Chairman Dr. Pachauri under the scanner as review of IPCC workings opens

Amsterdam (The Netherlands), May 14 (ANI): A review into the workings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is starting in Amsterdam.

IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri will be the first person to appear before the panel when it begins on Friday, and is expected to outline the organization”s rules and procedures.

Dr Pachauri is also under the scanner over some of his consultancy work, although an investigation in March by auditors KPMG cleared him of financial irregularities.

“Dr Pachauri is in a very difficult position, because some of the most vociferous critics of the IPCC hold him personally responsible for the panel”s perceived failings,” said Mr. Ward.

“Such critics are unlikely to be satisfied by anything other than Dr Pachauri”s departure,” he added.

According to the BBC, the review has been demanded by governments and commissioned by the UN, following allegations that the IPCC made a series of errors in its major 2007 report. The review was demanded during the February meeting of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) governing council.

The IPCC has admitted to one error, concerning the melting date of Himalayan glaciers, but robustly rebuts the wider charge.

The review panel was set up by the Inter-Academy Council, which comprises bodies such as the UK”s Royal Society.

“I”ve read many many comments about the IPCC and I”ve talked to people inside and outside the organization,” said Robbert Dijkgraaf, co-chair of the Inter-Academy Council.

“They feel the issue of climate change is so important that it really needs robust scientific counsel.
“The IPCC has grown in importance and it”s a very good time and a good opportunity to look at its management structure and its processes,” he told BBC News.

Dr. Dijkgraaf said the panel would be looking to draw on different shades of opinion over the next few months.

The panel”s costing of natural disasters has also come in for criticism

Ministers felt allegations about IPCC errors were undermining the body”s reputation and with it the reputation of its conclusions, on which many governments have based their climate policies.

Subsequently, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon asked the Inter-Academy Council to run the review.

The council is independent of the UN, and has the capacity to select from among the world”s top academics.

Dr. Dijkgraaf suggested Dr. Pachauri”s position was not an issue for the review, and pointed out that the IPCC had itself asked for an independent review.

The 12-strong review panel spans the physical and biological sciences and economics, and is drawn from the developed and developing worlds.

Its final recommendations will be presented to the IPCC in October, during a meeting aimed at finalizing structures and procedures for its next major evaluation of climate science and economics, due to conclude in 2013. (ANI)

IPCC chief Pachauri blasts critics for portraying scientists as climate criminals

London, Mar. 27 (ANI): In a strongly worded article published on the Guardian website, Rajendra Pachauri, the chairperson of the UN-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has hit out at those in “positions of power and responsibility” who are trying to portray “dedicated scientists as climate criminals”.

Pachauri also accused critics for using an error in the 2007 IPCC report to question the scientific basis of climate change of “an act of astonishing intellectual legerdemain [sleight of hand]“.

Scientific knowledge of climate change, he says, is “something we distort and trivialise at our peril,” he adds.

Pachauri”s comments come after repeated attacks on the credibility of the IPCC following the high-profile discovery of a mistake about melting Himalayan glaciers in its report.

The mistake has prompted calls for Pachauri to resign and forced the IPCC to convene an international panel of experts to review the way it operates.

In the Guardian article, Pachauri writes: “Thousands of scientists from across the world have worked diligently and in an objective and transparent manner to provide scientific evidence for action to meet the growing challenge of climate change. To obscure this reality through misplaced emphasis on an error in a nearly 3,000-page rigorous document would be unfortunate.”

He adds: “Even more unfortunate is the effort of some in positions of power and responsibility to indict dedicated scientists as ”climate criminals”. I sincerely hope the world is not witnessing a new form of persecution of those who defy conventional ignorance and pay a terrible price for their scientifically valid beliefs.”

The web site article appears to be a reference to James Inhofe, a US senator and long-standing climate sceptic, who last month called for a criminal investigation of climate scientists.

Inhofe published a minority report from the Senate committee on environment and public works that claimed climate scientists involved with a controversy over emails from the University of East Anglia released online “violated fundamental ethical principles governing taxpayer-funded research and, in some cases, may have violated federal laws”.

The report named 17 American and British climate experts as “key players” in the affair and highlighted their roles in preparing IPCC reports.

The list included Phil Jones and Keith Briffa of the University of East Anglia”s Climatic Research Unit, and Peter Stott, a leading expert at the Met Office.

Michael Mann, a US scientist at Penn State University, who is on the list, said: “I think the following quote characterises the situation best: ”Continuous research by our best scientists … may be made impossible by the creation of an atmosphere in which no man feels safe against the public airing of unfounded rumours, gossip, and vilification.” The quote wasn”t made during the last few months. It was made by US president Harry S Truman in 1948, in response to politically motivated attacks against scientists associated with the dark era of McCarthyism.”

Mann added: “I fear that is precisely the sort of atmosphere that is being created, and sure, it impacts research. The more time scientists have to spend fending off these sorts of attacks and dealing with this sort of nonsense, the less time is available to them to actually do science, and to push the forefront of our knowledge forward. Perhaps that is the intent?”

Pachauri says it was “to be expected” that the critical choices that climate change asks of human society “would pose challenges for some stakeholders and sectors of the economy”.

“But to ignore the IPCC”s scientific findings would lead to impacts that impose larger costs than those required today to stabilise the Earth”s climate,” he added. (ANI)

Danish PM to discuss climate change during visit to India

New Delhi, Sep.10 (ANI): The Prime Minister of Denmark, Lars Loekke Rasmussen, will arrive here on Friday on a daylong working visit to India to speed up negotiations on a climate deal ahead of a key summit to be held in Copenhagen between December 7 and 18.

Rasmussen will meet with his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh and the UN’s top climate scientist Rajendra Pachauri, who is chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Rasmussen will meet with Dr. Singh at Hyderabad House at 12 p.m. The two sides will have delegation-level talks after which an agreement on environment cooperation will be signed.

In the afternoon, he will deliver a speech on “Green Economy” organized in cooperation with the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) at the Hotel Oberoi.

He will emplane for Vienna on Saturday morning.

On Tuesday, at the start of the Nordic Climate Solutions conference gathering decision-makers and businessmen in Copenhagen, Rasmussen said the negotiations were progressing slowly “in all areas.”

“It’s very difficult because these are not just issues concerning climate,” but also economy and technology, he said.

“Take the example of India, where I will meet the Indian prime minister who wants to gives his population of one billion some prosperity and who therefore doesn’t want to commit to restrictive reductions unless the world brings new technology to his country,” Rasmussen said. (ANI)

Barroso: Public and private sector needed to tackle climate change

Copenhagen – The public sector alone cannot tackle climate change, EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso warned Monday at a climate conference in Copenhagen.

“In tackling climate change, public sector action will not be enough,” Barroso said in his remarks to around 1,000 business leaders, adding that “all parties, policy makers, business and consumers” need to combine.

Copenhagen in December will host the United Nations’ key climate talks where countries are to seek to make proposals on the reduction of CO2 emissions.

“It will be difficult,” Barroso said of the upcoming December talks, adding “these talks are too important to fail.”

“The economic crisis is an impetus for change, not an excuse for inaction,” Barroso said in response to those who question undertaking major changes and cuts in emissions over the ongoing economic crisis.

“The costs of climate change will be much higher if we do not make adjustments now,” he added.

The EU Commission head noted that renewable energy also offers new job and business opportunities, saying “European industry has no time to lose in the search for innovative responses.”

Many business were asking for “coherent, stable, efficient policy framework to guide investment issues,” he said.

Barroso also welcomed the “positive engagement” of the United States in the global discussion on climate change, describing the run-up to the

The three-day World Business Summit on Climate Change opened Sunday.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Sunday criticized the lack of engagement by businesses in the fight against the threat of climate change.

Also taking part in the conference were former US vice president Al Gore and the head of the UN Climate Council Rajendra Pachauri.(dpa)

Kazakh President Nazarbayev concludes four-day visit to India

New Delhi, Jan.26 (ANI): Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev ended his four-day fourth visit to India on Monday evening. He was here as the Chief Guest of the Indian Government for this year’s Republic Day celebrations.

The visit, which commenced from Friday evening, saw the President presiding over key bilateral talks that culminated in the signing of five bilateral pacts for long-term cooperation, attending a Indo-Kazakh business summit jointly organized by ASSOCHAM, FICCI and the Confederation of Indian Industry, courtesy meetings with President Pratibha Devisingh Patil, Vice-President Mohammad Hamid Ansari, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Leader of Opposition L. K. Advani and UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi.

He also visited the Akshardam Temple in East Delhi and the tomb of Mughul Emperor Humayun. He met with renowned Indian scientist Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, who currently heads the Inter-Governmental Commission on Climate Change (IGCCC). Pachauri it may be recalled won the Nobel Prize along with former U.S. Vice President Albert Gore in 2007.

The agreements that were signed included an extradition treaty between India and Kazakhstan, a protocol supporting the accession of Kazakhstan to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), a Memorandum of Understanding between Nuclear Power Corporation of India and National Company KazAtomProm, a Memorandum of Understanding between the Indian Space Research Organisation and the National Space Agency of Kazakhstan for cooperation in the field of space activities and an agreement between ONGC Mittal Energy Limited (OMEL) and National Company KazmunaiG for cooperation in the field in natural gas and oil.

At the bilateral business summit held here on Saturday, President, Nursultan Nazarbayev urged captains of Indian industry not to hesitate or be shy of taking advantage of the positive investment climate in Kazakhstan. He emphasized that the scope for bilateral business to business activity was huge, and appealed for levels of cooperation to go beyond traditional items like oil and gas, and move into areas like textiles, agriculture, information technology, infrastructure, pharmaceuticals, metallurgy and dairy goods etc.

He said both Kazakhstan and India, being large countries in terms of geographic expanse and enjoying healthy economic growth, have the potential to exploit and nurture in not only business, but also in other areas of shared commonalities.

He also used his visit to reaffirm Kazakhstan’s commitment to counter the menace of terrorism, and appealed for due punishment to be given to the terrorists involved in the Mumbai attacks of November 2008 at the earliest.

He rounded off his visit by attending the “At Home” function hosted by President Patil on the occasion of India’s 60th Republic Day. (ANI)