Feb 062011

Last Monday evening, BBC2 broadcast a Horizon programme with the title Science Under Attack. Both the title and the content of the programme were deeply misleading but, no doubt unintentionally, it may reveal far more about the scientific establishments confused and panic-stricken reaction to the onslaught of criticism that it has witnessed since the Climategate scandal broke just over a year ago than either its illustrious presenter or the programme makers realise or intended.

The white knight who galloped to the rescue of our beleaguered ‘community of climate scientists’ (the presenter’s words) was Sir Paul Nurse, a Nobel Prize winning geneticist and the newly appointed president of the Royal Society. His rather blokeish, seemingly modest, but relentlessly confident and avuncular style in front of the camera, together with a gift for appearing to explain complex issues in a fair-minded and easily digestible way, were more than enough to lull any audience into a complacent acceptance of anything he might have to say. So what went wrong?

Sir Paul’s primary mission was to persuade viewers that the questions posed by global warming sceptics are of no consequence, and that climate science has emerged from a traumatic year of unsavoury revelations without a stain on its good name. But there was another theme that underpinned his thesis: everyone should listen to what scientists say and then meekly accept it as incontrovertible truth. Whether his efforts were appropriate for a scientist of his distinction is very doubtful. It is not unreasonable for the public to expect the president of our national academy of science to take a well-balanced view of such an important subject as climate change, but there was absolutely no evidence of this.

The Royal Society recently attempted to dump its indefensible claims that the science of anthropogenic global warming is settled and the debate is over by drafting a new, and far more cautious, report on the present level of scientific understanding of this vexed topic. It would appear that their new president has no such doubts or concerns about the vast uncertainties that dog climate research. One wonders just how much Sir Paul knows about the present state of play in climate science, which is well outside his field of expertise. It would also be interesting to know how he has informed himself about this subject.

This Horizon programme would seem to have been part of a concerted PR campaign that was launched soon after compromising emails from the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia were released on the Internet. The narrative that the scientific community, and it’s cheerleaders in the eNGOs, the government, and parts of the media seek to implant in the public consciousness is that the scientists whose behaviour was laid bare in their correspondence were in fact innocent victims of politically motivated and unscrupulous climate sceptics, rather than the perpetrators of apparently disgraceful behaviour. This is to turn logic on its head, but if Nurse has noticed, eminent scientist that he no doubt is, then he sees no reason to comment.

For all his ‘man of the people’ delivery, one could hardly accuse Sir Paul of false modesty. Only seconds into his presentation, we were informed that “science created our modern world”, a fatuous and arrogant claim that seems to be emerging as a new mantra from the beleaguered science community.  Professor Brian Cox used almost the same phrase in his Wheldon lecture last December “science … delivered the modern world” while attempting to justify the BBC’s lack of impartiality when reporting climate related matters.

If this is the way that scientists are now inclined to see themselves, and an endorsement of that notion from such an eminent personage as the president of the Royal Society would certainly seem to send a message that it is quite OK to do so, then that is truly terrifying. Are scientists really so hubristic now that they ignore the contributions of philosophers, engineers, businessmen, explorers, academics from a host of non-scientific disciplines, social reformers, entrepreneurs, politicians, and countless others in order to assign all accolades and glory to themselves?

A few moments later, we were treated to a clip of Sir Paul barking, ‘Are you saying that the whole community, or a majority of the community of climate scientists are skewing their data? Is that what you are saying?’ at a rather startled looking James Delingpole. The camera immediately cut away giving the impression that the redoubtable ‘Dellers’ had no response to this salvo, which seems unlikely. Not many sceptics think anything of the kind, although they are well used to hearing the worst kind of climate alarmist, who is clutching at straws, making this accusation. Why the president of the Royal Society should choose to use such a notoriously threadbare ‘straw man’ argument without allowing a reply from his victim is something that each of us must decide for ourselves. And this sets the scene for most of the rest of the programme in which Sir Paul’s views are paramount, and the arguments of climate sceptics the attackers of the programme title are not given any serious consideration.

The message that Sir Paul evidently wishes to get across and there can be no doubt that this edition of Horizon was about getting a very specific message across and doing so ruthlessly was not particularly complex. If a Nobel Prize winner chooses to lay down the law on a matter as important as global warming, there is no room for dissent from anyone outside the cosy academic world of the scientific establishment that he inhabits. The views of an acclaimed researcher, albeit in a totally unrelated field, who is the new head of the world’s oldest and arguably most respected scientific institution, and by his own estimation a creator of the modern world, are beyond criticism or challenge because they represent SCIENCE. Particularly, no one should pay any attention to the questions that global warming sceptics pose because they are not part of the SCIENTIFIC ESTABLISHMENT and must therefor be politically motivated troublemakers. In this scenario there are legions of impartial and scrupulously fair-minded mainstream climate scientists queuing up to explain everything, while the sceptics just cause trouble.

As examples of such worthy personages, it is remarkable that Sir Paul chose to interview a very complacent glaciologist from James Hansen’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) at NASA who seemed to have a less than adequate understanding of the carbon cycle and, believe it or not, Phil Jones, the researcher at the centre of the University of East Anglia Climategate scandal.

The man from NASA had some very pretty video presentations to show how satellites collect vast quantities of data about Earth’s climate, and how weather models can mimic observed data. No mention was made of the relatively short period that satellite data covers, or that GSMs that can predict weather patterns over a period of days with reasonable accuracy are not necessarily capable of telling us much about what the climate is likely to do during the rest of this century. A brief excursion into the carbon cycle lead to this amazing exchange:

Bob Bindschadler [NASA scientist]: We know how much fossil fuel we take out of the ground. We know how much we sell. We know how much we burn. And that is a huge amount of carbon dioxide. It’s about seven gigatons per year right now.

Paul Nurse: And is that enough to explain…?

Bob Bindschadler: Natural causes only can produce – yes, there are volcanoes popping off and things like that, and coming out of the ocean, only about one gigaton per year. So there’s just no question that human activity is producing a massively large proportion of the carbon dioxide.

Paul Nurse: So seven times more.

Bob Bindschadler: That’s right.

So it would appear that neither the NASA expert, nor the president of the Royal Society who has chosen to enlighten the public about the climate debate in an hour long TV programme, know that anthropogenic emissions of Co2 are generally estimated as about 5% of natural emissions into the atmosphere, not 700%.

However Sir Paul did confide, rather breathlessly, that GISS burns $2bn (no it’s not a typo) in funding for climate research each year, rather implying that any data that cost that much must be pretty darned good. The possibility that funding on this scale might be a distinct disincentive to following up on any evidence that casts doubt on anthropogenic global warming (AGW) seems not to have crossed the presenter’s mind. This is strange as, at other points in the programme, Sir Paul stresses the importance of scientists considering all the evidence relating to the research they are conducting and to testing their theories to destruction. As his programme appears to be an exercise in assessing the credibility of climate scepticism in face of the wisdom handed down by the creators of the modern world, one might expect him to follow his own excellent advice so far as methodology is concerned. It would seem that he reserves such good practices for the day job in the genetics lab.

Concerning the availability of research funding to those concerned about the climate, there is a deep irony in the fact that the Horizon programme was broadcast about the same  time that Jeff Id, who has made a valuable, and sceptical, contribution to the climate debate, announced that he was closing his Air Vent blog because of business and family pressures, and Antony Watts of Watts Up With That took a decision to scale back his activities for similar reasons.

The sceptics that Professor Nurse chooses to interview, supposedly to find out what evidence climate scepticism is founded on, are James Delingpole and Fred Singer.

The former is a journalist who happily admits that he is an arts graduate who only became interested in the climate debate about a year ago, and that he can hardly be expected to be a match for a scientist of Nurse’s standing. Fred Singer, now in his mid-eighties, was introduced as ‘one of the world’s most prominent and prolific climate sceptics’ and interviewed in a crowded and very noisy Washington diner where a few mumbled remarks about solar influence on climate were hardly audible, but gave the impression as the film makers presumably intended that he was talking nonsense.  Of the multitude of climate sceptics who could have presented arguments that Sir Paul would have had trouble sweeping aside, there was no sign, but then we were not watching that kind of programme and he was not considering all the evidence or testing his theories to destruction on this occasion.

The interview with Phil Jones, on the other hand, was conducted in the tranquil setting of the CRU library and the University or East Anglia campus, where not a syllable of the Climategate emailers responses to sympathetically posed leading questions could be missed.  This was an obvious attempt to rehabilitate this still beleaguered scientist, but why should Sir Paul want to do such a thing when doubts about both Jones behaviour and his research findings still so obviously exist?  The day after the programme was broadcast, the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology published their review of the supposedly independent inquiries into the Climategate affair. They found that the inquiries were not independent, and that they failed to examine issues that could have proved damaging to Jones and his colleagues.

What is perhaps rather strange is that, while giving Jones and the University of East Anglia such an easy time, and claiming that the Climategate emailers have been exonerated by ‘independent’ enquiries even though these just happen to have been set up by their employers, the very institutions that would suffer most if any malfeasance had been reported, Sir Paul omits to mention that he was born (and bred :correction, see below) in the city of Norwich, where UEA is based, and that he received his PhD from UEA in 1973. Nor does he mention that Jones was a part of the Society’s climate advisory network that produced the now discredited and replaced statement on climate change referred to above. Given the degree of mistrust that exists between warmists and sceptics, those would seem to be matters that he should have been quite open about.

There is much more that one could say about this programme which, while purporting to be a dispassionate analysis of the climate debate by an eminent scientist, is just another shocking attempt to influence public opinion by being very selective in the evidence it considers. Instead of reviewing the criticisms, or in the words of the programme title ‘attacks’, that climate research has been subject to, Nurse prefers to home in on a very mild criticism that comes from those within the establishment fold who seek to defend the scientists.

Scientists may not be willing enough to publicly discuss the uncertainties in their science, or to fully engage with those that disagree with them, and this has helped to polarise the debate.

The hostile and arrogant attitude of climate scientists to anyone who may be so impertinent as to want to ask questions about their findings were displayed for all to see in the  Climategate emails. Engaging with those who disagree with them and acknowledging uncertainties will not prevent a polarised debate, it will simply bring an increased deluge of embarrassing questions from sceptics, and climate scientists must know this. But the suggestion that climate scientists may merely have been a little bit reticent sounds benign and reassuring to the uninitiated when delivered with a steady gaze looking straight into the lens of the camera. The problem is that if the uncertainties that attend every step on the way to an anthropogenic climate change hypothesis were frankly discussed, then the credibility of climate science would vanish like snowdrifts in a heatwave. Too many unjustified claims of certainty or near certainty have been made in the past for researchers to publicise the true state of affairs now.

But if all else fails, one can always blame the media for any woes. This seems to be a very strange line for Sir Paul to take. In an age when ‘churnalism’ (journalists regurgitating undigested press releases, stories from wire services, and PR packages without checking them) assures any sensational story about imminent environmental catastrophe a place in the headlines it is hard to know what climate scientists have to complain about. But Sir Paul says:

It’s not surprising that the public are confused reading all of this different stuff. There’s these lurid headlines and there’s political opinions, I think, filtering through, which probably reflects editorial policy within the newspapers, and we get an unholy mix of the media and the politics, and it’s distorting the proper reporting of science. And that’s a real danger for us, if science is to have its proper impact on society.

He seems to  be referring to the Daily Express, Daily Mail and Sunday Telegraph where climate scepticism is freely reported, but not of course to the Guardian, the Independent, and very often the Times and Sunday Times, which seem to be prepared to print any scare story about ‘new scientific research’, however ill founded and preposterous it might be. And Sir Paul certainly doesn’t address what Steve McIntyre has called ‘the silence of the lambs’: the failure of the climate science community to criticise or correct inaccurate and exaggerated reporting when it stirs up alarm about human impact on the climate.

Indeed there are moments of pure unreality in Sir Paul’s diatribe against those who attack science.

There’s an overwhelming body of evidence that says we are warming our planet. But complexity allows for confusion, and for alternative theories to develop. The only solution is to look at all the evidence as a whole. I think some extreme sceptics decide what to think first and then cherry-pick the data to support their case.

Of course the possibility that climate scientists might be victims of precisely the same affliction is not addressed. As for the so-called consensus view of climate science, he has this to say:

“Consensus” can be used like a dirty word. Consensus is actually the position of the experts at the time, and if it’s working well – it doesn’t always work well – but if it’s working well, they evaluate the evidence. You make your reputation in science by actually overturning that, so there’s a lot of pressure to do it. But if over the years the consensus doesn’t move, you have to wonder: is the argument, is the evidence against the consensus good enough?

It is this utterance, perhaps more than anything else in the programme, which suggests that Sir Paul is way out of his depth where climate science is concerned. The idealised scenario that he proposes may be possible in mathematics, chemistry, physics or genetics, but in climate research it would be professional suicide, as the Climategate emails show. In this field, if no other, dissent is viewed as heresy pure and simple, regardless of how well founded it might be.

And while we are on the subject of the scientific consensus on climate change, it is very strange that Sir Paul has omitted any mention of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change from this programme about the inviolable authority of climate science. I wonder why?

Controversy surrounding AIDs and GM crops are touched on briefly, but the programme’s focus is relentlessly on climate change. A sequence dealing with aids includes a long, and very sympathetic, discussion with a man called Tony who does not believe that HIV causes AIDs because, although he was diagnosed HIV positive years ago, and has not taken any of the medication he was prescribed, he is still alive and apparently healthy. This would seem to have been included for no other purpose than to suggest that climate sceptics are no different from HIV sceptics, and therefor totally irrational.

Controversy about GM food crops is also given a brief airing, but Sir Paul seems to be oblivious to the irony that the green activists who trash fields of GM maize, and therefore science must be scientific ignoramuses because they do not listen when researchers say there is no danger, are likely to be the very same people who will turn out for anti fossil fuel demonstrations and presumably fully accept all that the climate science community has to say on that subject.

This episode of Horizon begins and ends in the archives of the Royal Society with Sir Paul admiring – almost worshiping – the early minutes of the Royal Society’s meetings and works by Newton and Darwin. No one can doubt the outstanding record of scientific achievement of the Society in the past, and Sir Paul is obviously thrilled to be at its head, but the inclusion of these sequences seem to say to the audience, don’t you dare question what I, the successor of these great men, am telling you.

In the eyes of many scientists, it seems to be becoming as unacceptable to challenge scientific dogma today as it was to question the theology of the medieval church, although it is not yet quite so dangerous. Yet anyone who has read the Climategate emails must know that in climate science a reformation is long overdue: this branch of science definitely needs a spring-clean. In the emails we see a world of people whose sole preoccupation seems not to be curiosity and discovery, but keeping one jump ahead of their critics. And how do they view those critics? As politically motivated ignoramuses of course, while Sir Paul describes, the CRU in the following terms:

‘The unit’s headquarters are [sic] tiny, yet Dr Jones and his colleagues have had a truly global impact’.

Why should such titans of the scientific world be concerned about sceptics who want to check their research? What could they possibly have to fear? And why, in the wake of the Climategate scandal, did the University of East Anglia promise a review of the research that has come out of the CRU, and then quietly drop the idea? And why is asking questions about such matters considered to be an attack on science?  Indeed why, if there isn’t any problem really, has such controversy triggered an hour-long programme from the BBC starring the president of our national academy of science?

No one could possibly expect the scientific world’s new chief representative (and shop steward?) to say anything that might stand in the way of concern about global warming providing billions of pounds of research funding, but the subject did deserve something rather better than a tedious and often confused defence of the establishment view; just leave it all to the scientists Sir Paul seems to be repeating endlessly, like Phil Jones, who understand all these things and cannot possibly be wrong.

But how can any fair-minded person, inside or outside the scientific establishment, be indifferent to demands that climate scientist, who have so much influence on public policy at present, should be subject to intense scrutiny, and particularly by those who are most hostile to their views. Only then can their research findings be fully tested and finally trusted. Although Sir Paul says he is keen on scientists testing their ideas to destruction, he seems terrified if that process is instigated from outside the scientific establishment and applied to climate science. And therein lies the real thrust of his programme.

Sir Paul is now at the pinnacle of the scientific establishment. His views on climate science matter, regardless of whether he really knows anything about the controversies that have engulfed this subject or not. Although he purports to be considering whether the attacks that have been made on climate science during the last year can in any way be justified, it seems evident that his mind was closed to any such possibility from the outset. Had this not been the case he would have chosen very different climate sceptics to talk to and would have attempted to establish just what their concerns are.

The title of the programme, Science Under Attack, points to a fascinating sidelight on the way that the scientific establishment now view the climate debate. As I have said, what controversy exists over GM crops and the cause of AIDs is of a very different type and order from that concerning anthropogenic global warming, and their inclusion in this programme is ancillary to the main theme. So far as I am aware, mathematicians, physicists, chemists and astronomers are not conspicuously under attack. Only climate science and climate scientists are in the cross hairs of public condemnation at the moment. So why was this programme called Science Under Attack? Is this meant to imply that anyone who fails to embrace the consensus view on climate change is challenging science, and the scientific method, in its entirety? If so that would seem to be a very dangerous position for Sir Paul and the scientific establishment to adopt.

If the Royal Society is prepared hold up climate science as the poster child of science as a whole, then the credibility of science is being linked to just one discipline that has a distinctly short and chequered record. This leads to two serious pitfalls. In the first, the old established disciplines maths, physics, chemistry, astronomy etc are likely to resent the hype and razzmatazz surrounding their junior colleagues, and become hostile and inquisitive. It would seem unlikely that climate science would come out of such scrutiny by other disciplines smelling of roses.

The second is that the public may come to judge science as a whole by the performance and behaviour of one high profile discipline; climate science. This would seem to be a most ill advised and offering a hostage to fortune. At the moment the frenetic revelations of last year have quietened down, but it would be quite unjustified to assume that all the skeletons have tumbled out of the climate science cupboard and that more will not follow.

Added to these considerations, it seems that criticism is something that the scientific establishment now finds impossible to cope with in an open and constructive way. Hence the rather hysterical title of Sir Paul’s programme and its utter failure to acknowledge and address the origin of the problems that climate scepticism are causing to those who seek to promote and defend science. As I have said, it would be unreasonable to expect the president of the Royal Society to express any outright scepticism about global warming in a popular television series, but one might expect him to acknowledge that doubts exist when it is so manifestly obvious that uncertainties in the science have not been acknowledged in the past. In fact, he does no more than acknowledge that some uncertainties exist, but in a dismissive way that suggests that this need worry no one.

There are various possible explanations for this obtuse behaviour.

It is of course possible that Sir Paul is simply being disingenuous, but this would seem unlikely. Then there is the possibility that, when assessing a controversy in a discipline that he is not familiar with, he has been credulous and willing to retail uncritically the views of his cronies in the scientific establishment. But perhaps the most likely explanation, based on Sir Paul’ own words, is that an overweening arrogance has seized the world of science. Here is part of Sir Paul’s peroration:

I’m here in the Royal Society,[which represents]  350 years of an endeavour which is built on respect for observation, respect for data, respect for experiment. Trust no-one, trust only what the experiments and the data tell you. We have to continue to use that approach, if we are to solve problems such as climate change.

It’s become clear to me that if we hold to these ideals of trust in evidence, then we have a responsibility to publicly argue our case. Because in this conflicted and volatile debate, scientists are not the only voices that are listened to. When a scientific issue has important outcomes for society, then the politics becomes increasingly more important. So if we look at this issue of climate change, that is particularly significant. Because that has effects on how we manage our economy and manage our politics. And so this is become a crucially political matter, and we can see that by the way that the forces are being lined up on both sides. What really is required here is a focus on the science, keeping the politics and keeping the ideologies out of the way.(Emphasis added)

This would appear to be a plea for acceptance of scientific hegemony on a scale that brooks no dissent, but at the same time it is contradictory. The climate sceptics who precipitated the Climategate scandal were, in fact, attempting to establish that trust in the experiments and data is justified. Why hinder them?  Concern that only the voices of science should be listened to from someone with Sir Paul Nurse’s influence sit very uneasily with the plea that the evidence for AGW is overwhelming. If this is the case, what does scientific establishment have to fear? And anyway, why should the voice of climate science be unchallengeable? As for the importance of not trusting anyone other than climate scientists when assessing the evidence of AGW, it is necessary for most of us to do so, and not least the audience that has spent an hour soaking up Sir Paul’s anything but objective views on the climate controversy, even though he is a geneticist. Is the title ‘scientist’ really enough to convey the ability to pontificate on any branch of science with authority?

Finally lets look at what a couple of commentators who can definitely not be described as climate sceptics had to say about Science Under Attack. Here is Fiona Fox of the Science Media Centre, one of the most influential climate alarm advocates, writing on the BBC College of Journalism website :

Many, including colleagues in the science communication world, felt that it [Nurse’s programme] was a classic example of ‘scientism’, a growing tendency to demand that science should trump everything else as the only sound basis for good public debate and decision-making.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/journalism/blog/2011/02/when-does-the-vigorous-defence.shtml

And Mike Hulme, former director the Tyndall Centre at the University of East Anglia

In this programme from BBC’s Horizon team, the incoming President of the Royal Society, Sir Paul Nurse, offers a vigorous defence of the trustworthiness of science. He also reveals an exalted view of the normative authority of science: both in the world of political decision-making (e.g. the cases of climate change and GM crops which the programme selects) and in the private lives of citizens. I suggest that he betrays an underlying adherence both to the linear view that science should drive policy-making and, to a lesser extent, to the deficit model of science communication.

http://mikehulme.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Science-under-attack.pdf

If concerns such as these are being expressed from the heart of the warmist community, then Sir Paul’s tenure at the Royal Society is likely to be an interesting one. As he acknowledges in Science Under Attack, public belief in anthropogenic global warming is steadily declining in spite of all the efforts by scientists, politicians, the eNGOs and a large part of the media. Evidently it is not enough for scientists to shout ever more kindly that they are right and everyone else is not only wrong, but is not even capable of having a valid opinion.

And so we finally return to the programme title: Science Under Attack. Is Sir Paul really saying that because climate scientists are being criticised, all science is being attacked and threatened? It would appear that he is, but choosing climatology as the champion and exemplar of science would seem to be illogical and very risky, so why do it? Does he really think that the reputation of scientists everywhere depends on the public image of climate scientists? He may be right, but if so, then the world of science risks being hopelessly compromised by any shortcomings that become evident in a field that is now mired in controversy and, as he admits in the programme, failing to convince the public that human activity is warming the planet.

Science has not been well served by Sir Paul’s programme. If he is right, and the image of science as a whole has suffered from the ructions in climatology over the last year, then the scientific establishment would be wise to cut climate science adrift before it inflicts any more damage on the rest of the profession. Instead, the science establishment seem to think that it can to shore up the reputation and authority of their profession with a blatantly partisan TV film fronted by a man who seems very proud to be following in the footsteps of Newton, Wren and Darwin.

H/t to Alex Cull for an excellent transcript of the programme, which can be found here.

(UPDATE 11/02/2011: I have corrected this post which originally said that Sir Paul was ‘born and bred’ in Norwich.  Although he was born in Norwich, he was brought up in London)

197 Responses to “Nurse puts science on life support”

  1. Excellent analysis. The propaganda war seems to be stepping up on TV, and unfortunately, the blogosphere is not well adapted to assessing or countering this tactic. BishopHill and Climate Resistance both had good articles on this programme, but commenting on blogs tends to flare up immediately and die down equally fast. Careful analysis requires time to reflect, and above all written transcription (many thanks Alex) to put the factual evidence out for examination.

    You ask: why was this programme called Science Under Attack? Nurse starts with the letter from 255 members of the National Academy of Science to “Science” magazine which was a protest about Virginia Attorney General Cuccinelli’s investigation into Mann, and the suggestion by some Republican Congressmen that new hearings would be held into climate science. This could fairly be considered as a politically motivated attack on science, and would have made an interesting subject. But Nurse never mentioned it again. This, and the treatment of Singer and Delingpole demonstrates clearly that there was no intention of treating the science.
    Ben Pile, in a comment on his article at Climate Resistance, suggests that speculation on motivation is not useful. In this case, in the absence of any science at all (in the BBC’s flagship science programme, no less,) speculating on motives seems all we can do.
    Nurse’s case is easily dealt with. He may well see himself as science’s shop steward, and his evident naive faith in science as the source of all that is good and the justification of its own omniscience makes him an odd choice as President of the Royal Society.
    But the big question is surely about the BBC. What did the programme makers think they were doing, a month or so before the BBC’s review of science programming is published? The Horizon audience is not the same as the audience for climate change ads about drowning puppies. Who could possibly come away from this programme satisfied? What message did it contain, beyond the fact that Delingpole is young and nervous and Fred Singer is old and disagrees with the consensus?
    Cox, Nurse, and Murray; three programmes in as many months, ostensibly about climate science, yet containing zero science. The publication of the BBC’s review of science, promised for this spring, will be the occasion to ask some serious questions.

  2. TonyN, Geoff, great analysis and thanks for the mention!

    Just to add that there’s now a transcript of the Rupert Murray programme here.

  3. TonyN,

    What if Prof Sir Paul Nurse and consensus science turn out right in their assessment of the evidence and you and the Daily Mail are wrong?

    Have you ever wondered how you much of a fool you’ll look to have been in 100 years time when your descendants are researching their family trees and looking up cached versions of the old internet sites?

  4. Geoff, #1:

    I assume that you you saw this email from Emma Jay, the Producer / Director of ‘Science Under Attack’, to James Delingpole:

    The BBC email invitation to James Delingpole

    From: “Emma” [email address removed]

    Date: 3 August 2010 19:25:08 GMT+01:00

    To: James [email address removed]

    Subject: BBC Horizon

    Dear James

    I hope you don’t mind me contacting you on this email address but I was given it by Louise Gray at the Telegraph.

    I am making a film for BBC’s Horizon on public trust in science and I was hoping you may be able to help.

    The film will explore our current relationship with science, whether we as a society do and should trust it. It is being presented by the nominated President of the Royal Society, Sir Paul Nurse. If he is voted in later this summer he will be taking over the at RS at the end of the year at around the same time the film will be transmitted so it would very much launch his presidency. The premise will be ‘This is a turbulent time for science. After the debacles of Climate-gate, GM products and MMR, I want to explore why science isn’t trusted and whether we as scientists are largely to blame’. By looking at these different areas he will dig into the difficult questions of how to deal with uncertainty in science, the communication of this uncertainty, and the difficulties when science meets policy and the media.

    The tone of the film is very questioning but with no preconceptions. On the issue of who is to blame no-one will be left unscathed, whether that is science sceptics, the media or most particularly scientists themselves. Sir Paul is very aware of the culpability of scientists and that will come across in the film. They will not be portrayed as white coated magicians who should be left to work in their ivory towers – their failings will be dealt with in detail.

    Now obviously one of the other great areas of contention is when science meets the media. Much as most scientists would like their papers to be published unedited in the mainstream media that obviously does not work. We will be visiting the newsroom of a national newspaper (most likely the Times although we have also been talking to the Telegraph) to explore the realities of where science fits in the news agenda, but I also want to explore the equally important role of the online world.

    As an influential blogger on climate change, among other subjects, I’d really like Paul to meet you and chat to you about your views – how you see your role and that more generally the influence of the internet in changing the debate; your views on climate-gate and how that was handled by the media; the failings or otherwise of scientists in communicating the science.

    Filming would be on the afternoon of 18 August ideally.

    If you are interested please drop me a line or give me a call.

    Kind regards

    Emma [removed by author]

    Producer/Director
    BBC Vision Productions

    Had this template for the programme been followed, sceptics would have had little or nothing to complain about. Presumably it was also the basis on which the decision to make the programme was taken.

    If the transformation took place in the cutting room, it would be very interesting to know whether Nurse had any input at that stage or, indeed, saw and approved the final cut. It is just possible that he was not happy about the finished product and is bending ears at the BBC at this very moment. If this is the case, he could hardly admit it publicly.

  5. Tempterrain,

    The BBC Horizon program “Science under attack” is, and will remain, a deplorable example of crude propaganda.

    This will be true tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, and in an 100 years.

    It will still be true even if, as you say, “Prof Sir Paul Nurse and consensus science turn out right in their assessment of the evidence and you and the Daily Mail are wrong”

  6. It’s almost as if there is a deep dark secret that has yet to see the light of day and they are throwing in all their Biggest Guns to keep it so; that if they give on this point all is over, lost forever. Why are they launching this latest series of ‘attacks’? What are they really trying to ‘protect’?

    It only seems all the more reasonable that the non-scientists (the taxpayers) continue to wait longer before committing to the New World Order. There does seem to be something in the closet that has not seen the light of day.

  7. My thoughts at Watts Up – I had a guest post..

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/02/03/has-the-bbc-has-broken-faith-with-the-general-public/

    I Interviewed James Delingpole about Horizon, and he gave me the inivitation above.

  8. TonyN
    I know you are familiar with the following:

    Extracts from UK Ofcom Broadcasting Code:
    5.5 Due impartiality on matters of political or industrial controversy and matters relating to current public policy must be preserved on the part of any person providing a service (listed above). This may be achieved within a programme or over a series of programmes taken as a whole.
    Meaning of “series of programmes taken as a whole”: (Their emphasis)
    This means more than one programme in the same service, editorially linked, dealing with the same or related issues within an appropriate period and aimed at a like audience. A series can include, for example, a strand, or two programmes (such as a drama and a debate about the drama) or a ‘cluster’ or ‘season’ of programmes on the same subject.
    5.6 The broadcast of editorially linked programmes dealing with the same subject matter (as part of a series in which the broadcaster aims to achieve due impartiality) should normally be made clear to the audience on air.

    So will the BBC be conforming to this code?
    Perhaps Steve Mc and some other eminent rationalists could be invited, or offer to debate
    If not, will some brave soul whom watched the programme raise a complaint?

    Meanwhile, my four complaints with Oz ABC have reached an interesting stage which I‘ll comment on later.

    I’m shocked that the Horizon program has stooped to editing techniques to deliberately convey misinformation. It is a programme that comes here from time to time, that in future I’ll treat with the greatest suspicion, or avoid.

  9. A very good and interesting post. A distinguished scientist of my acquaintance, who is a believer in AGW, explains his belief simply in that scientists take on trust what other scientists say. He has no reason to distrust his fellow researchers, because for him the search is for the truth, and he finds it incomprehensible that other scientists would try to force a particular outcome by manipulation of methods and data. The charitable amongst us may conclude that Paul Nurse is suffering from the same delusion.
    When scientists have investigated spiritualism in the past they have come away convinced it is a genuine phenomenon. The scientific mind is not expecting to be tricked. If you want to expose a medium, or find out how a magician’s trick is done, don’t send a scientist. Send another magician or illusionist (e.g. Harry Houdini). If you want to catch a scientific fraud, perhaps one of Enron’s directors would be the best person to send.

  10. There are rumours that Martin Durkin (of TGGWS fame) may be interested in doing a documentary about sceptics.

    So far as the impartiality rules about are concerned, I’ve also heard a whisper this evening that suggests someone my be perusing this too.

    I think that the Nurse programme was probably a step too far, for both the establishment and the broadcaster.

  11. David C, #9:

    I think that you are right about scientists from other disciplines not wanting to believe ill of their colleagues in climate research, but then how many scientists work in areas that are quite so politically charged as climatology? Perhaps the pressures to come up with the ‘right’ answers are just more than other scientists have ever experienced, or can comprehend.

  12. TonyN What a great post and one I hope provokes some navel gazing from our intelligentsia. Paul Nurse has destroyed at a stroke any hope we that he would get the Royal Society back on an even keel any time soon. I do not for a moment think he is as stupid as he has come across in the BBC documentary, but he has been ill advised and extremely naive to allow himself to be manipulated by the BBC.

    Even if he was to fess up now and admit his mistake he would be so damaged that his only course of action would be to resign. That course of action is not one I think he will take as he did come across with a degree of arrogance that has no place in a leadership role such as his. Paul Nurse is now irrelevant having locked himself into a ridged position.

    Tony there may be more to your comment to David #11 and certainly it is part of the problem. Paul Nurse failed to grasp that climate scientists are pushing policy makers into huge expenditure as if there is no alternative to their view. This has never happened in the past and is why so many people feel compelled to comment. Certainly there is no other area of science where so much of our money is lavished on the scientists so that they can tell us that we need to rein back all our progress, with absolutely no proof they are right.

    Science has led to discovery, and this in turn has feed into engineering and invention. Paul Nurse is wrong to attribute man’s progress to science, but rather it has been our invention and curiosity that has driven science. Science does not create money or wealth, that is done by human endeavour, and again is something Paul Nurse has completely overlooked. Just look at peak oil. Science told us oil was running out. Engineering has blown that notion completely out of the water and discoveries of oil and gas are coming in faster than at any time in our history. And this has been driven by need, not by Government diktat. In fact it’s been a success precisely because in the main governments especially those in the west have not been involved. There is an important lesson here.

    Paul Nurse is typical of many academics that both I and my wife have met in the course of our lives. These people live in a bubble totally disconnected to the real world, and are in the main incapable of the type of thinking need in an issue such as climate science. They are also over sensitive to criticism of their work, another reason they have no place in policy making. All Paul Nurse and our totally irrelevant public broadcaster have managed to do is polarise opinion even more.

  13. I’m wondering if Nurse was the model for the hero of Ian McEwan’s novel “Solar” – quite one of the worst novels I’ve ever read – and not just because of the gobbets of global warming propaganda which occasionally interrupt the plot. Like Nurse, McEwan’s hero has a Nobel Prize acquired early in his career, and wanders into climate science by accident. There’s also a physical resemblance. The novel is raunchier than Nurse’s Horizon programme, and contains quite a bit more science, as well as some nice satirical portraits of green activists. It ends in tears, by the way.

  14. Peter G:

    I believe that Rees was reputed to have extremely well developed political antenna, and I very much doubt if that is true of Nurse. And I wonder what the reaction of Rudge’s 43 rebels within the Royal Society will be, and whether the Horizon Programme will add to their number.
    I’m sure that you are right and, if what we saw the other night really is a reflection of the RS position on AGW under its new president, then this will lead to ever greater polarisation of the debate with the warmists being driven to more and more extreme claims such as cold snowy winters being caused by global warming,,climate change, climate disruption, the climate challenge, and perhaps launching a campaign to save the Climategate martyrs.

  15. Peter Geany,

    I’m not sure what you are getting at with your statement “Paul Nurse is wrong to attribute man’s progress to science, but rather it has been our invention and curiosity that has driven science. ”

    Yes, human curiosity has initially, as you say, ‘driven science’ and provided a framework of understanding. Engineering, or the application of science, using that same understanding, has led to the creation of the modern world. There can’t be any suggestion that Sir Paul Nurse was wanting to separate or exclude engineering, medicine or mathematics from the overall description of ‘science’. To that extent, Sir Paul’s remarks are absolutely correct.

    As the Royal Society states on its website:

    “We aim to expand the frontiers of knowledge by championing the development and use of science, mathematics, engineering and medicine for the benefit of humanity and the good of the planet.”

    Furthermore, a list of notable fellows of the RS does include the names of Babbage, Brunel, Cockerill and others who would definitely fall into the category of “engineer”.

    http://ccgi.newbery1.plus.com/blog/?p=384

    You can choose to look at AGW from either a geo-engineering or scientific perspective, but the overall conclusions have to be the same. This has to be a general principle and it’s just impossible for science and engineering or technology to be in conflict with each other.

  16. Sorry pasted up the wrong URL previously. Should be:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Fellows_of_the_Royal_Society

  17. You know it is almost as if we are witnessing the last throw of the dice. Those that are left defending the roost are the young and witless. Today we see the Hockey Team has tried to setup and pervert the peer review process yet again. Only this time they have been caught red handed. This is everything that Climategate alluded to and more. And what’s more it is so relevant to Paul Nurse as he has just finished telling us we should only believe peer review. It’s all over the net and I’m sure there is not a single person that follows this subject that doesn’t know about it.

    Only this time every tiny little detail is there for the world to see. We don’t need a parliamentary or any other type of review to get at the truth, it’s all there for all to see. I wonder if Rudge’s 43 rebels will ask our esteemed leader of the Royal Society to comment. As I say Paul Nurse is now in a straitjacket.

  18. TonyN #4
    Comparing the transcript of the Horizon programme with Emma Jay’s letter outlining the subject to Delingpole, I thought of your comments on Justice Burton and his treatment of “An Inconvenient Truth”. An official report on this programme, produced by a legal mind of his calibre, would be devastating. What channels of protest are there, apart from the BBC complaints procedure? Would the formation of some kind of official organisation, a sort of NGO version of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, be any use?

    PeterGeany #17
    I’d like to think you were right about the last throw of the dice, but I just don’t see it that way. I feel like repeating the Cassandra-like comments I made at the time of TonyN’s “They don’t know what’s hit them” article a year ago, post Climategate.
    On the Steig / O’Donnell spat, you say: “… there is not a single person that follows this subject that doesn’t know about it.
    Only this time every tiny little detail is there for the world to see”.
    Quite. But “everyone who follows this subject” amounts to maybe tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of people world-wide – i.e. nothing in the eyes of politicians and their allies. There is no way the Steig story can be simplified and made comprehensible to the average voter, and then put in the context of the twenty+ year saga which we are familiar with, but which is completely unknown outside the blogosphere.

    What should have happened, from the moment Jones made his “Why should I give you the data..?” remark, was a slow accretion of concern and comment, starting with science journalists, spreading to mainstream political comment, involving media debates and opinion-makers of all stripes, and eventually politicians and voters. It didn’t, and we’re no nearer to turning the climate change scandal into a “story with legs” than pre-Climategate.

    Still, I hope you’re right and I’m wrong. Then I can go back to leading a normal life far from the blogosphere. Or would I be as lost as a Green deprived of his disaster scenario?

  19. Congratulations on your extremely clear-sighted article. It will be interesting to learn (as I am sure we will eventually) what hand Nurse and the other participants respectively had in the editing,and whether this breached impartiality…

  20. Peter #15

    You cite Babbage and Brunel.

    My house looks on to the church where Babbage was married and also on to arguably Brunels greatest achievement-the Great Western Railway.

    However they both had their falures as they attempted to keep at the cutting edge of science. Brunels most spectacular failure was the Atmospheric railway and its trains which were intended to run along the GWR along the coast here.

    http://www.exetermemories.co.uk/em/_events/atmospheric_railway.php

    He also failed to understand the current and aligned the railway in a manner that still causes problems to this very day. It is possibly the only stretch of railway anywhere in the world where locals would consult their tide tables before they consult their railway time table. In a strong easterly wind and with a high tide the sea can crash over the tracks-as it did when the line was built 170 years ago.

    Brunel was eventually brought to task for his mistakes after several high profile enquiries had initially exonerated him. Sound familiar?

    So in any age ‘scientists’ ‘engineers’ call them what you will, don’t always know as much as they think they do and can make mistakes.

    Climate scientists seem to believe that their science is much more settled than it really is. To believe that such a new branch is already ‘post modern’ and doesn’t need to folow the same rules as other branches (as Max continually points out) is somewhat arrogant.

    Either Sir Paul Nurse was at fault in the way he clearly didn’t follow the brief that participants had been sent, or the Horizon team are guilty of judicious editing to make some point. As I haven’t (yet) heard any protests from Nurse we must assume that both sides achieved what they wanted from the programme.

    Tonyb

  21. geoffchambers, #18:

    So far as I can make out, the BBC complaints procedure which culminates in the Trust’s Editorial Standards Committee, and Ofcom for non BBC complaints culminating in their Broadcasting Standards Committee (or a sub-committee thereof), are dead ends. In both cases, it takes about a year to complete the process. Once a decision has been taken at a lower level, each escalation simply results in more potent forces being employed to defend it. I’m not guessing about this because I’ve been through the mangle with both of them.

    In the case of Ofcom and AIT, this led to a decision so absurd that it is difficult to get people to believe what happened. The only practical recourse once one has exhausted either of these procedures is judicial review which means risking a large amount of money. In some cases it may be possible to raise a complaint through the Parliamentary Ombudsman, but this would not involve the kind of forensic consideration that you so rightly suggest would blow Ofcom’s and the BBC’s devious obfuscation out of the water. For what it’s worth, I did try to find someone who would take the Ofcom debacle to court, but without success.

    The only institutional body devoted to climate scepticism in the UK is the GWPF, which is doing a fine job, but as an educational charity fighting court cases with broadcasting regulators is not in any way part of their function, even if they could find the resources. So what can one do?

    Tim C, #19:

    It is a matter of luck whether any information comes out in the wash; there is no procedure for finding out.

  22. David C# 9, TonyN #11, I’m sure you are right about this. It was certainly my position before I started looking into things.

    Positions are shifting, but very slowly. Many of my colleagues would agree in private conversations that climate science is badly over-hyped, but few would go much further than that at this stage.

  23. TonyN,

    You rarely venture into any scientific discussion, I’m not sure why that should be. You’ve obviously made a thorough study and decided that the RS and just about every other scientific body world wide have got it all wrong, so its seems somewhat selfish not to share what you’ve found.

    Nevertheless, you’ve now dipped your toe into the water and challenged Sir Paul Nurse on his home turf by saying: “So it would appear that neither the NASA expert, nor the president of the Royal Society who has chosen to enlighten the public about the climate debate in an hour long TV programme, know that anthropogenic emissions of Co2 are generally estimated as about 5% of natural emissions into the atmosphere, not 700%.”

    So are they nearer 5% or 700%? To answer that question you need to understand that there is natural carbon cycle.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_cycle

    The 700% figure is referring to new carbon that is added to the cycle rather than the amount of carbon which is already in the cycle. The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has been in balance at ~280ppmv for thousands of years until the advent of the industrial age. The carbon budget, in other words, has essentially been in balance.

    I would guess that politically you’ll all advocate balanced economic budgets and you’ll appreciate the dangers if they are allowed to become out of balance, if spending is allowed to increase by that 5%, for an extended time. It doesn’t matter much for a few years, but after a time the gap grows ever wider and problems start to arise.

    That’s pretty much the case with CO2 now. It has risen from 280ppmv to 385pmmv due entirely to human activities over the last 150 years, and continues to increase at an exponential rate and out of all control. Conventional science says that CO2 is an important GH gas and there will be adverse consequences if this is allowed to continue.

    You say it isn’t and there is no danger. Yes, I’d like to believe you, but you’ve no qualifications to make that judgement. Not too put too fine a point on it, you really just don’t know what you are talking about.

    [TonyN: I’m delighted that you’ve heard of the carbon cycle too, but I don’t want it discussed on this thread in any context other than the transcript of what Bindschadler and Nurse said in the film, which was a misleading solecism that should never have got beyond the editing suite.]

  24. TonyN Reur 21, You wrote in part:

    Once a decision has been taken at a lower level, each escalation simply results in more potent forces being employed to defend it. I’m not guessing about this because I’ve been through the mangle with both of them.

    For my complaints to the Oz ABC, I was invited by the CRU (Complaints Rejection Unit), and to a lesser degree by the ABC’s director of editorial policies, to pursue my complaints through one of three optional higher levels.

    For general interest, here is my most relevant recent Email to the director which explains why, amongst other things, I think that higher appeal would be futile. Note in particular the statistics of successful appeals to higher authority!

    Subject: Re: Problems with the ABC’s Editorial Policies
    Note: A&CA = Audience & Consumer Affairs, (or sarcastically; CRU)

    Dear XXXX, [31/Jan/2011]
    Thank you for your rapid reply Email.
    Unfortunately, my final comment has caused a distraction. It really reflected my uncertainty as to what to do, if anything, in the way of appealing the A&CA rulings. A&CA had advised [me] that the two ABC internal methods will soon no longer be available, and they recommended that if I were to elect one of those, that I should do so within 9 days from now, and cited:

    Review of the ABC’s Self-Regulation Framework. (The Report)
    http://www.abc.net.au/corp/pubs/documents/review_of_the_abc_self_regulation_framework_1009.pdf.

    I have since reviewed this rather substantial document, and have reached a decision not to proceed with any of the three appeal alternatives. My main reasons are as follows, with elaborations in the footnotes:

    1) The [external] ACMA approach has long seemed to be the most sensible to me*, but it appears that they can only rule on interpretations of the Code of Practice. Oddly, A&CA quoted Editorial Policies in their rulings, whereas, using your own expression, the Code of Practice is “distilled” from the far more detailed Editorial Policies. Thus, ACMA are arguably likely to uphold any allowable A&CA interpretation of what I have already described as inadequate in definitions.

    2) The statistics within The Report suggest that there is almost zero chance of any appeal being upheld, via any of the alternatives, and thus it is probably a waste of resources and time, to even try.****

    3) Regardless of the result of any appeal, it does not alter the fact that the existing wording in Editorial Policies enables lack of impartiality. (as distinct from the UK Ofcom Broadcasting Code, which is very clear in the that area). This not only includes bias, and exaggeration,** but bad journalism in the form of non-investigative reporting etc.***

    Thus, I’m ready to discuss any details with you, as outlined in my earlier Emails.
    For instance, I can greatly expand on the list of bias, misinformation, and exaggeration in some programmes.

    Yours sincerely,
    Bob XXXX

    FOOTNOTES:
    * It makes sense to me, to rid the system of those two internal methods.
    ** The unchallenged bias and exaggeration in The Science Show is sometimes gross, but the problem has global implications. It has led to ridicule of the ABC to a wide audience in the blogosphere.
    *** Re Chairman’s address of 10/March/2010
    **** The inference that 67% of appeals to ICRP were successful is statistical nonsense when based on a sample of 3. A random swing of only 1 unit in decisions would give 33% to 100%! (whereas ACMA fairly reliably infers; ~0%, and CRE a goodly quality; ~3%)

  25. PeterM

    You wrote to TonyN:

    The 700% figure is referring to new carbon that is added to the cycle rather than the amount of carbon which is already in the cycle.

    I won’t go into the accuracy of the two numbers per se, but would just remind you that a molecule of CO2 emanating from human fossil fuel combustion is no different in its GH effect than one exhaled by a termite or released from the Earth’s crust through a volcano or submarine fissure.

    The simplistic assumption of a “perfect balance” (at exactly 280 ppmv in the atmosphere on average over a given year) for thousands of years prior to human industrialization is a postulation embraced by IPCC, supported by ice core data (prior to 1958), but refuted by actual analyses made in several locations prior to 1958 (TonyB).

    I’ll agree that it is a logical assumption, and certainly less tenuous than the since discredited companion suggestion (Mann hockey stick) that global climate also remained essentially constant prior to human industrialization.

    Ian Plimer, who probably knows a bit more about geology than Paul Nurse, has estimated that all natural CO2 emissions from terrestrial and submarine volcanoes and fissures actually exceed those emitted by humans.

    Whether Plimer or Nurse is right on this geological question is a moot point, but I’d put my bet on the opinion of a hands-on geologist versus that of a Nobel Prize winning geneticist.

    But, in addition to the presumptuous title “Science under Attack”, the main objection I had to this entire story is that Nurse used the “argument from authority” (RS) to discuss a topic where he has no particular knowledge, probably even less knowledge than you or I, as a matter of fact. This “argument from authority” always smacks a bit of arrogance and elitism, which is how Nurse came across to me (similar to the earlier Brian Cox lecture).

    Then there was the clear shot in the foot when he stated

    trust only what the experiments and the data tell you

    He should have been aware that “the experiments and data” definitely do not tell us that AGW, caused primarily by human CO2 emissions, has been the major cause of post-industrial warming. nor that it represents a serious potential threat for humanity and our environment.

    The empirical scientific data from reproducible experimentation or physical observations which we should trust are still lacking.

    Max

    [TonyN: Please see my note on #23, just in case …]

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