As a boy growing up in
St. Louis, Missouri, Auer was reportedly fascinated by weather. After a freak winter storm caused havoc in his home town, he decided to become a meteorologist. He studied meteorology at
Colorado State University before getting a job at the
University of Wyoming. Auer was a Professor of
Atmospheric Science at the University of Wyoming for 22 years. A land use typing method to classify land as urban or rural, based on work he published in 1978, is used by the
United States Environmental Protection Agency and by the Jamaican National Environment and Planning Agency. His most frequently cited research paper involves ice crystals in clouds. In 1990, Auer emigrated to New Zealand, becoming Chief Meteorologist for the
Meteorological Service of New Zealand Limited from 1990 to 1998. and was regarded in New Zealand as a "well-known and colourful meteorologist". In 2006, he helped found the
New Zealand Climate Science Coalition to argue against claims for man-made global warming, leading the MetService to publicly disavow the views of their former Chief Meteorologist. Following the transfer of "climate science" issues from the then New Zealand Meteorological Service into the
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) in 1992, Augie become critical of its statements, including those of former associate
Jim Salinger. In a 19 May 2007 interview with
The Timaru Herald newspaper, Auer claimed that a combination of misinterpreted and misguided science, media hype, and political spin had created the current hysteria and it was time to put a stop to it, adding "It is time to attack the myth of global warming." On 10 June 2007, Auer died suddenly of a heart attack while dining with family in
Melbourne, while celebrating his 35th
wedding anniversary and his 67th birthday. ==See also==