Read the whole thing.Perhaps the most worrying thing about the PBL report, though, is a rather obvious one about which its authors say little.
In all ten of the issues that the PBL categorised as major (the original errors on glaciers and Dutch sea level, and the eight others identified in the report), the impression that the reader gets from the IPCC is more strikingly negative than the impression which would have been received if the underlying evidence base had been reflected as the PBL would have wished, with more precise referencing, more narrow interpretation and less authorial judgment. A large rise in heat related deaths in Australia is mentioned without noting that most of the effect is due to population rather than climate change. A claim about forest fires in northern Asia seems to go further than the evidence referred to—in this case a speech by a politician—would warrant.
The Netherlands look more floodable, Asian glaciers more fragile. A suspicion thus gains ground that the way in which the IPCC sythesises, generalises snd checks its findings may systematically favour adverse outcomes in a way that goes beyond just serving the needs of policy makers. Anecdotally, authors bemoan fights to keep caveats in place as chapters are edited, refined and summarised. The PBL report does not prove or indeed suggest systematic bias, and it stresses that it has found nothing that should lead the parliament of the Netherlands, or anyone else, to reject the IPCC’s findings. But the panel set up to look at the IPCC’s workings by Dr Pachauri and Mr Ban should ask some hard questions about systematic tendencies to accentuate the negative.
05 July 2010
The Economist on Dutch IPCC Report
The Economist has a brilliant online article on the Dutch IPCC report, that is well worth reading in full. Here is how it concludes:

6 comments:
Interested people should also read the Dutch report, available at:
http://www.pbl.nl/en/index.html
Some may find that The Economist article itself has a tendency to “accentuate the negative”. But judge for yourself.
Once again, 'false but true' is the standard applied to climate science.
How long until 'false is not true' returns as the standard?
From the 3rd paragraph in the Economist article:
"...their work seems to bring out a systemic tendency to stress negative effects over positive ones. This tendency can be defended."
I found that whole paragraph hard to understand. When they mention "their work", are they talking about the IPCC report or the PBL report? And can anyone hazard a guess as to what they mean by the tendency can be "defended"?
Thanks.
Hey, what happened to the first two comments?
-3-fws
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Roger,
The Muir Russell report has been released. Once again, an 'official investigation' has been conducted with only one side being interviewed. I have a question for you -- I have to think that that the sloppy, one-sided efforts are deliberate. Do you think that the blatantly obvious shortcomings of the process are really a signal by the investigators?
I'm serious. Assume that the people involved all understand their marching orders are to produce a whitewash. Having some shred of integrity, they deliberately avoid making the effort of dotting all the 'i's and crossing all the 't's that a thorough quality effort would require. Since the 'investigation' is clearly a coverup to anyone looking at the incompetence of the process, they are signaling that they aren't happy with what they have had to do. It's subtle sabotage.
Why else would they produce such obviously inadequate investigations? They don't even bother to go through the motions.
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