Site icon Climate Etc.

Week in review

by Judith Curry

A few things that caught my eye this past week.

From my twitter feed:

Brendan O’Neill in Telegraph: It is vital that knowledge is controversial, even about climate change http://is.gd/7inGnX

It’s not a shortage of creative scientists, just agencies unwilling to fund creative ideas. http://ow.ly/B4UF7

Caleb Rossiter: Deserting the climate wars [link]

Naomi Klein: Big green is in denial [link]

WSJ: Climate change agenda needs to adapt to reality [link]

David Roberts (@drgrist) is back from digital detox. His reflection is a must read: http://shar.es/11GNPd

Mark Steyn: When science is settled by government [link]

Royal Society blog:  “retrofitting excellent science to a policy problem is all too common and unhelpful” [link]

Carl Wunsch on ocean’s changing temperature [link]

Italian scientists to appeal manslaughter conviction re Aquila earthquake; lay confusion over probability [link]

Un-muzzle the scientists?  Not so fast [link]

“Strategic use of science is fundamentally political” It’s a ‘tool of influence.’ [link]

New Senate report explains WHAT CLIMATE REGULATION IS ALL ABOUT [link]

Matt Ridley in the WSJ: Whatever Happened to Global Warming? http://wp.me/p7y4l-u79

Global Temperature Drops Below IPCC Projection Range [link]

Ban-Ki Moon’s Climate Summit Dead In The Water [link]

The 8% Consensus: Only 11 Of 144 Countries Have Backed The Kyoto Protocol’s Extension [link]

California’s 100 year drought [link]

Reconceptualising risk in research: The call to do no harm goes far beyond the field. [link]

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