Endorsements In 2001, 16 national
science academies issued a joint statement on climate change. The joint statement was made by the
Australian Academy of Science, the
Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts, the
Brazilian Academy of Sciences, the
Royal Society of Canada, the
Caribbean Academy of Sciences, the
Chinese Academy of Sciences, the
French Academy of Sciences, the
German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina, the
Indian National Science Academy, the
Indonesian Academy of Sciences, the
Royal Irish Academy,
Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (Italy), the
Academy of Sciences Malaysia, the
Academy Council of the Royal Society of New Zealand, the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, and the
Royal Society (UK). The TAR has also been endorsed by the
Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences,
Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society, and
European Geosciences Union (refer to "
Endorsements of the IPCC"). In 2001, the
US National Research Council (US NRC) produced a report that assessed Working Group I's (WGI) contribution to the TAR. US NRC (2001) "generally agrees" with the WGI assessment, and describes the full WGI report as an "admirable summary of research activities in climate science". IPCC author
Richard Lindzen has made a number of criticisms of the TAR. Among his criticisms, Lindzen has stated that the WGI Summary for Policymakers (SPM) does not faithfully summarize the full WGI report. has responded to Lindzen's criticisms of the SPM. Houghton has stressed that the SPM is agreed upon by delegates from many of the world's governments, and that any changes to the SPM must be supported by scientific evidence. Trenberth has stated that during the drafting of the WGI SPM, some government delegations attempted to "blunt, and perhaps obfuscate, the messages in the report". concluded that the WGI SPM and Technical Summary are "consistent" with the full WGI report. US NRC (2001) who disagree with aspects of the IPCC's work. Perhaps the best known is
Richard Lindzen, contains criticisms of the IPCC's work, including the "
SRES" greenhouse gas emissions scenarios, which are used in the TAR. The Economic Affairs Select Committee is made up of members of the
House of Lords, which scrutinizes and votes on government legislation. One of the criticisms made by the EAC (2005) is an apparent inconsistency between the Working Group II Summary for Policymakers and a statement made in the full WGII report: "The IPCC Summary for policy makers says that economic studies underestimate damage, whereas the chapter says the direction of the bias is not known." The
UK Government issued a response to the report by EAC (2005). but remained generally supportive of the IPCC's procedures. The UK Government rebutted a number of other criticisms of the TAR which were made by the EAC (2005).
Discussion of the "hockey stick" graph 4 data from 1850 to 2013. schematic Figure 7.1.c (red) [based on Lamb 1965 extrapolating from central England temperatures and other historical records]; central England temperatures to 2007 shown from Jones
et al. 2009 (green dashed line). Also shown, Moberg
et al. 2005 low frequency signal (black). The third assessment report (TAR) prominently featured a graph labeled "Millennial Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstruction" based on a 1999 paper by
Michael E. Mann,
Raymond S. Bradley and Malcolm K. Hughes (MBH99), which has been referred to as the "
hockey stick graph". This graph extended the similar graph in
Figure 3.20 from the
IPCC Second Assessment Report of 1995, and differed from a schematic in the
first assessment report that lacked temperature units, but appeared to depict larger global temperature variations over the past 1000 years, and higher temperatures during the
Medieval Warm Period than the mid 20th century. The schematic was not an actual plot of data, and was based on a diagram of temperatures in central England, with temperatures increased on the basis of documentary evidence of medieval
vineyards in England. Even with this increase, the maximum it showed for the Medieval Warm Period did not reach temperatures recorded in central England in 2007. These studies were widely presented as demonstrating that the current warming period is exceptional in comparison to temperatures between 1000 and 1900, and the MBH99 based graph featured in publicity. Even at the draft stage, this finding was disputed by contrarians: in May 2000
Fred Singer's
Science and Environmental Policy Project held a press event on Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C., featuring comments on the graph
Wibjörn Karlén and Singer argued against the graph at a
United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation hearing on 18 July 2000. Denialist
John Lawrence Daly featured a modified version of the IPCC 1990 schematic, which he mis-identified as appearing in the IPCC 1995 report, and asserted that "Overturning its own previous view in the 1995 report, the IPCC presented the 'Hockey Stick' as the new orthodoxy with hardly an apology or explanation for the abrupt U-turn since its 1995 report". Criticism of the MBH99 reconstruction in a review paper, which was quickly discredited in the
Soon and Baliunas controversy, was picked up by the Bush administration, and a Senate speech by US Republican senator
James Inhofe alleged that "manmade global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people". The data and methodology used to produce the "hockey stick graph" was criticized in papers by
Stephen McIntyre and
Ross McKitrick, and in turn the criticisms in these papers were examined by other studies and comprehensively refuted by , which showed errors in the methods used by McIntyre and McKitrick. On 23 June 2005, Rep.
Joe Barton, chairman of the
House Committee on Energy and Commerce, wrote joint letters with
Ed Whitfield, chairman of the
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, demanding full records on climate research, as well as personal information about their finances and careers, from Mann, Bradley and Hughes.
Sherwood Boehlert, chairman of the
House Science Committee, said this was a "misguided and illegitimate investigation" apparently aimed at intimidating scientists, and at his request the
U.S. National Academy of Sciences arranged for its
National Research Council to set up a special investigation. The National Research Council's report agreed that there were some statistical failings, but these had little effect on the graph, which was generally correct. In a 2006 letter to
Nature, Mann, Bradley, and Hughes pointed out that their original article had said that "more widespread high-resolution data are needed before more confident conclusions can be reached" and that the uncertainties were "the point of the article".
Sea level rise predictions An example of scientific research which suggests that previous estimates by the IPCC, far from overstating dangers and risks, have actually understated them is a study on projected rises in sea levels. When the researchers' analysis was "applied to the possible scenarios outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the researchers found that in 2100 sea levels would be 0.5–1.4 m [50–140 cm] above 1990 levels. These values are much greater than the 9–88 cm as projected by the IPCC itself in its Third Assessment Report, published in 2001". This may have been due, in part, to the expanding human understanding of climate. Greg Holland from the
National Center for Atmospheric Research, who reviewed a multi-meter
sea level rise study by
Jim Hansen, noted "
There is no doubt that the sea level rise, within the IPCC, is a very conservative number, so the truth lies somewhere between IPCC and Jim." ==See also==