Tuesday, December 15, 2009

DOE sends a “litigation hold notice” regarding CRU to employees – asking to “preserve documents” « Watts Up With That?
Well, well, well.
Look what was waiting in every single email Inbox on Monday morning:
Angier: Newspaper Science Reporting Is 'Basically Going out of Existence'
Several mainstream news organizations in recent years have let go of their science reporters and done away with their science sections altogether. The science section of The New York Times, which is one of the few left in the country, features more health-related stories and fewer hard-science stories than it used to, said Angier, a Pulitzer Prize winner.
[Yeah, right]: Confidence In Science Of Global Warming Grows Despite 'Climate-gate' - Copenhagen Insider
Today Rajendra Pachauri, leader of the Nobel- prize winning UN climate science process, spoke in Copenhagen with confidence in the bedrock of science on which our understanding of global warming rests.

Meanwhile the opposition continues to try to squeeze the last few drops of doubt out of a few email lemons stolen from East Anglia University.
[Believer: Farmers will benefit from insane, expensive UN attempts to control the weather]
Among those taking part is North Dakota Farmers Union president Robert Carlson, who is there representing the International Federation of Agricultural Producers. Speaking from Denmark, Carlson says agriculture will play a key role in helping mitigation of greenhouse gases through no-till farming, planting grass and trees, and manure management.

"Agriculture will actually benefit economically from cleaning up the atmosphere, but that is going to take a little transition time to do. I think university studies show it will be 2012 and beyond before agriculture will really benefit."
Copenhagen climate summit: Ed Miliband admits failings - Telegraph
Ministers have not “covered themselves in glory” Ed Miliband admitted last night after the Copenhagen climate talks collapsed once again over the failure of the rich and poor world to agree a deal to stop global warming.

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