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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Nobel physicist quits US group over climate stance
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Sept 15, 2011

Norwegian physicist and Nobel laureate Ivar Giaever has quit a major US physics society due to its stance on global warming, a spokeswoman for the group told AFP Thursday.

"I can confirm he has resigned," American Physical Society spokeswoman Tawanda Johnson said, noting that Giaever, 82, sent a letter to that effect to the group's executive director Kate Kirby on Tuesday.

"His reason is that he takes issue with APS's stance on climate change."

The APS, which is a member organization of 48,000, adopted a national policy statement in 2007 which states: "The evidence is incontrovertible: Global warming is occurring."

Last year another climate change skeptic, University of California professor Hal Lewis, left the group, claiming global warming was a "scam" and a "pseudoscientific fraud."

In a statement issued after Lewis's departure, APS said that "on the matter of global climate change, APS notes that virtually all reputable scientists agree... carbon dioxide is increasing in the atmosphere due to human activity."

Giaever, who shared the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physics for his "experimental discoveries regarding tunneling phenomena in semiconductors," did not respond to an AFP email requesting comment.

Johnson stressed that Giaever's position represented the minority in the scientific community, and that while APS is "disappointed" at his departure it does not intend to change its position.

"We don't have members resigning in droves or anything like that," she said.

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Canberra, Australia (UPI) Sep 14, 2011
Australia has introduced its controversial carbon pricing scheme in Parliament. The plan would force around 500 of Australia's most polluting companies to pay $24 for each ton of carbon they emit, beginning next July. It would evolve into a cap-and-trade emissions plan in 2015. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who pledged during last year's federal election not to introdu ... read more


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