Important statements of uncertainty concerning the modelling
predictions in its Chapter 8, which had been agreed upon by the scientists, had been
removed from the published version. The coordinating lead author for Chapter 8,
Benjamin Santer, responded11 justifying this change on the basis that it made the
assessment clearer, thus ignoring clause 10 of the IPCC’s governing principles which requires the inclusion of such uncertainties. Edwards and Schneider12 said that the
removal of expressions of doubt were demanded by the politics of the day and were
thereby justified. If true, the IPCC process had not delivered the policy neutral report
that the governing principles required.
[snip]
David Deming has told a US Senate hearing14 that, some time after the
publication of his 1995 Science paper on Borehole temperatures, he was approached
by the media and other climate scientists interested in any anthropogenic warming
implications. He claims to have been contacted by one climate scientist who expressed
the view that “we must get rid of the Medieval Warm Period. ”