclimate reconstructions qualify as the proverbial
'smoking gun': proof that mainstream climate researchers have
systematically conspired to suppress evidence contradicting their
doctrine that humans are warming the globe.
This
paranoid interpretation would be laughable were it not for the fact
that obstructionist politicians in the US Senate will probably use it
next year as an excuse to stiffen their opposition to the country's
much needed climate bill. Nothing in the e-mails undermines the
scientific case that global warming is real — or that human activities
are almost certainly the cause. That case is supported by multiple,
robust lines of evidence, including several that are completely
independent of the climate reconstructions debated in the e-mails.
First,
Earth's cryosphere is changing as one would expect in a warming
climate. These changes include glacier retreat, thinning and areal
reduction of Arctic sea ice, reductions in permafrost and accelerated
loss of mass from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. Second, the
global sea level is rising. The rise is caused in part by water pouring
in from melting glaciers and ice sheets, but also by thermal expansion
as the oceans warm. Third, decades of biological data on blooming dates
and the like suggest that spring is arriving earlier each year.
Denialists
often maintain that these changes are just a symptom of natural climate
variability. But when climate modellers test this assertion by running
their simulations with greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide held
fixed, the results bear little resemblance to the observed warming. The
strong implication is that increased greenhouse-gas emissions have
played an important part in recent warming, meaning that curbing the
world's voracious appetite for carbon is essential.
Mail trail
A
fair reading of the e-mails reveals nothing to support the denialists'
conspiracy theories. In one of the more controversial exchanges, UEA
scientists sharply criticized the quality of two papers that question
the uniqueness of recent global warming and vowed to keep at least the
first paper out of the upcoming Fourth Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Whatever the e-mail
authors may have said to one another in (supposed) privacy, however,
what matters is how they acted. And the fact is that, in the end,
neither they nor the IPCC suppressed anything: when the assessment
report was published in 2007 it referenced and discussed both papers.
If
there are benefits to the e-mail theft, one is to highlight yet again
the harassment that denialists inflict on some climate-change
researchers, often in the form of endless, time-consuming demands for
information under the US and UK Freedom of Information Acts.
Governments and institutions need to provide tangible assistance for
researchers facing such a burden.
The
e-mail theft also highlights how difficult it can be for climate
researchers to follow the canons of scientific openness, which require
them to make public the data on which they base their conclusions. This
is best done via open online archives, such as the ones maintained by
the IPCC and the US National Climatic Data Center.
Tricky business
But
for much crucial information the reality is very different. Researchers
are barred from publicly releasing meteorological data from many
countries owing to contractual restrictions. Moreover, in countries
such as Germany, France and the United Kingdom, the national
meteorological services will provide data sets only when researchers
specifically request them, and only after a significant delay. The lack
of standard formats can also make it hard to compare and integrate data
from different sources. Every aspect of this situation needs to change:
if the current episode does not spur meteorological services to improve
researchers' ease of access, governments should force them to do so.
The stolen e-mails have prompted queries about whether Nature
will investigate some of the researchers' own papers. One e-mail talked
of displaying the data using a 'trick' — slang for a clever (and
legitimate) technique, but a word that denialists have used to accuse
the researchers of fabricating their results. It is Nature's
policy to investigate such matters if there are substantive reasons for
concern, but nothing we have seen so far in the e-mails qualifies.
The
UEA responded too slowly to the eruption of coverage in the media, but
deserves credit for now being publicly supportive of the integrity of
its scientists while also holding an independent investigation of its
researchers' compliance with Britain's freedom of information
requirements.
In
the end, what the UEA e-mails really show is that scientists are human
beings — and that unrelenting opposition to their work can goad them to
the limits of tolerance, and tempt them to act in ways that undermine
scientific values. Yet it is precisely in such circumstances that
researchers should strive to act and communicate professionally, and
make their data and methods available to others, lest they provide
their worst critics with ammunition. After all, the pressures the UEA
e-mailers experienced may be nothing compared with what will emerge as
the United States debates a climate bill next year, and denialists use
every means at their disposal to undermine trust in scientists and
science.