Even though all three of Wednesday’s broadcast network evening
newscasts reported on President Obama’s decision to attend the climate
change summit in Copenhagen, they also continued to ignore email
evidence that scientists who push global warming theory have distorted
data to support their assertions while trying to suppress the views of
dissenters. FNC’s Special Report with Bret Baier gave attention to the
Climategate controversy on Monday and Wednesday, while Wednesday’s The
Situation Room on CNN, guest hosted by Suzanne Malveaux, ran what
appears to be CNN’s first story on the controversy, but correspondent
Brooke Baldwin downplayed the story’s significance. The same story ran
twice on the Friday, November 27, American Morning on CNN.
Baldwin began and ended her report fretting over the timing of the
revelation as coming so soon before the climate change summit in
Copenhagen. She also twice referred to a climate change "consensus," a
loaded term which is normally employed by those who believe global
warming theory is not debatable. Baldwin began her report
by rhetorically asking, "How about the timing of all of this?"
She again noted the timing in her conclusion: "Again, here, all of
this coming out weeks – as you mentioned, Suzanne – ahead of
Copenhagen's climate summit where President Obama will, in fact, be
attending, and today the White House announced that the President is
prepared, speaking of those caps here, to put on the table a U.S.
emissions reduction target in the range of 17 percent below 2005
levels."
Baldwin partially quoted one email, but, unlike FNC’s Angle and
Goler, the CNN correspondent seemed to give her own opinion that "it’s
hard to know what [the emails] will add up to" because "there’s very
little context," rather than quoting the view of one of the scientists
in question for a dissenting view as FNC did. Baldwin:
When a reputable climate research institute has its computer server
hacked and hundreds of its private e-mails made public, the news gets
around fast, especially from groups that don't believe the global
warming consensus. One e-mail attributed to the research center's
director had this cryptic excerpt referring to the, quote, "trick of
adding in the real temps" to each series to hide the decline in
temperature. Because there's very little context in that e-mail and the
others, it's hard to know what they'll all add up to.
Video of the CNN report can be found
here.

FNC’s
Special Report first got to Climategate on Monday during the regular
"Political Grapevine" segment. After noting that Republican Senator
James Inhofe was planning to investigate the issue, substitute host Jim
Angle relayed the content of one of the emails, and the contention by
its author that it was taken out of context. Angle: "One of the e-mails
found and posted from center director Phil Jones refers to a technique,
quote, ‘hide the decline in recent global temperatures.’ Jones wrote
that in compiling new data he had used what he called the ‘trick’ of
adding in temperatures from different time periods to hide the decline.
... Jones says the comment was taken out of context."


Wednesday’s
show led with the story of President Obama’s decision to go to
Copenhagen, and correspondent Wendell Goler’s report dealt partially
with Climategate. Substitute anchor Chris Wallace treated the issue
with credibility as he introduced the report. Wallace: "The White House
is characterizing President Obama's decision to go to next month's U.N.
climate change conference as a sign of his commitment to find a
solution to global warming, but recently discovered emails from climate
scientists have many people now doubting just how legitimate that
threat is."
Goler relayed that hacked emails "allegedly show climate change data
was distorted or destroyed to make the case for global warming," and
then quoted one scientist, Dr. Kevin Trenberth, as the scientist seemed
to fret about some evidence that contradicted global warming theory.
The FNC correspondent passed on Trenberth’s contention that his words
were taken out of context. Goler: "Kevin Trenberth of the U.S. Center
for Atmospheric Research saying, quote, ‘The fact is we can't account
for the lack of warming at the moment, and it's a travesty that we
can't.’ Dr. Trenberth and others say their words were taken out of
context."
FNC's Fox Report showed a similar report by Goler the same evening.

During
the show’s "Fox All Stars" segment, conservative leaning syndicated
columnist Charles Krauthammer gave his view on the matter’s
significance:
So what you see in the emails are people who have, are
on somewhat shaky grounds. It’s not as if there’s no science at all in
this, but there is contradictory evidence, such as the flattening of
the rise in temperatures, which they cannot explain. And their response
is, as we saw here, either suppression or manipulation or, even worse,
the delegitimation and the personal attacks on skeptics in an attempt
to write them out of the journals, to get them fired, and all kinds of
nasty stuff. So I think it puts a lot of their research in question.
Below are transcripts of relevant portions of the Monday, November
23, Special Report with Bret Baier on FNC, the Wednesday, November 25,
Special Report, and the Wednesday, November 25, The Situation Room on
CNN:
# From the November 23 Special Report:
JIM ANGLE: And now the latest from the "Political Grapevine." The
leading global warming skeptic in Congress says he'll ask for an
investigation into allegations that some scientists have purposely
overstated the data supporting the theory of man-made climate change. Oklahoma
Republican Senator James Inhofe is referring to information discovered
by computer hackers who reportedly broke into a server at a
well-respected climate change research center in Britain.
One of the e-mails found and posted from center director Phil
Jones refers to a technique, quote, "hide the decline in recent global
temperatures." Jones wrote that in compiling new data he had used what
he called the "trick" of adding in temperatures from different time
periods to hide the decline. Climate change skeptics argue data indicates global temperatures stopped increasing as far back as 1960. Jones says the comment was taken out of context.
Inhofe points to all that to bolster his suspicion that the U.N. and
its climate change panel, quote, "cooked the science to make this thing
look as if the science was settled when all the time we knew it was
not."
# From the November 25 Special Report:



CHRIS
WALLACE: Welcome to Washington. I'm Chris Wallace in for Bret Baier.
The White House is characterizing President Obama's decision to go to
next month's U.N. climate change conference as a sign of his commitment
to find a solution to global warming, but recently discovered e-mails from climate scientists have many people now doubting just how legitimate that threat is. White House correspondent Wendell Goler explains.
WENDELL GOLER: Aides announced the President will stop in Copenhagen
near the start of the climate change conference before going to Oslo,
Norway to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Environmentalists will be
watching.
KEYA CHATTERJEE, WORLD WILDLIFE FUND: -and what we're looking for is
a signal that climate and clean energy are going to be the next
legislative priority up after health care.
GOLER: Mr. Obama will promise to cut America's greenhouse gas
emissions at least 17 percent over the next 10 years, 30 percent over
the next 15. Since a treaty is unlikely in Copenhagen, his goal is
something less.
BARACK OBAMA: A strong operational agreement that will confront the
threat of climate change while serving as a stepping stone to a legally
binding treaty.
GOLER: Still, environmentalists want a stronger commitment to a green economy and something more than an operational agreement.
CHATTERJEE: We're looking for legal treaty text to come out of Copenhagen.
GOLER: The Chamber of Commerce says the U.S. would have to build 130
nuclear power plants to cut greenhouse gases enough to meet the targets
– a huge expense that comes as polls show belief in global warming has
fallen six percent among Democrats over the past few years, 15 percent
among independents, and 22 percent among Republicans. It's unclear if
economic concerns are feeding the doubts, but they are fueling a
challenge to the EPA's claim that it has the authority to regulate
greenhouse gas emissions which the Competitive Enterprise Institute
says could cost trillions.
MYRON EBELL, COMPETITIVE ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE: We think that the
EPA's decision is fundamentally flawed because it is based on junk
science.
GOLER: Myron Ebell's group has found new ammunition in thousands of
e-mails hacked or leaked from East Anglia University in England which allegedly show climate change data was distorted or destroyed to make the case for global warming.
EBELL: If we're cherry-picking, these are very large cherries.
They're very ripe and they're very hard to miss once you look through
these files and these e-mails.
GOLER: For example, Kevin
Trenberth of the U.S. Center for Atmospheric Research saying, quote,
"The fact is we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment,
and it's a travesty that we can't." Dr. Trenberth and others say their
words were taken out of context.
KEVIN TRENBERTH, NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH: It
certainly doesn't mean that there's no global warming. It does mean we
don't have a complete enough observing system to fully track exactly
what's going on and especially why it's going on.
GOLER: Trenberth says rising CO2 levels, melting ice, rising water and warmer temperatures are all measurable.
TRENBERTH: Global warming is happening. There are some uncertainties
and the models are not perfect, and the key questions are then what do
we do about it, and this is where the debate certainly is required.
GOLER: Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe plans hearings on whether the
e-mails show the science on climate change was cooked. Meanwhile, even
though the President only plans to spend the day in Copenhagen, a half
a dozen of his cabinet secretaries will spend time there making
presentations they hope will lead to an agreement.
...
CHRIS WALLACE: Charles, I want you to weigh in on all this and also
this fascinating story about somebody hacking into the files of the
Climate Research Unit in East Anglia in Britain and finding some
e-mails from climate scientists where they talked about, quote, "hiding
the decline in global temperatures" because obviously if the earth is
cooling, then that hurts the global warming argument.
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: The global warming
science is not junk science, but it's speculative. It's based on
incomplete data. It's based on computer models that rest on assumptions
that, in turn, rest on an understanding of how the globe, the climate
controls itself that is extremely incomplete. So its projections are
speculative. But it pretends that, of course, that it’s the hardest of
all sciences and anybody who is skeptical is a denier, using a term
used normally about the Holocaust, which is, of course, an event that
actually happened as opposed to projections in global warming, which
are speculative science.
So what you see in the emails are people who have, are on
somewhat shaky grounds. It’s not as if there’s no science at all in
this, but there is contradictory evidence, such as the flattening of
the rise in temperatures, which they cannot explain.
And their response is, as we saw here, either suppression
or manipulation or, even worse, the delegitimation and the personal
attacks on skeptics in an attempt to write them out of the journals, to
get them fired, and all kinds of nasty stuff. So I think it puts a lot
of their research in question. I think what's interesting about Obama
is he’s going to be at the U.N. to announce the policy about climate
change on the basis of nothing. He’s going to be proposing what the
House has passed that he knows is not going to pass in the Senate. And
we are actually a constitutional democracy where the President can't
announce a policy unilaterally. It actually has to pass the two houses
of the Congress, and our allies abroad know that, and they’re going to
look at this announcement he’s going to make and think it's going to be
extremely strange.
# From the 5:00 p.m. hour of the November 25 The Situation Room:

SUZANNE
MALVEAUX: President Obama will go to Copenhagen next month for a major
climate change summit. That word today coming from the White House, and
it comes as Congress is still divided over new climate change
legislation. Meanwhile, the global warming controversy, that is heating
up as well, after hackers have made public some of these sensitive
e-mails. Our CNN's Brooke Baldwin, she’s got the story. Brooke, tell us
what this is about, the center of this controversy over the e-mails.
BROOKE BALDWIN: Yes, Suzanne, how about the timing of all of this? Yes,
we are talking about hundreds of e-mails and documents spanning just
about a decade here among prominent climate scientists, and they have
been hacked, as you mentioned, fanning really a debate over whether some scientists might have exaggerated their case for manmade climate change.
BALDWIN: The consensus that the climate is changing, that the
burning of fossil fuels is a significant factor goes way beyond the pop
culture sensation of Al Gore's Inconvenient Truth and his appearance on
last week's episode of 30 Rock on NBC.
AL GORE, FROM 30 ROCK: Kenneth, encourage your lawmakers to take action and recycle everything, including jokes.
KENNETH, THE PAGE, FROM 30 ROCK: I'm sorry, sir, what?
GORE: Quiet, a whale is in trouble. I have to go.

BALDWIN:
So when a reputable climate research institute has its computer server
hacked and hundreds of its private e-mails made public, the news gets
around fast, especially from groups that don't believe the global warming consensus. One
e-mail attributed to the research center's director had this cryptic
excerpt referring to the, quote, "trick of adding in the real temps" to
each series to hide the decline in temperature. Because there's very little context in that e-mail and the others, it's hard to know what they’ll all add up to. A
climate research unit in question here posted a message calling this e-
mail hack job "mischievous" and saying it is helping the police
investigate. Senator James Inhofe has for many years portrayed this
data showing the warming trend as a hoax and sees the e-mails as
evidence.
SENATOR JAMES INHOFE (R-OK): I'm pleased by the vast and growing
number of scientists, politicians, reporters, all over the world who
are publicly rejecting climate alarmism, alarmism, this is, those who
want to scare people into some kind of action, you know, the water’s
going to rise up, the world’s coming to an end.
BALDWIN: But the White House energy czar points to the 2,500
climate scientists all around the world who agree the climate is
warming and that these e-mails aren't changing that. As for the
American public, according to a Washington Post/ABC News poll out this
week, the number of Americans who believe global warming is happening
is down from 80 to 72 percent from last year, down but still a large
majority.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #1: We really do have a global warming. The polar bears are getting in trouble, and the glaciers are melting.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN #2: I do think that we tend to blow things a
little out of proportion, but I do think we need to be concerned.
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: I think it is over hyped. I think some of it is attributed to man but not all of it.
BALDWIN: That same Washington Post/ABC News poll shows since 2006
the increase in climate skepticism is driven largely by a shift within
the Republican Party and independents. There was also a dip among
Democrats but small. Still, a majority of respondents support a
national cap on greenhouse gas emissions.
BALDWIN: Now back to those hacked e-mails and the documents. We also want to point out that it suggests
some scientists pressured journals not to publishing work of those who
questioned whether the earth is, in fact, warming, but, again, here,
all of this coming out weeks – as you mentioned, Suzanne – ahead
of Copenhagen's climate summit where President Obama will, in fact, be
attending, and today the White House announced that the President is
prepared, speaking of those caps here, to put on the table a U.S.
emissions reduction target in the range of 17 percent below 2005
levels. That deadline for 2020, and by 83 percent by 2050, and, you
know, this will ultimately be in line with targets laid out in a bill
passed by the House earlier this year.
— Brad Wilmouth is a news analyst at the Media Research Center.