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But the lawmakers did criticize the way Jones and his colleagues handled freedom of information requests, saying scientists could have saved themselves a lot of trouble by aggressively publishing all their data instead of worrying about how to stonewall their critics. Lawmakers stressed that their report -- which was written after only a single day of oral testimony
-- did not cover all the issues and would not be as in-depth as the two other inquiries into the e-mail scandal that are still pending. Willis said the lawmakers had been in a rush to publish something before Britain's next national election, which is widely expected in just over a month's time. "Clearly we would have liked to spend more time of this," he said, before adding jokingly: "We had to get something out before we were sent packing." One of the two pending inquiries is being headed by former civil servant Muir Russell, who is looking into whether scientists, including Jones, fudged data or manipulated the peer review process. It also is examining the extent to which university followed applicable freedom of information laws. That report is due to report sometime this spring.
Geologist Ernest Oxburgh is leading a parallel investigation into the integrity of the science itself, one staffed by academics including Kerry Emanuel, a professor of meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Huw Davies, a former president of the International Association of Meteorology & Atmospheric Science. The committee said that climate scientists had to be much more open in future
-- for example by publishing all their data, including raw data and the software programs used to interpret them, to the Internet. Willis said there was far too much money at stake not to be completely transparent. "Governments across the world are spending trillions of pounds, or trillions of dollars, on mitigating climate change. The science has got to be irreproachable," he said. ___ On the Net: Report:
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/
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