LEADING
SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS 'ARE CENSORING DEBATE ON GLOBAL WARMING'
The Sunday
Telegraph, 1 May 2005, Plus correspondence with Science
LEADING SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS 'ARE CENSORING DEBATE ON GLOBAL WARMING'
The Sunday Telegraph, 1 May 2005
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/05/01/wglob01.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/05/01/ixworld.html
By Robert Matthews
Two of the world's leading scientific journals have come under fire from
researchers for refusing to publish papers which challenge fashionable wisdom
over global warming.
A British authority on
natural catastrophes who disputed whether climatologists really agree that the
Earth is getting warmer because of human activity, says his work was rejected
by the American publication, Science, on the flimsiest of grounds.
A separate team of
climate scientists, which was regularly used by Science and the journal Nature
to review papers on the progress of global warming, said it was dropped after
attempting to publish its own research which raised doubts over the issue.
The controversy follows
the publication by Science in December of a paper which claimed to have
demonstrated complete agreement among climate experts, not only that global
warming is a genuine phenomenon, but also that mankind is to blame.
The author of the
research, Dr Naomi Oreskes, of the University of California, analysed almost
1,000 papers on the subject published since the early 1990s, and concluded that
75 per cent of them either explicitly or implicitly backed the consensus view,
while none directly dissented from it.
Dr Oreskes's study is now
routinely cited by those demanding action on climate change, including the
Royal Society and Prof Sir David King, the Government's chief scientific
adviser.
However, her unequivocal
conclusions immediately raised suspicions among other academics, who knew of
many papers that dissented from the pro-global warming line.
They included Dr Benny
Peiser, a senior lecturer in the science faculty at Liverpool John Moores
University, who decided to conduct his own analysis of the same set of 1,000
documents - and concluded that only one third backed the consensus view, while
only one per cent did so explicitly.
Dr Peiser submitted his
findings to Science in January, and was asked to edit his paper for publication
- but has now been told that his results have been rejected on the grounds that
the points he make had been "widely dispersed on the internet".
Dr Peiser insists that he
has kept his findings strictly confidential. "It is simply not true that
they have appeared elsewhere already," he said.
A spokesman for Science
said Dr Peiser's research had been rejected "for a variety of
reasons", adding: "The information in the letter was not perceived to
be novel."
Dr Peiser rejected this:
"As the results from my analysis refuted the original claims, I believe
Science has a duty to publish them."
Dr Peiser is not the only
academic to have had work turned down which criticises the findings of Dr
Oreskes's study. Prof Dennis Bray, of the GKSS National Research Centre in
Geesthacht, Germany, submitted results from an international study showing that
fewer than one in 10 climate scientists believed that climate change is
principally caused by human activity.
As with Dr Peiser's
study, Science refused to publish his rebuttal. Prof Bray told The Telegraph:
"They said it didn't fit with what they were intending to publish."
Prof Roy Spencer, at the
University of Alabama, a leading authority on satellite measurements of global
temperatures, told The Telegraph: "It's pretty clear that the editorial
board of Science is more interested in promoting papers that are pro-global
warming. It's the news value that is most important."
He said that after his
own team produced research casting doubt on man-made global warming, they were
no longer sent papers by Nature and Science for review - despite being
acknowledged as world leaders in the field.
As a result, says Prof
Spencer, flawed research is finding its way into the leading journals, while
attempts to get rebuttals published fail. "Other scientists have had the
same experience", he said. "The journals have a small set of
reviewers who are pro-global warming."
Concern about bias within
climate research has spread to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
whose findings are widely cited by those calling for drastic action on global
warming. In January, Dr Chris Landsea, an expert on hurricanes with the United
States National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, resigned from the
IPCC, claiming that it was "motivated by pre-conceived agendas" and
was "scientifically unsound".
A spokesman for Science
denied any bias against sceptics of man-made global warming. "You will
find in our letters that there is a wide range of opinion," she said.
"We certainly seek to cover dissenting views."
Dr Philip Campbell, the
editor-in-chief of Nature, said that the journal was always happy to publish
papers that go against perceived wisdom, as long as they are of acceptable
scientific quality.
"The idea that we
would conspire to suppress science that undermines the idea of anthropogenic
climate change is both false and utterly naive about what makes journals
thrive," he said.
Dr Peiser said the
stifling of dissent and preoccupation with doomsday scenarios is bringing
climate research into disrepute. "There is a fear that any doubt will be
used by politicians to avoid action," he said. "But if political
considerations dictate what gets published, it's all over for science."
Copyright 2005, The
Sunday Telegraph