Desperate Green Attempt Launched to Abuse and Discredit US Government Report Casting Doubt on ‘Settled’ Climate Science

Massed Green forces are being mobilised and rushed to the American front to try to quell a disturbing outbreak of genuine climate science debate. Activist battalions under the command of Green Blob-funded Leo Hickman from Carbon Brief are engaged in a “crowdsourced” attempt to “fact check” a recent climate report from the US Department of Energy (DoE). This was published at the same time that it is proposed to remove carbon dioxide from 2009 endangerment findings, leading to inevitable major rollbacks of rules backing the Net Zero fantasy. The Guardian has already reported that the report is a “farce full of misinformation” and now the former Guardian writer Hickman is writing to scientists quoted in the report, seeking help in identifying any inaccuracies and what is termed “mischaracterisation”.

At first, his email was not sent to the scientist Dr Roger Pielke Jnr, despite his work being quoted 30 times from eight peer-reviewed articles that he authored or co-authored, along with three posts from his Substack. In his latest post, Pielke gives a detailed review of how his work was reported and concludes that, in each instance, it was cited accurately. As a scientist, he said he had some suggestions – he does not directly say so, but they are on the grounds that that is what genuine scientists do, even if they disagree with each other. Overall, he awarded the five science authors “a strong A”.

The official US Government report looked at the effect of greenhouses gases on the climate. Although written in a balanced and restrained style, it blew great lumps out of the ‘settled’ science narrative that has been used by hard-Left activists to roll out a command-and-control Net Zero project. By demonising the trace gas CO2 and cancelling any discussion about natural climate variation, the Elite Left has attempted to seize control of the hydrocarbon-dependent economy. Taking out this vital resource by using four decades of bullying political techniques has left many economic and social functions under their control.

The official US Government report has been a major blow to these global aims. Net Zero is dead in the all-important territory of the United States, helped by the DoE report that states computer models offer “little guidance” on how much of the climate responds to higher CO2 levels. In addition, it notes that most extreme weather events are not increasing, sea level rises in North America show no increasing trend, while weather attribution claims are challenged by natural climate variation along with an admission that they were originally designed with ‘lawfare’ in mind.

Toys are being flung out of the pram in all directions. You would have to have a heart of stone not to laugh at the anguish expressed on X by this distressed soul. 

Dr Colose works for GISS, the climate alarm branch of NASA. The Federal agency has been told to get back to launching spacecraft, and climate activities at GISS are being run down by the Government. These cutbacks could include work on the often retrospectively adjusted GISS global temperature operation.

For his part, Leo Hickman does not seem to be a big fan of the scientific process where all opinions are allowed in the pursuit of better knowledge. The abhorrent idea of “false balance” in climate science has infected the body politic, science and the media for over a decade, with activists claiming infallible knowledge and making determined efforts to cancel any criticism and alternative views. Quoted in the Guardian in 2014, Hickman said: “It is crucial that the public – and policymakers – are accurately informed about the risks that climate change presents in the years and decades ahead… debate should be limited to the policy response rather than confuse this with a false debate about the science”.

In its recent article, the Guardian quotes Naomi Oreskes, a Harvard Professor said to be an expert in climate misinformation, who claimed the true purpose of the report was to “justify what is a scientifically unjustifiable failure to regulate fossil fuels”. Oreskes is at the forefront of the war on hydrocarbons. In 2021 she co-wrote a paper stating that the legal burden of proof for climate claims made by activists should be lowered to “more likely than not”. In her view, “the too narrow focus of climate science with extremely stringent levels of proof is damaging in a legal context, and can lead to confusion when communicating scientific findings more generally”. In other words, it gets in the way of convincing juries to crush oil and gas companies with huge financial penalties.

The DoE report correctly notes that computer models have spent 40 years trying to place a centigrade figure on the warming caused by a doubling of CO2 in the atmosphere. The range of disagreement has not decreased over this period and it extends over a factor of three. The divergence within 37 major computer models is graphically indicated below, with estimates from 1.8°C to 5.7°C.

Despite this, the claim that humans have caused most of the atmospheric warming over the last 100 years is made by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change citing the product of computer models. As the DoE report notes: “Climate models are the primary tool used to project future climate changes in response to increasing atmospheric levels of anthropogenic greenhouse gases.” The sceptical might ask if there is anything better to back up claims that humans must embark on the destructive path of ceasing to use hydrocarbons – a disaster long in the planning for those who seek elite collectivist control.

In the Guardian, Zeke Hausfather of Berkely Earth criticised the use of his 2019 paper to demonstrate that climate models “consistently overestimated observations”. He claimed the paper actually “confirmed” how well models had performed in the years after they were published. What was not mentioned was that the paper reviewed only a few early computer models going back to 1970 with data ending in 2017. It made retrospective adjustments to some of the original inputs and mathematicians have queried some of the calculations involved. To say the least, other interpretations are available, although the Guardian claims that the Hausfather report, “actually showed that climate models have performed well”. 

“Performed well” is not a term that immediately springs to mind when considering the block illustration above. This is contained in the DoE report and shows global surface trends from various CMIP6 climate models from 1979–2024. Most of the models display warming to the right of the blue bar which denotes actual temperature observations. The worst three show warming at around twice the observed level.

Is it too much to hope for a balanced debate on an authoritative report that is free from obvious bias and sets out what is known – and unknown – about the effect of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere? Is it not possible for the pram toys to be collected and abuse kept to a minimum? Alas, the answer is probably no, with Leo Hickman and his Green Blob forces on the charge. What is pompously dismissed as a “false debate about the science” is the last thing they seem to want.

Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor. Follow him on X.

US Department of Energy: ‘A Critical Review of Impacts of Greenhouse Gas Emissions on the US Climate’. Authors – John Christy Ph.D, Judith Curry Ph.D, Steven Koonin Ph.D, Ross McKitrick Ph.D, Roy Spencer Ph.D.

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23 Comments
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modularist
8 months ago

Judith Curry’s book is the best single volume I have read on risk assessment from climate change. Highly recommended.

varmint
8 months ago
Reply to  modularist

Try also “Energy and Climate Wars” by Michael J Economides and Peter Glover, and “Taken by Storm” by Ross McKittrick and Christopher Essex. There are many books on this issue which is one of the most important issues today. Not because of climate change , but because of the absurd policies governments are putting place at astronomical cost to supposedly deal with it.

FerdIII
8 months ago

0.2 C…..that is it….over 100 years….0.2 C
And we are to shutter and deconstruct the modern world over the 0.2….wow. That level of crazy must really hurt.

stewart
8 months ago
Reply to  FerdIII

Interesting how a human couldn’t feel a 0.2 degree change in temperature (I’d say we’d struggle to detect a 1 degree change) but somehow it poses a threat to civilisation.

What really poses a threat to civilisation is that level of stupidity.

Jaguar
Jaguar
8 months ago
Reply to  FerdIII

The observed trend is 0.2 C per decade, or 2 deg per century. Noticeable, but not a catastrophe – it will provide more benefit than harm for at least the first 100 years. Also, there are scientists who think two-thirds of the warming is due to other factors, not CO2.

varmint
8 months ago
Reply to  Jaguar

You say 2 C per century is “noticeable”—–By Who? A 99 year old? But it is only theoretically 2 C. It is projections of 2 C, which does not mean that will unfold.

zebedee
zebedee
8 months ago

If it’s still available you may like to download the source code of NASA GISS ModelE and marvel at the horror of it. If I remember correctly there are tools available to update Fortran 77 to DoD extensions, they were too lazy.

Roy Everett
8 months ago
Reply to  zebedee

At the time of Climategate I believe there were attempts to access the source code that “homogenized” the surface temperature data which was modelled the “catastrophic” amount of temperature rise, the rate of increase and the rate at which the rate of increase was increasing. The latter two are almost impossible to deduce from the data. Furthermore, the data seemed to have been tweaked by figures to create the “official” outcome (see, for example, the code [MathLab?, 701kB ] comments labelled HARRY_READ_ME). After Climategate, I thought the whole issue of the tweaked data and distorted models had been quietly dropped. Yet still the legacy blunders on! It’s almost as if there were, shock horror, a political agenda to get AGW accepted by the populace as “settled science” rather than “H L Mencken Imaginary Hobgoblin”.

robnicholson
robnicholson
8 months ago
Reply to  zebedee

I thought I misread when you said it was written in Fortran but you’re right!

stewart
8 months ago

The “everyone knows it’s true” argument is the least scientific of all arguments. It’s an argument designed to shut down thinking and compel acceptance.

“The consensus” is just an ever so slightly more sophisticated way of saying the same thing, used by dumb over educated people who have seen how other dumb over educated people use it and think it sounds terribly clever.

varmint
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

“Consensus” is the means by which lots of people can say what no induvial can say. It is “politic”, not “science”. —-Matters of science are not decided by a show of hands.

Robin Guenier
Robin Guenier
8 months ago

I’ve taken a detailed interest in the climate issue for several years – mainly regarding international politics and the interpretation of treaties and agreements (I am legally trained). I’ve no technical or scientific training and have declined therefore to take a view on matters involving climate science. Interestingly with regard to the UK’s net zero policy, the science is irrelevant anyway as the policy is potentially disastrous and completely pointless whatever the truth about the science: https://cliscep.com/2025/06/24/the-case-against-net-zero-an-eleventh-update/.

However, when I see the near hysterical response of these people to a balanced report authored by respectable senior scientists, I begin to wonder if perhaps I should support the climate sceptics after all.

modularist
8 months ago
Reply to  Robin Guenier

New media has rescued these five talented and persistent professionals from the almost total legacy media blackout on their views, and the DeSmog BS that is penned about them and trotted out in left wing rags any time they need to be slapped down in public.

varmint
8 months ago
Reply to  modularist

In climate science, which is basically politicised science you must be ideologically aligned, otherwise you will not be physically removed, but you will just see funding vanish, colleagues ostracise you and journals not publish you. Climate Politics needs the credibility of “science” in order to proceed and bring along the public who are mostly reluctant to challenge something they see as scientific, because they think they are not qualified to do so. Being sceptical is seen as dangerous, whereas it is essential in science to question everything. Peer review became “groupthink” . Science no longer required accuracy, only alignment with the Political narratives . Those who complied would find advancement and those who didn’t were shunned and faced pressure to comply or else. In moving away from “science” and turning into “official science” what was required was a perception that humans were dangerously changing the climate, and omitting parts of the story and highlighting other parts did that job. To question this “official science” or “consensus” was irresponsible and even dangerous. ———The scientists above despite being portrayed as outliers and mavericks stayed true to what science is meant to be about, and the thing about truth is that it cannot… Read more »

stewart
8 months ago
Reply to  Robin Guenier

I’ve no technical or scientific training and have declined therefore to take a view on matters involving climate science. This is something I’ve heard others say, but don’t really understand. One thing is to not get into what scientists have to say about, for example, particle physics, or deep space observations of the stars, that is, things that I have no day to day experience with and ultimately has no direct, discernible effect on me that I have any chance of observing. However, the climate is something quite different. It’s something that we all encounter and experience every day. The entire premise of the climate change story is that it is going to have a massive, very noticeable impact on our lives. And because they have been banging this drum for basically two decades now, you’d think that we might start noticing some of this by now. As it happens, i remember some of their predictions that should have manifest themselves. A navigable North Pole in the summer, the Maldives fully submerged, a much diminished Great Barrier Reef. They have not only not come to pass, reality hasn’t even approached their predictions. I don’t need to be a scientist to… Read more »

RogerB
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

Well said.

Robin Guenier
Robin Guenier
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

I’m sorry Stewart but I completely disagree. As it’s possible to make an irrefutable case for abandoning net zero without going anywhere near the ghastly and highly emotional area of climate change science, I’ve no doubt it’s best to do just that. Otherwise you’ll be dismissed as a ‘denier’ giving your opponents the perfect excuse for ignoring your views on the practicalities of the policy. And it’s those views that matter: the overriding priority is to get rid of this disastrous policy.

suit_ed
suit_ed
8 months ago
Reply to  Robin Guenier

I think in reality both of you are right. Whilst it’s possible for laymen to assess with their own senses the changes in climate and weather as they are supposedly asserted (including the political and social engineering at play), you’re probably right that the key at least in the short term is to focus on dismantling and disarming the net zero narrative at all costs. This surely must be a priority, but after that we need a population with the confidence to independently assess the information they’re provided themselves.

brachiopod
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

If the models are useful to predict how the climate will change then surely they should all give the same answer when asked to predict the past? The fact that they don’t reveals them to be just so much ‘willy waving’ by climate alarmist grant-whores, and should all be binned until hard data can be reliably collected.

varmint
8 months ago
Reply to  Robin Guenier

You should support “science”, not “official science” used for political purposes. —In science you question everything, in official science you shut down all questions, because it isn’t science you are indulging in. It is POLITICS.

Cotfordtags
8 months ago

Oh the joy of the tweet saying that the report is selective in its data, when these charlatans have been selling us a snake oil concoction entirely based on selective data, in some cases totally made up data like the GIGO trash our fairy tale report producer the Met Office keeps coming up with.

Gezza England
Gezza England
7 months ago
Reply to  Cotfordtags

Remember the Climategate email from the corrupt Phil Jones saying he would do everything to keep a paper the ecofascists disliked from being published.

JXB
JXB
8 months ago

Consensus is religion; evidence is science.

Science isn’t a democracy wherein the theory with the most votes wins.

If it is necessary to rely on a head-count to support a claim, then that means the evidence to support it does not exist, otherwise just one scientist could make the case from empirical evidence.

The plethora of computer models used to “prove” the global warming scam, indicates no empirical evidence exists, otherwise it would be produced instead of fear-mongering, name-calling challengers, refusing debate, and manipulating numbers.