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« 11 days later | Main | He never said it »
Thursday
Feb112010

Russell review under way

The BBC seems to be first out of the block in reporting on the Russell Review's first appearance at a news conference an hour ago.

The most interesting part is the identities of the panellists:

  • Geoffrey Boulton, general secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (Professor of Geology)
  • Dr Philip Campbell, editor-in-chief for Nature journal
  • Professor Peter Clarke of the University of Edinburgh (a particle physicist by background, he now heads the e-Science Centre at Edinburgh)
  • David Eyton, head of research and technology at BP
  • Professor Jim Norton, vice president for the Chartered Institute for IT.

There seem to have been no changes to the scope of the review.

My first reaction is that the appointment of Philip Campbell will be severely criticised, given Nature's highly questionable role in some of the back story to the Hockey Stick affair and earlier scandals like the Huang borehole paper. (Update: and of course there was the legendary "deniers" editorial in Nature too). This is a big mistake by Sir Muir.  The others are unfamiliar names, however, which is probably a better sign.

There is still a great deal about the review that gives me cause for concern: the fact that there is still no indication of whether evidence will be taken from sceptics or whether evidence will be taken in public. The apparent absence of statistical expertise on the panel.

Another worry is that the terms of reference still seem remarkably unclear - does consideration of UEA's "policies and practices for acquiring, assembling, subjecting to peer review and disseminating data and research findings" include consideration of whether individual scientists have engaged in intimidation of journals? Who knows?

Another interesting feature of the review is that they are passing on assessment of the past scientific work of the CRU to a special investigative panel put together by the Royal Society. I think most people will shrug their shoulders at this. This is the twenty first century and arguments from authority don't carry much weight any longer. The Royal Society is a body closely associated with global warming promotion. Its advisory panel on global warming is full of CRU people, including Phil Jones and his replacement as CRU director, Peter Liss. There are many other global warming promoters in there too. I think most people on the sceptic side are simply not going to take the Royal Society's word for it.

One can't help but be reminded of the NAS panel in 2006, where they announced that they were going to set up a separate panel to look at the question of data availability. The panel finally reported two years late in 2009, failing to answer any of the questions they were tasked with answering. I wonder when the Royal Society is going to report. Balls being kicked into long grass here I would say.

There's only one solution: free the data and free the code.

 

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    Channel Four Reports: Within hours of the launch of an independent panel to investigate claims that climate scientists covered up flawed data on temperature rises, one member has been forced to resign after sceptics questioned his impartiality. The revelation (posted...

Reader Comments (58)

I have just written to ask them to put an automatic alert to updates feature on their website -- I think many people will want to follow this closely. It wouldn't hurt for others to ask for it as well.

Feb 12, 2010 at 6:00 AM | Unregistered CommenterMargaret

Margaret

You don't need them to do it - try this: www.changedetection.com

Feb 12, 2010 at 7:25 AM | Registered CommenterBishop Hill

I'm ready to sign a suitable memo.

Thanks

Feb 12, 2010 at 10:18 AM | Unregistered CommenterCall Center

Well done Bishophill. Keep up the good work.

It is odd they call themselves The Team? Why not panel?

I hope I am wrong but, we have about as much chance finding a virgin in a lumber camp as the J Team do in coming up with the truth.

Feb 12, 2010 at 3:41 PM | Unregistered CommenterStacey

What an interesting website.

It brings to mind a fictional discussion between a couple of smart-alec passengers on the titanic, arguing that the captain has 'got it completely wrong' - the ship will sink stay afloat for at least 2.1 hours, not 1.3 hours, and anyway icebergs don't exist this far south. They continue to smugly expound their superior analyis and expose of the Captains inaccurate data, until the water closes over their heads 2.12 hours later.

Thankfully we're not on the titanic - we have a chance to change course and avoid the crash while improving our economic reliliance at the same time - so let's not waste our time being smug, eh?

Feb 12, 2010 at 4:57 PM | Unregistered CommenterSam Kimmins

Marvellous. I never thought I'd see the day when the presence of one of the worlds largest oil companies (BP), on a review team, was considered to be disadvantagous to the climate sceptics 'case'.

Oh the irony

Feb 12, 2010 at 5:03 PM | Unregistered CommenterSam Kimmins

Welcome Sam, and thanks for your comments. If you could try to keep your comments to the subject of the thread that would be helpful.

Feb 12, 2010 at 5:09 PM | Registered CommenterBishop Hill

He who has at Tate's is lost.

Feb 12, 2010 at 10:30 PM | Unregistered Commenterbonmot

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