Britain's Met Office has embarked on an urgent exercise to bolster the reputation of climate-change science after the furor over leaked e-mails, referred to as "Climate-gate."Too late. Right now all of those involved or connected in any way with globaloney are under suspicion. They'll have to do a lot more than sign statements to regain the trust of the people.
More than 1,700 scientists have agreed to sign a statement defending the "professional integrity" of global warming research. They were responding to a round-robin request from the Met Office, which has spent four days collecting signatures. The initiative is a sign of how worried it is that e-mails stolen from the University of East Anglia are fueling skepticism about man-made global warming at a critical moment in talks on carbon emissions.
One scientist said that he felt under pressure to sign the circular or risk losing work. The Met Office admitted that many of the signatories did not work on climate change.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Brits Scramble to Protect Globaloney
The British science community is watching their precious climate change dollars (or pounds) go bye-bye as ClimateGate unfolds, and they're circling the wagons in an attempt to keep climate change as a moneymaking issue:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment