A scientist whose research has been used by prominent climate science denialists Lord Matt Ridley and Rupert Murdoch to claim carbon dioxide is good for the planet has hit back at the โselective presentationโ of hisย work.
Professor Ranga Myneni, of Boston University, has been researching satellite data showing how the extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels is contributing to increased plant growth across theย planet.
In an article published in the Murdoch-owned The Times and reproduced in Murdochโs The Australian, Ridley said 30 years of satellite data showed plant growth had risen by 14 per cent across theย world.
I asked Lord Ridley on Twitter about the source for his satellite data and he pointed me to a 2013 presentation by Professor Myneni.
Myneni told DeSmogย the presentation Lord Ridley had cited had not been peer reviewed and was โwork in progressโ but hoped it would appear as two scientific articles, one of which was in review at the journal Nature Climateย Change.
He said his analysis of satellite data covering the last 30 years did show a 13 to 14 per cent increase in vegetation growth. He said some of this could be attributed to increased levels of carbon dioxide, but changes in the way land was management was also aย factor.
Myneni,ย in Norway for a meeting of ecologists to discuss vegetation changes in remote regions,ย said โin the context of being good versus badโ he was โworried about how this work is beingย interpretedโ.
He said Ridleyโs story โsuffers from selective presentation of factsโ and would โnot surviveย peer-reviewโ.ย
If one were to interpret the greening of the Earth as a good or a positive development then one must also accept that the accompanying climate changes (global warming, for example) and its physical (sea level rise) and biotic impacts (polar bears) as bad or negativeย developments.
Again, in my opinion, this benefit of greening is not worth price of all the negativeย changes.
Humans are one amongst many species on Earth and we have no right conducting such experiments that affect all forms of life – it is simply indecent, deeply vulgar and inhuman (you can choose anyย adjective).
This is not the first time that Ridley has cited Myneniโs work. He first did so in a January 2013 column in the Wall Street Journal, prompting Murdoch himself to tell his Twitter followers that the satellite data showed the planet was โgrowing greener with increasedย carbon.โ
World growing greener with increased carbon. Thirty years of satellite evidence. Forests growing faster andย thicker.
โ Rupert Murdoch (@rupertmurdoch) January 6, 2013
Ridley, who earns undisclosed but likely substantial money from coal mining on his family’s estate, also cited Myneniโs work in an October 2013 story in The Spectator.
Ridleyโs article in The Times also promoted a report written by Dr Indur Goklany and published by the climate science denialist lobby group the Global Warming Policy Foundation.
The report, titled Carbon Dioxide: The good news, makes a number of claims about the supposed benefits of adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere while dismissing the well documented impacts, including rising temperature extremes, sea level rise and damage to oceanย ecosystems.
Like Ridley, Goklany is a member of the GWPFโs academic advisoryย council.
Ridley claimed the report was โwas thoroughly peer ยญreviewedโ which would usually be taken to mean that independent scientists had looked at theย manuscript.
But through tweets from the official GWPF account and Professor Ross McKitrick, the chair of the GWPFโs advisory council, it appears that instead the document was sent around to other GWPF members forย review.
McKitrick said Goklanyโs report was โa survey of findings previously published in peer-reviewed scientific journalsโ.ย However, Goklanyโs report includes references to the work of another climate science denialist, Craig Idso.
The same Idso report was cited heavily by a 2014 coal industry report that also argued that extra CO2 in the atmosphere would be good for plants andย crops.
The GWPF report says Goklany has previously been an โIPCC reviewerโ and is an โindependent scientistโ.ย The report does not mention that Goklany has long associations with several conservative think tanks that have worked to promote climate science denial, including the Heartland Institute.
Leaked internal documents from Heartland listed Goklany as receiving $1000 per month for work on its โalternativeโ Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Changeย reports.
Ridleyโs column in The Times also promoted the views of denialist Patrick Moore, who delivered the GWFโs annual lecture earlier this month.ย Moore is not a climate scientist but has claimed there is โno scientific proofโ that humans are causing globalย warming.
Photo: Matt Ridley. Image: Flickr/IAB UK
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