Thankyou for getting John Hunter to admit that he obtains funds from Greenpeace.
In 1991 Greenpeace International published a letter in CoalTrans International (the journal of the world's international coal trading industry). That letter included the following assertion about me that was attributed to Hunter.
"Courtney clearly understands nothing about physics or climate or, at least, he pretends not to understand."
At the time I was the Senior Material Scientist of the National Coal Board (a.k.a. British Coal) based at the Coal Research Establishment (CRE). I had Hunter's above assertion printed in large letters and framed, then I mounted it on the wall of my office at CRE. It provided amusement for many until I left that job in 1997.
This year, Hunter has impugned my integrity, my veracity, my scientific credentials, and my scientific competence. This caused me some distress until I learned that Hunter still gets funds from Greenpeace. "He who pays the piper calls the tune". Clearly, the recent attacks on me indicate that I must have been effective of late.
Again, thankyou.
All the best
Richard
Dear John Daly:
(John Hunter is the primary author of What's Wrong With Still Waiting For Greenhouse?. In August, 2002, Greenpeace provided travel support for John Hunter, as an employee of the University of Tasmania, to present a paper on sea level rise to the Pacific Islands Forum in Fiji. This is the only funding ever provided by Greenpeace in support of John Hunter's work. He had no contact with Greenpeace prior to May 2002.)
In the above email, Richard Courtney quite clearly implied that John Hunter had received payment from Greenpeace since 1991, and that this payment had influenced his work ('he who pays the piper calls the tune'). The email was followed by another (6 March 2003) to Hunter and to a number of members of climatesceptics, which contained the following elucidation:
"I enjoyed reading this response from Greenpeace. It pleases me that after
more than a year of research they have failed to state a single error in
anything I wrote. Instead, they cite personal insults against me for writing
it"
The Greenpeace letter said one of those insults was from you, Hunter.
In 1990 two senior officials of GreenPeace published an article about 'global
warming' in CoalTrans International. It was suggested that I reply to that
and I did. My (long) letter provided referenced scientific information that
refuted each assertion in the Greenpeace article, and it was published as an
article in CoalTrans International. Following this, the Editor of CoalTrans
International asked me to become Contributing Technical Editor of that
journal. I accepted the post and took responsibility for all matters of
science and technology in that journal. Greenpeace wrote to say they would
research answers to my article and would respond in due course. In 1991
Greenpeace wrote a letter to CoalTrans International saying they had
researched the matter by asking for comments on my article from climate
scientists. I published that letter in full (two-thirds of a page) with my
response beneath it. My answer began;
Is this the Greenhouse Industry at work? Well, firstly, Courtney's
claims cannot be true, for the following reasons:
Secondly, let's look at the published evidence:
I have looked through 1991, both advertisements, and articles, news items (scanned).No advert from Greenpeace, no item overtly from Greenpeace, no apparent reference to Richard Courtney.
Needless to say, this article made absolutely no mention of the quote attributed to Hunter in Courtney's emails.
It is left to the reader to decide whether the above supports John Daly's claim of a `Greenhouse Industry', or whether Courtney's claims are instead a complete fabrication. Since Courtney has been informed several times of the above information and yet has never retracted his original claims, it would certainly appear to be a good example of contrarianism: holding to a particular view in the absence of any supporting evidence and/or in the face of totally contrary evidence.
(Copies of the original emails, and a scanned copy of the article Climate change debate: Greenpeace replies may be obtained by phoning 0427 098 831 or +61 427 098 831.)
22 August 2013