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Harold Shapiro of the InterAcademy council offers his report to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moonRecommendations are for managerial reform, not on climate science and assessment reports

The Amsterdam-based InterAcademy Council (IAC), a global organization of the world’s science academies, released a comprehensive report yesterday reviewing the processes and procedures of the embattled Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Continue Reading Fundamental Management Reforms Recommended for IPCC Climate Panel

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Stanford University climate scientist Dr. Stephen Schneider died unexpectedly of an apparent heart attack while traveling yesterday while on a plane bound for London after attending a meeting in Stockholm.

Schneider was Professor of Environmental Biology and Climate Change at Stanford, Co-Director at the Center for Environmental Policy of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and a Senior Fellow in the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment. Schneider, along with his Stanford Biologist wife Terry Root, won the 2003 National Wildlife Federation’s National Conservation Achievement Award. He co-authored more than 450 scientific papers and publications, contributed to all four IPCC assessment reports, and was Coordinating Lead Author for the  IPCC Working Group II Third Assessment Report – work that led to his receiving the Nobel Peace Prize a a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Continue Reading Leading Climate Scientist Stephen Schneider Dies at 65 – The World Loses a Great Scientist and Communicator

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Climategate is a media ruse based on sensationalism, not investigative journalism. When the climategate story broke, a number of people welcomed the news and eagerly offered their emotional support. Now that the scientists involved were vindicated by three investigations, one would expect to see retractions or at least addendums to the coverage. Unfortunately this is not the case.

Continue Reading Irresponsible Media Continues to Fuel Climategate Controversy

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GlobalWarmingisReal contributor Anders Hellum-Alexander wraps-up the climate and environmental news headlines for the past week:

  • An important question for environmentalists to ask is; what should be our stance on how to respond to the recession? A reporter at Grist asks, “Feed the economy, or starve it?

Continue Reading Environmental News Wrap: June 29-July 5

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WhateverGate

The UK’s Sunday Times recently retracted claims made in an article published last January by Jonathan Leake, a writer who is no stranger of climate-change-denying controversy. Leake’s claims, says the times retraction, that non-peer-reviewed data based on unscientific sources influenced the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment Report  regarding climactic impacts on the Amazon Rainforest – what Leake characterized at the time as “Amazongate – were completely false. What the  retraction doesn’t say is that Leake knew it wasn’t accurate when he submitted it for publication.

Continue Reading Sunday Times Retracts “AmazonGate” Article for Shoddy Journalism – For Jonathan Leake, Par for the Course

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In the wake of revelations that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) allowed faulty data into its 2007 Fourth Assessment Report about the rate of melt for the Himalayan Glaciers, the United Nations has announced it will commission an independent panel to review the IPCC’s operations and recommend any needed changes.

Continue Reading UN to Commission Independent Panel to Review IPCC

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Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson held firm against lead climate pseudo-skeptic James Inhofe and his colleagues on Tuesday at an EPA budget hearing with the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

Continue Reading EPA Chief Lisa Jackson Spars With Senate GOP Over Climate Science

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In the aftermath of the incident surrounding erroneous statements in part of the Fourth Assessment Report released in 2007 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) claiming that Himalayan glaciers could disappear by 2035, pressure has been mounting for IPCC chief, Dr. Rejandra Pachauri, to step down.

Continue Reading Scientists Behaving Badly – Raina Demands Public Apology, IPCC’s Pachauri Remains Defiant – Nobody Wins

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Speaking this week at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Dr. Jonathan Pershing, the Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change, said negotiators and advisors were preparing for failure just as Air Force One was landing in Copenhagen on the final day of the COP15 climate conference.

Continue Reading COP15 High Drama – Climate Negotiators Prepare “Failure Speech” as Obama Arrives in Copenhagen

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Thanks to rising sea levels, land forms that sustain wildlife may no longer be above water or otherwise suitable for some species who may be hard pressed to find places to go. Pictured: a Galapagos penguin, one of thousands of endemic island species facing likely extinction unless we can get a handle on greenhouse gas emissions in short order. EarthTalk® is a weekly environmental column made available to our readers from the editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: Are there any conservation efforts focused on animal species endemic to islands likely to be submerged by rising sea levels? – H. Wyeth, Anahola, HI

Continue Reading EarthTalk: Conservation Efforts for Species on Sinking Islands