Month: June 2018

LEAKED: A look inside the ClimateWorks Foundation $66 million campaign to foist climate laws on local governments

This document, from 2016 is part of the cache of John Podesta emails (campaign manager for Hillary Clinton), is a meeting packet for an NGO called The ClimateWorks Foundation. They say this on their web page:

Climate change threatens ecosystems, societies, and economies. These challenges require innovative responses and insights. Using the power of collaboration, ClimateWorks Foundation mobilizes philanthropy to solve the climate crisis and ensure a prosperous future.

And on their BOD page, U.N. climate crusader Christiana Figueres, who was executive Secretary of the UNFCCC from 2010-2016 along with Hillary’s campaign manager, John Podesta among others; an unholy alliance in my opinion.

In this leaked document (via Wikileaks) we see a list of billionaire foundations driving this NGO, who seem to be acting as if they are oblivious to the rule of law or domestic governments, working to create a global cap and trade system and funding a flurry of other environmental NGOs to change local policy.

One item from the document shows a session titled:

Cities as a Lever for Change Post‐Paris

As reported on page 80, they were helped by McKinsey and Company, the most influential management consulting firm in the world, which got a $42.4 million contract to help make this happen.

According to the budget document on page 170, the total 2016 budget for ClimateWorks Foundations was a whopping $66.6 million dollars! And alarmists claim climate skeptics are well-moneyed, sheesh!

Looking through the document. this seems like a RICO type of scenario to me. They are highly organized, and well-funded, where they planned to use all that money to influence local and state governments to enact climate laws, carbon trading, and put their tendrils even deeper into the deep state.

For example, here on page 20, they plan to influence California’s electricity grid. Shades of ENRON and rolling blackouts where the grid was crippled so greedmongers could eke out more money in trading. Here, they want to control virtually all of the western states, in one giant green monopoly:

Mr. McElwee described the grant to the Energy Foundation to support the U.S. Western grid integration. The grant to the Energy Foundation would support analysis for a recommendation for integrating the California Independent System Operation (CAISO) with a six‐state utility, following opportunities opened up by recent California legislation, and potentially leading to increased balancing of renewables across the region. The board discussed the goals and tactics of the proposal.

Just think what we’d be seeing if Hillary Clinton had won the presidency.

Here is the entire 208 page document, feel free to browse and post items of interest in comments.

https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/fileid/57594/16165

h/t to “JB”.

 

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June 24, 2018 at 06:17PM

Children evacuated from ‘summer’ camp after snow blankets Poland/Ukraine

“Winter refuses to die as large parts of the northern hemisphere like Labrador and Eastern Europe get blanketed by unusual summer snow.  

Snowfall in summer in Poland and Ukraine!

Yesterday, on the second day of summer, snow fell in Poland! according to Severe Weather Europe at Facebook.

In Ukraine in the Karpaten 27 children had to be rescued from summer camp by emergency crews as “several centimeters of snow fell and temperatures dropped near freeing,” the German Weser Kurier here reports.

Schnee in den Karpaten – 27 Kinder aus Zeltlager gerettet

(Snow in the Carpathians – 27 children rescued from tent camp)

The onset of winter shortly after the beginning of summer.

In the Carpathians in Ukraine, several inches of snow fell aa temperatures hovered around freezing last night. Rescuers escorted 27 children and eight adults from a camp near Mount Blysnytsia. Snow was also reported from the High Tatras, which adjoins the Carpathians.

https://www.weser-kurier.de/schlagzeilen_artikel,-schnee-in-den-karpaten-27-kinder-aus-zeltlager-gerettet-_arid,1742250.html

http://notrickszone.com/2018/06/24/wheres-the-warming-summer-snow-blankets-poland-ukraine-27-summer-camp-children-evacuated/

Thanks to Glenn Cuthbert for this link

The post Children evacuated from ‘summer’ camp after snow blankets Poland/Ukraine appeared first on Ice Age Now.

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June 24, 2018 at 05:01PM

Oreskes 2004 and Peiser

As mentioned in previous post on the consensus article in skepticalscience, there was an entry explaining the Oreskes 2004 paper. In the article, it was presented as “Oreskes 2004 and Peiser”. Which was an odd thing. Peiser didn’t write the paper together with Oreskes (otherwise it would be “Oreskes and Peiser, 2004). At the contrary, Peiser wrote a critique on the conclusion of the paper (that not a single paper rejected the consensus position). The author of this article seems to have a lot of confidence also mentioning the critique together with the Oreskes paper.

At that time, I did not know much about the Peiser critique and initially had to rely on the explanation provided by the author of the skepticalscience article. This is how the critique is presented in the article:

Oreskes 2004 and Peiser

A survey of all peer-reviewed abstracts on the subject ‘global climate change’ published between 1993 and 2003 shows that not a single paper rejected the consensus position that global warming is man caused (Oreskes 2004). 75% of the papers agreed with the consensus position while 25% made no comment either way (focused on methods or paleoclimate analysis).

Benny Peiser, a climate contrarian, repeated Oreskes’ survey and claimed to have found 34 peer reviewed studies rejecting the consensus. However, an inspection of each of the 34 studies reveals most of them don’t reject the consensus at all. The remaining articles in Peiser’s list are editorials or letters, not peer-reviewed studies. Peiser has since retracted his criticism of Oreskes survey:

“Only [a] few abstracts explicitly reject or doubt the AGW (anthropogenic global warming) consensus which is why I have publicly withdrawn this point of my critique. [snip] I do not think anyone is questioning that we are in a period of global warming. Neither do I doubt that the overwhelming majority of climatologists is agreed that the current warming period is mostly due to human impact.”

A [snip] in a skepticalscience article? I need to know more about that! What exactly got snipped in that quote from Peiser?

I also noticed some discrepancy between the description by the author of the skepticalscience article and the quote from Peiser. The author of the skepticalscience article claims that Peiser retracted his criticism of the Oreskes survey, while the quote (attributed to Peiser) mentioned that he withdrew this point of his critique.

So, what did Peiser actually withdraw? His complete critique on the paper (as suggested by the skepticalscience author) or just part of it (as suggested by the quote attributed to Peiser)? In the last case, which part exactly did he withdraw?

As it is explained in the article, I understood that Benny Peiser replicated the study and found 34 peer reviewed studies rejecting the consensus. It seems that later was found (by whom?) that most of those 34 papers didn’t reject the consensus and Peiser retracted (part of) his critique. Connecting both parts of the quote before and after the snip seems to suggest that Peiser, after the correction, changed his mind and is now fully in line with the Oreskes 2004 paper. Which seems to contradict Peiser’s quote that he only withdrew part of his critique.

Time to follow the links and find the source to see what was actaully said and what was omitted. A link is provided, but curiously, it goes to an episode of an ABC program called “MediaWatch” and the Peiser critique is not even the subject of this episode. Its subject is an article written by Andrew Bolt in the Herald Sun in which the conclusion of the Peiser critique was mentioned. Luckily, the MediaWatch episode also has some links that went to the orginial source.

Following the first link brought me to the retraction email from Peiser to Science Magazine. In it, Peiser wrote that he tried to replicate the Oreskes findings and that his results didn’t confirm her result. It was an interesting read. Peiser’s argumentation is much more comprehensive than is explained in the skepticalscience article:

  • he found 34 abstracts contradicting the claim that the universal agreement had not been questioned even once in the peer-reviewed literature since 1993
  • he found 44 abstracts that emphasise the claim that current climate change is natural
  • he only found 13 abstracts that explicitly endorse the “consensus view”
  • a significant number of abstracts reject what Oreskes calls the “consensus view”
  • natural climate variability over recent geological time is greater than reasonable estimates of potential human-induced greenhouse gas changes.
  • he agrees that a majority of publications goes along with the notion of anthropogenic global warming by applying models based on its basic assumptions
  • there are skeptical scientist out there who write papers. Peiser admits that these are a minority, but critical papers should be found in the ISI database and the result that “not a single paper rejected the consensus position” is dubious.

He also explains that he found discrepancies when he compared his results with the result claimed by Oreskes. He found much more abstracts than Oreskes and was puzzled by this fact. It made him believe that Oreskes could not have done the specific search she claimed to have done in the paper.

Apparently, she didn’t. That became clear when I followed the second link, pointing to an inquiry in which Peiser answers the questions of someone from ABC (probably in function of that episode of MediaWatch?). The search term she used was indeed “global climate change” but she limited her search to documents of the type “article”, while Peiser searched for the same term, but for all document (it was not mentioned in the paper that only articles were selected). That shed some light on the controversy. There was also this interesting question:

It implies that, given this methodology, the 34 articles you found that “reject or doubt the view that human activities are the main drivers of the observed warming over the last 50 years” may not have been included in the 928 articles randomly selected by Prof Oreskes. Is this possible?

The question is whether (most of) the 34 abstracts that Peiser found were of a different document type than “article”. Interestingly, in answering this question, Peiser explains what exactly he withdrew:

Yes, that is indeed the case. I only found out after Oreskes confirmed that she had used a different search strategy (see above). Which is why I no longer maintain this particular criticism. In addition, some of the abstracts that I included in the 34 “reject or doubt” category are very ambiguous and should not have been included.

This answer clarifies a lot. Peiser found more abstracts than Oreskes because in his search strategy more document types were selected, therefor coming to more abstracts than Oreskes did. The 34 abstracts found by Peiser apparently were not (all?/most?) included in the 928 articles selected by Oreskes. After he came to know the exact methodology, he withdrew that specific part of his criticism. Which is different from the suggestion by the author of the skepticalscience article that he retracted all the points of critique on the survey. As far as I could find, Peiser still had points of critique on the paper as he also explains in the same inquiry email:

Please note that the whole ISI data set includes just 13 abstracts (less than 2%) that *explicitly* endorse what she has called the ‘consensus view.’ The vast majority of abstracts do not deal with or mention anthropogenic global warming whatsoever. I also maintain that she ignored a few abstracts that explicitly reject what she calls the consensus view.

Peiser also put the abstracts online so everybody could check (there seems to be a problem with that server, but the abstracts can still be found via the Wayback Machine).

That is why the author of the skepticalscience article was so confident in mentioning the critique together with the survey. Readers were tricked into believing that this clarification by Oreskes settled all criticism and that there was no critique on the survey anymore. By omitting that part of the story, the author of the skepticalscience article made it very safe to mention the critique.

Did the author knew the full extent of the critique of Peiser? I have serious doubts that he actually went to the source and read the whole story himself. Remember, the reason for my search was the snip that I found in the quote. When I read the MediaWatch inquiry email, I found the second part of the quote in the inquiry email, but couldn’t find the first part in the rest of the text. I was puzzled and started to doubt whether this was the original source after all, but when I went back to the MediaWatch episode, I found that first part! It is introduced as a quote from the first email written by Peiser to ABC (there was no link to it, so I don’t know the context or the rest of the content). And yes, further in the episode, I found that second part of the quote…

It all fitted together, this seems to be were the author of the skepticalscience article got his quote from. Chances are that the author just copied the quotes from the MediaWatch episode on Andrew Bolt and snipped the text in between both quotes since it was not related to his article. So, he quoted secondhand information from a source in which the Peiser critique was mentioned, instead of going to the original source just one click further…

Another thing that points in that direction is that the author of the skepticalscience article reported that Peiser “claimed to have found 34 peer reviewed studies rejecting the consensus”. This is not the case and if he actually viewed the source, then he would have known that. Peiser only mentioned that he found abstracts, he didn’t claim that he found “peer reviewed studies”. Also Oreskes didn’t claim that she found peer-reviewed studies. Although she mentioned “peer-reviewed literature” a couple times in the paper, she also used the term “abstracts” to describe what she found. So the claim that Peiser found 34 “peer-reviewed studies” came from the imagination of the author of the skepticalscience article himself.

By the way, that second part of the quote after the snip was not a new insight of Peiser after he realized that Oreskes used a different search strategy, as seems to be suggested in the article. He made a similar claim in the original critique.

How relevant is all this? Personally, I find the Oreskes findings rather meaningless. In previous post, I wrote a post about the term equivocation (the use of ambiguous terms) and said that the Oreskes survey makes a good example. Oreskes didn’t define what she meant by “climate change” and “anthropogenic climate change”, therefor it could be interpreted in different ways, depending on the definition used by the reader. In the skepticalscience article, this ambiguity is used to declare a much broader consensus than actually exists.

Concluding, the framing was very strong in this tiny part of the skepticalscience article. The author of the skepticalscience article forgot/glossed over/didn’t understand/omitted essential information that would make the reader understand the actual critique of Peiser. The combining of the two separate quotes made me wonder whether the author understood the critique of Peiser and whether he just relied on the information provided in the MediaWatch episode instead of going to the original source.

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June 24, 2018 at 04:54PM

Sloppy Science + Bad Reporting = Fake Scare

 

Abusing science to incite fear is not confined to global warming/climate change. Medical science has also been debased by taking up the appeal to public alarm. The current example being exploitation of ovarian cancer, as explained by Warren Kindzierski writing in Financial Post How weaselly science and bad reporting consistently find cancer links that don’t exist  (Weaselly: Stretching facts with the use of such words as ‘this could,’ ‘can,’ ‘may,’ ‘might,’ ‘probably,’ ‘likely’ cause cancer)

Last month, the Quebec court authorized a class-action suit against two brands of baby powder that alleges that regular use of talc powder by women in their genital area is linked to a higher risk of ovarian cancer. Part of the allegations relate to claims that an ovarian cancer risk from powdered talc use is demonstrated by nearly four decades of scientific studies. Cosmetic talc has certainly been the subject of much scientific debate, study and, increasingly, legal challenge.

However, the cosmetic talc-ovarian cancer link is commonly misunderstood. Published biomedical studies cover both sides, suggesting a talc-ovarian cancer link and showing no link. Even today in prominent journals, letters to the editor — penned by scientists — rage back and forth, defending their studies or attacking the other side’s studies.

Now this is civilized, real science.

This bouncing back and forth of positive versus negative effects between talc and ovarian cancer is referred to as “vibration of effects” by John Iaonnidis, a professor of medicine and of health research and policy at Stanford University. Studies vary depending on how they are done. Why is this? Well, getting scientists to agree on important things like methods, what data to use and how to analyze and interpret effects from subtle human exposures is next to impossible. It would be no problem if one were studying cancer risks in populations receiving large exposures over long durations; but such situations are non-existent.

The truth is that the ability of any biomedical method, epidemiology included, to discriminate cancer risks in people from small exposures to a physical or chemical agent does not exist.

Most cancers are caused by a number of factors. As a result, establishing cancer causation is complex — unless a particular risk factor is overwhelming. Epidemiology studies cannot and do not realistically replicate this complexity, at least not very well. That is why the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute lists a number of key risk factors for ovarian cancer and talc is not one of them.

The institute states that it is not clear whether talc affects ovarian cancer risk. An expert U.S. cosmetic-ingredient review panel assessed the safety of cosmetic talc in 2015. It thoroughly analyzed numerous studies investigating whether or not a relationship exists between cosmetic use of talc in the perineal area and ovarian cancer. The panel determined that these studies do not support a causal link. They also agreed that there is no known physiological mechanism by which talc can plausibly migrate from the perineum to the ovaries. The news coverage of the lawsuit has been silent on that evidence.

Part of the public’s misunderstanding about talc comes from scientists offering opinions about cancer from small exposures. Too many scientists use weasel words to stretch facts: “This could,” “can,” “may,” “might,” “probably,” “likely” cause cancer. Flimsy so-called evidence from their studies that suffer from vibration of effects and their speculations are voraciously inhaled by naïve journalists. Stretched facts miraculously get reported as facts to the public — or worse, misused for litigation purposes.

The woman’s bathroom is a chemical exposure chamber with literally dozens of cosmetic products used at various times. Both skin contact and inhalation regularly occur with grooming products. However, repeated uses of small amounts of cosmetic talc or any other cosmetic product do not amount to overwhelming exposures despite the claims of some scientists and media. Overwhelming exposures — the ones that cause effects — are those that occur with laboratory rats and mice. Underwhelming exposures are what occur to people in the real world.

It is highly speculative that repeated use of small amounts of cosmetic talc is a definitive cause of ovarian cancer. It is not a definitive cause; it is only suggestive. Prominent organizations such as the U.S. National Cancer Institute and expert panels should make clear statements about such cancer risks, but they do not. Selective methods in epidemiology studies, speculation by scientists and inaccurate reporting by news media are ingredients used to transform weak suggestive evidence from underwhelming cosmetic talc exposure into something that is mistakenly claimed to be harmful for the public.

And that is why we end up with class action suits against cosmetic companies.

Warren Kindzierski is an associate professor in The School of Public Health at the University of Alberta.

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June 24, 2018 at 04:31PM