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French weatherman fired after slamming climate conference

Fog and smog swallow up the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris

The Jakarta Post
Paris
Tue, November 3, 2015

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French weatherman fired after slamming climate conference Fog and smog swallow up the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Monday. (AP/Jacques Brinon) (AP/Jacques Brinon)

Fog and smog swallow up the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Monday. (AP/Jacques Brinon)

A weather forecaster for French state television has been fired after releasing and promoting a book criticizing politicians, scientists and others for what he calls an exaggerated view of climate change.

Philippe Verdier's dismissal from France-2 comes a month before Paris hosts a U.N. conference aimed at the most ambitious worldwide agreement yet to limit global warming. He announced the dismissal in an online video over the weekend in which he described it as an attack on media freedom.

France Televisions, which owns France-2, would not comment Monday. French media reported that the network said Verdier had violated ethical rules. Many media organizations have guidelines about journalists publicly expressing personal opinions on subjects they cover.

Verdier was initially suspended a month ago, after his book came out and he sent an open letter to French President Francois Hollande saying the climate conference "won't solve anything."

In an online video he released at the time, Verdier criticizes "complete hype on the climate" by scientists, politicians, business lobbies, environmental and religious groups. "You are dramatizing things to underline your will to gather the world's powerful and defuse a pending cataclysm," he wrote to Hollande.

Most climate scientists agree that the planet's climate is changing largely because of human action. Though some public officials and a few climate scientists disagree, the world's scientific organizations say that changes such as increasingly extreme weather and rising sea levels are a result of the buildup of heat-trapping gases, especially carbon dioxide, from the burning of coal, oil and gas.

The conference Nov. 30-Dec. 11 is based on the results of more than 100 years of climate science, and top officials from 196 countries including President Barack Obama are coming to Paris to talk about ways to slow that change.

In his letter to Hollande, Verdier questions the president's sincerity in promising to help the environment and asks him to plant a tree in the Elysee Palace to prove his "green" credentials.

Similar issues have popped up with some television weathercasters in the United States.

Donald Wuebbles, a climate scientist at the University of Illinois, notes the difference between television weathercasters who look at daily weather and scientists who study long-term change in the atmosphere over periods of at least 20 to 30 years. Often television weathermen don't study the long-term effects and statistics.

Wuebbles told The Associated Press on Monday that Verdier's claims that the temperature is now in plateau are contradicted by data. Wuebbles said temperatures may go up and down year to year but the overall long-term trends upward are clear. (kes)

 

 

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