Professor Jonathan Overpeck once complained journalists were too
concerned about balance in global warming stories. Now hes the
centerpiece of two one-sided reports based on his predictions of
global catastrophe.
If we dont like the idea of flooding out
New Orleans we will have to commit soon to a major effort to curb
carbon emissions, a
March 23 New York Times article quoted the University of Arizona professor of geosciences.
Wire reporter Deborah Zabarenko
went a step further, paraphrasing Overpecks New Orleans comment in
her March 23 story. Miami would be a memory, Bangkok a soggy shadow
of its former self and the Maldive Islands would vanish if melting
polar ice keeps fueling a faster-than-expected rise in sea levels,
the Reuters correspondent wrote.
Both Revkin and Zabarenko excluded any critics of Overpeck, such as
University of Virginia climatologist Pat Michaels, who says
Overpecks models are nothing but hot air. Michaels told theBusiness & Media Institute that Overpecks model is based on exaggerations, not
historical trends.
While Overpeck based his computer modeling on a 1-percent per year
increase in so-called greenhouse gases, Michaels noted that the
actual annual increases in carbon dioxide in the last 10 years
averaged 0.49 percent. It was 0.42 percent in the ten years before
that, and 0.43 percent between 20 and 30 years ago.
And while Overpeck warned journalists that the melting was
irreversible, Michaels pointed out that scientific literature is
littered of references to the fact that sea levels were much higher
in previous interglacials than in the current one while previous
interglacials were warmer than the current one.
In laymans terms the earth has seen higher sea levels during
warmer periods, and theyve receded since then.
Overpeck himself is far from a dispassionate scientist. In a January
2002 interview with liberal Web site
TomPaine.com, Overpeck said his view on global warming was informed by his own
personal science, and that while scientists dont like to be
alarmists, to sound tentative about scientific conclusions on
climate change is not serving the public.
The professor also lambasted skeptics of global warming theory and
the journalists who include them in their reporting.
You can always find one scientist who disagrees with the consensus,
whether for money, politics or their science. And often, the press
will give that one scientist as much weight as the hundreds he or
she is disagreeing with, Overpeck lamented.
Ironically, that appears to be the case with Overpeck, a lone voice
against more than 7,600
scientists
who dispute the theory that manmade greenhouse gases contribute
significantly to climate change.
Reuters, NY Times Push Study Predicting Dramatic Sea Level Change
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