Scientific journal retracts article that claimed
no evidence of climate crisis
Publisher Springer Nature says 2022 article ‘not
supported by available evidence’ as editors launch investigation
Graham Readfearn
@readfearn
Fri 25 Aug 2023
16.00 BST
One of the
world’s biggest scientific publishers has retracted a journal article that
claimed to have found no evidence of a climate crisis.
Springer
Nature said it had retracted the article, by four Italian physicists, after an
internal investigation found the conclusions were “not supported by available
evidence or data provided by the authors”.
Climate
sceptic groups widely publicised the article, which appeared in the European
Physical Journal Plus in January 2022 – a journal not known for publishing
climate change science.
Nine months
later the article was reported uncritically in a page one story in the
Australian newspaper and promoted in two segments on Sky News Australia – a
channel that has been described as a global hub for climate science
misinformation. The segments were viewed more than 500,000 times on YouTube.
The article
claimed to have analysed data to find no trend in rainfall extremes, floods,
droughts and food productivity.
“In
conclusion on the basis of observational data, the climate crisis that,
according to many sources, we are experiencing today, is not evident yet,” the
article said.
Several
climate scientists told the Guardian and later the news agency AFP that the
article had misrepresented some scientific articles, was “selective and biased”
and had “cherrypicked” information.
After those
concerns were raised, Springer Nature announced in October it was investigating
the article.
In a
statement Springer Nature said its editors had launched a “thorough
investigation”, which included a post-publication review by subject matter
experts.
The authors
of the article also submitted an addendum to their original work during the
course of the investigation, the statement said.
“After
careful consideration and consultation with all parties involved, the editors
and publishers concluded that they no longer had confidence in the results and
conclusions of the article,” the journal said.
“The
addendum was not considered suitable for publication and retraction was the
most appropriate course of action in order to maintain the validity of the
scientific record.”
A
retraction note appearing on the article says concerns were raised “regarding
the selection of the data, the analysis and the resulting conclusions of the
article”.
The note
says the article’s conclusions “were not supported by available evidence or
data provided by the authors”.
“In light
of these concerns and based on the outcome of the post publication review, the
editors-in-chief no longer have confidence in the results and conclusions
reported in this article,” the note adds.
The article
is still available for download, but the manuscript now has the words
“RETRACTED ARTICLE” stamped over each page. According to the journal’s website,
the article was accessed 92,000 times.
The
Guardian asked why the issues with the paper were not picked up before
publication. Springer Nature said it could not discuss “the specific history or
peer review process of a paper with anyone other than the authors”.
The
publisher and editors were “committed to maintaining the highest possible
levels of integrity in the content published in the journal, and we are taking
steps to ensure that similar issues do not occur in the future”.
“For
example, we are supporting our editors-in-chief in increasing oversight of
editors and guest editors to ensure that our policies and best practice are
adhered to,” a statement added.
Prof Steven
Sherwood, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales who was
among those critical of the article, said it was important the journal had
allowed the authors to defend their work.
“This shows
the journal did not rush to judgment against the paper,” he said.
“I commend
the journal, both for giving this initial benefit of the doubt to the authors
and for having the resolve to retract the paper when the authors could not
justify their claims.”
Two of the
study’s four authors, retired nuclear physicist Renato Ricci and known climate
science sceptic Franco Prodi, signed a declaration in early 2022 that there was
“no climate emergency” and that “enriching the atmosphere with CO2 is
beneficial”.
The study’s
lead author, nuclear physicist Prof Gianluca Alimonti, argued in 2014 that
there was no consensus among climate scientists that global warming was caused
by human activity. At least six separate studies have shown that between 90%
and 100% of climate scientists agree warming is caused by humans.
The
Guardian emailed Alimonti for comment but did not receive a reply. The
Australian newspaper and Sky News Australia were also approached for comment.

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