Top climate scientist backs global warming claims – University of Reading
04 April 2005One of Britain's leading climate change experts has thrown his weight behind the claim that global warming is being caused by human activity in a report published by the Institute of Physics. The report by Professor Alan Thorpe, who took up his post as chief of the Natural Environmental Research Council on Friday 1 April, aims to tackle sceptics who doubt the models scientists use to predict future climate change. Professor Thorpe outlines the scientific basis for climate change and explains how the climate models actually predict future change. According to Thorpe, "uncertainty" is one of the key issues in predicting climate change but is an aspect of the research which is very poorly understood by the public, media and policy-makers. In the report, Professor Thorpe says: "Science is crucial in determining government and international policy on climate change but only some of the views on this issue are actually supported by the scientific models. "There is little doubt that a lack of knowledge about how climate change is predicted and the associated uncertainties are the main reason that there is so much ill-informed comment on climate change in the media and amoung the public." The report, 'Climate Change Prediction: a challenging scientific problem' by Alan J. Thorpe, Professor of Meteorology at the University of Reading, was published by the Institute of Physics and is devoted to de-mystifying the prediction methodology, and focuses on the scientific basis of climate change prediction. The Institute of Physics hopes that the paper will increase believability in climate models and persuade sceptics that human activity is likely to be causing global warming. The paper aims to convince policy-makers, the general public and the scientific community that the threats posed by global climate change are real. A copy of the paper can be downloaded here end For media enquiries only, please contact Craig Hillsley, the University of Reading press officer. Tel: 0118 378 7388 Email: c.hillsley@rdg.ac.uk