Brian P. Flannery Explained

Brian P. Flannery is a physicist who variously worked as an astrophysicist and as a climate modeller for ExxonMobil. He is known for being a co-author of Numerical Recipes, a widely used series of textbooks describing useful algorithms.

Flannery obtained his undergraduate degree in astrophysics from Princeton University in 1970[1] and his doctorate from the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1974, under the supervision of John Faulkner.[2] As an astrophysicist, he published work on cataclysmic variable stars and other interacting binaries until 1982.

In 1980, he joined ExxonMobil as a climate modeler and subsequently became a manager in 1998.[3] He previously participated in Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change[4] and continues to contribute to research on the mitigation of climate change. He has at times been accused of participating in effort's by ExxonMobil to undermine action against climate change.[5] Jeremy Leggett recounts a conversation with Flannery in his book, The Carbon War, in which the physicist claimed that if most of the recoverable oil and gas on the planet were to be burnt there would be no noticeable effect on the climate.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Brian Flannery . November 16, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161117063027/http://www.rff.org/people/profile/brian-flannery . November 17, 2016 . dead .
  2. Flannery . B. P. . Gas flow in cataclysmic variable stars . 1974 . 1974PhDT.........4F . PhD . University of California, Santa Cruz.
  3. Web site: Brian Flannery. 15 September 2015 . November 16, 2016.
  4. Web site: Working Group III: Mitigation. List of Authors and Reviewers. November 16, 2016.
  5. News: The Guardian. Bob. Ward. Why ExxonMobil must be taken to task over climate denial funding. July 1, 2009.
  6. Book: Leggett, Jeremy . The Carbon War: Dispatches from the End of the Oil Century . Allen Lane . 1999 . London . 173 . English.