NGOs divided over IPCC resignation

'Bring me the head of Pachauri', cry some, while others say he should stay

By John Vidal, The Guardian - Published under license by

05 Feb 2010

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Rajendra Pachuari

Environmental groups are split over whether Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, should resign over criticism of his handling of a false claim about melting glaciers in the panel's landmark 2007 report.

NGO's fear falling confidence in climate science could undermine governments' resolve to address global warming. Greenpeace says a new leader of the IPCC could restore confidence in the UN panel.

Pachauri has refused to apologise for the claim that Himalayan glaciers would melt away by 2035, which came from a report by green group WWF, who had in turn sourced it from a magazine article. "You can't expect me to be personally responsible for every word in a 3,000 page report," he said.

But yesterday John Sauven, director of Greenpeace UK, said Pachauri should have responded faster to the glacier error, after reportedly being told of it in December, before the Copenhagen climate conference. Pachauri has said he first became aware of the problem in January.

Sauven said a new leader at the IPCC could restore confidence in climate science: "If we get a new person in with an open mind, prepared to fundamentally review how the IPCC works, we would regain confidence in the organisation.... [but] if you changed the head, I don't think that would necessarily restore the credibility of the IPCC."

Sauven added: "The person at the top has to lead the organisation through a turbulent era when the scientists are in the crosshairs of a sophisticated campaign of disinformation. They will make mistakes, everybody does. Can Pachauri be trusted to be honest, open and transparent if a mistake is made? Does he have the continuing confidence not only of the scientific community but the wider public? These are the key questions he must answer."

The IPCC's mistake did not undermine the wider body of climate science, Sauven said.

However, other green groups defended Pachauri and said he should not resign.

Andy Atkins, executive director of Friends of the Earth, said: "It would be incredible if there wasn't the occasional error in a work of this size. We don't see any evidence that he has done anything that warrants his resignation. The danger is that if he is forced to go because of one error, how will we ever get this job done? Who could ever lead this organisation? It would set an incredibly dangerous precedent for the future. If it happened to him it could happen to the next chair."

Other groups said that there was a danger that public and governments would use the scandal as an excuse to water down pledges to move away from fossil fuels and cut greenhouse gas emissions.

"We remain absolutely convinced of the vast body of scientific evidence. The overall integrity of the science remains undented ... but the danger is this becomes a distraction from the big decisions that governments have to make," said Keith Allot, head of climate change at WWF.

Chris Smith, who chairs the Environment Agency, called for perspective and said man-made climate change was happening and the science had not been undermined.

"Let's not allow one or two errors to undermine the overwhelming strength of evidence that has been painstakingly accumulated, peer reviewed, tested and tested again, and that shows overwhelmingly that our emissions of greenhouse gases are having a serious impact on the earth's atmosphere, and that as a result climate change is happening and will accelerate," he said.

"We should not underestimate the damage that has been done by the glee with which the sceptics have seized on the one or two scientific mistakes and used them to undermine the whole consensus about the evidence and the conclusions we need to draw from it," Lord Smith added.

Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, told reporters in New Delhi today it would be "senseless" for Pachauri to take the blame for the error.

"I believe that the scientific evidence that is provided by the IPCC has not been shaken in spite of the very unfortunate mistake," he said.

This article first appeared on the Guardian

BusinessGreen.com is part of the Guardian Environment Network

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