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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 3, 2010 16:46:36 GMT
Latest IPCC Exaggeration3 Feb 2010 IPCC AR4 reported: "The Netherlands is an example of a country highly susceptible to both sea-level rise and river flooding because 55% of its territory is below sea level where 60% of its population lives and 65% of its Gross National Product (GNP) is produced." Dutch newspaper Vrij Nederland reported today : "In its last Assessment Report on the impacts of climate change shows that 55% of Netherlands is below sea level in this area and that 65% of the gross national product is produced. These figures are far too high. The Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) says only one fifth of the Netherlands is below sea level and only 19% instead of 65% of the GDP is generated there." climateaudit.org/2010/02/03/latest-ipcc-exaggeration/Do these "details" matter? You Bet!
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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 4, 2010 13:07:47 GMT
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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 5, 2010 0:06:37 GMT
"Politicians angered by latest IPCC error
Reason for their ire is a flawed statement about sea-levels in the Netherlands. In the IPCC 2007 Report, 55 percent of the Netherlands is reported to lie below sea-level and 65 percent of its GDP would depend on economic activity located in that part of the country."
"Following a review by the Dutch Central Statistics Bureau (CBS) it now appears that the IPCC's numbers are wrong. According to the CBS, only 20 percent of the country is situated below sea-level supporting 19 percent of GDP."
"Environment Minister Cramer said to be "very concerned" and "not prepared to accept any more mistakes". Liberal party representative Népperus said she wants recommendations currently under consideration by the "Delta Commission" to be postponed. "I'm not saying that sea-levels aren't rising", she said, "but there is a big difference between spending 100 billion or 80 billion Euros on reinforcement of our coastal defenses".
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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 5, 2010 0:16:14 GMT
Diederik Samsom is a Dutch politician and has been a member of the Dutch House of Representatives for the Labour Party (PvdA) since January 30, 2003. Before that he was the CEO of a green energy company and a campaigner for Greenpeace Netherlands. Samsom is the party's spokesperson on environmental issues. The speech is interesting not just because it shows how the issues with the IPCC are being interpreted in a political context, but by a politician who (and whose party) has been very supportive of action on climate. Mr. Samson (PvdA): “Mr Chairman. Something has gone seriously wrong with the international climate panel. There are sizable errors in the panel’s report. The thorough correction process, which everyone always has been keen on, has failed. That is in the words of the minister “disturbing”. That is correct. However, more than disturbing – that is, outrageous – would it be if it turns out that the author of the contested Himalaya-passage indeed had political motives for embroiding the text. Will the minister vow that she will have this last allegation investigated to the bottom and inform the Chamber quickly about it? The minster writes in her letter that she will insist on sharpening internal IPCC procedures. Rightfully so. However, the PvdA-fraction does not think this is sufficient. She realizes that this Chamber is not debating the faith of IPCC boss, mr. Pachauri, because neither the Chamber nor the minister are his employer. Does the minister share the opinion that for recovering faith more is needed than revising procedures? And if so, which possible additional measures does she have in mind for this? Finally, I would like to ask the minister to have the “Planbureau for the Living Environment” on the shortest possible notice prepare a new version of their regular review of the state of the knowledge about climate. Obviously taking into account an evaluation of the scientific implications of the recently discovered errors. Does this mean all is said and done? No, because we also have to talk about ourselves, about the way in which politics has run off with the science, about how she has pushed scientists towards either side of the debate and by doing so they themselves have undermined the neutrality of that science, neutrality which we are now calling for. How does a scientific discipline far away from politics function, like for example the mating behavior of fruit flies? A researcher finds that two orange fruit flies process orange offspring. Until a colleague discovers a different result; they produce green offspring. Both of them check each other’s work, test their own results again, start a debate, think about it, and lo and behold, the theory of dominant and recessive genes is born. That is the beauty of scientific progress. But within climate science this beauty has been long gone. When the Dutchman Damsté recently published a paper about a new theory about the reduction of snow on the Kilimanjaro, the Dutch magazine “Elsevier” obviously and immediately presented the headline: “Dutchman falsifies Al Gores climate evidence”. Damsté let me know in an email that he regrets that this message had been taken completely out of context. There was no talk of falsification, but rather a useful contribution for understanding the complex processes leading to the reduced snowcap over there, but for this nuance there is no room anymore in the climate debate. Rather than that the work by Damsté leads to reconsideration and scientific progress, the results are immediately – before the ink is even dry - shredded to pieces in an overheated public arena of the climate debate, not it the last place by politicians themselves. The abuse of the science which then occurs, contorts, politicizes and perverts the same science, and so we should not only be appalled and start to cry when the science falters, but we should dive into our own bossom. Science has to be neutral. She has to be a home where there is room for everyone. We must be able to base our politicial opinions – no matter how different – on the same scientific knowledge. The political debate has to be about choices that can be made on the basis of that same knowledge and not degenerate into some quarreling about the question which knowledge is true and which is not. One side, let me call it “my side”, has been too easy on stating that the science does not provide any room for other choices than immediate action. We have defacto removed “the others” from the house. Mr. De Mos and his kindred spirits have left that scientific house rather enthousiastically, and retreated themselves in the blogosphere, and all to easy now restrict themselves into the denying all science. And while we now frenetically try to keep the door closed, they are throwing in the windows with bricks. As far as I am concerned the lesson for us all today should be that I open the door and mr. de Mos drops his bricks. Then it is not only IPCC, but also us, who learn a valuable lesson." rogerpielkejr.blogspot.com/2010/02/what-happens-when-dike-shows-cracks.html#comments
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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 19, 2010 9:47:19 GMT
Sacked KNMI Director wiped the floor with the climate know-it–alls as early as the 1990’s Henk Tennekes was made to clear his desk and resign as Director of the KNMI (Dutch Meteorological Institute). His sin? In a newspaper column the world-renowned meteorologist had disproved all the bold claims about climate change. IPCC is run by a clique of only a few dozen people. He has now rsigned from the Dutch National Science Academy. De Telegraff February 13, 2010 www.probeinternational.org/files/UKVersieHenkTennekes.pdf
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Post by marchesarosa on Feb 19, 2010 10:00:26 GMT
Tennekes submitted a letter of resignation to the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences on Saturday, January 23, 2010. He wrote to me (Roger Pielke Sr) “I don’t want to remain a member of an organization that, like AMS and NAS, screws up science that badly.” The Academy President at that time, Frits van Oostrom did not bother to respond. See his letter of resignation here: pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2010/02/12/henk-tennekes-resigns-from-dutch-academy/
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