Tom Segalstad Explained

Tom Victor Segalstad (born 1949) is a Norwegian geologist. He has taught geology and geophysics at the University of Oslo, Norway, and at Pennsylvania State University, United States.

Career

Positions

He is the past head of the Geological Museum at the University of Oslo (a position he held for 12 years) and the past head of the Natural History Museums and Botanical Garden of the University of Oslo.[1]

He currently holds a position as associate professor of the largest university of Norway, UiO, University of Oslo, in Resource and Environmental Geology.

In 2008, he served as one of two conveners for the "Metallogeny of the Arctic Region" symposium at the 33rd International Geological Congress.[2]

Climate change

Segalstad was a reviewer of the IPCC Third Assessment Report, acting as one out of sixteen reviewers from Norway in the Working Group 1 of the IPCC but disagreed with the Scientific consensus on climate change from the assessment. He believes that human-released carbon dioxide won't have a large effect on the Earth's climate, claiming that it produces only a small percentage of the greenhouse effect, and that most would be absorbed by the ocean through geological processes.[3] [4] [5] According to his own account, after the results of the assessment were published, he resigned from the IPCC.[6] He explained later in regards to the report that the summary of the report had been released first, which attracted a large amount of media attention. He then claimed that the leader of the team making the IPCC report then stated that the information in the report had to match what had been stated in the summary, even though the summary had been written by government representatives and members of environmental organizations, not by scientists in the field of study.[7]

He was one of 100 signatories of a letter directed to the Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon describing the perceived mistakes in how the IPCC report was made.[7]

Criticism

Researchers Richard Bellerby, Are Olsen, and Gisle Nondal wrote a series of articles in Norwegian newspaper Forskning about Segalstad's stated beliefs and research on human emissions and how they do not affect climate change. The researchers went through Segalstad's points and gave counterarguments, concluding that he had used "incorrect interpretations of laws and geochemical data, in addition to a complete neglect of published measurements". They also repeatedly mentioned that Segalstad has yet to publish his research in any "recognized scientific journal".[8] [9]

Articles

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biography of Tom Victor Segalstad . Tom V. Segalstad . October 25, 2010 . . October 30, 2011.
  2. Web site: Metallogeny of the Arctic Region . International Geological Congress . International Geological Congress . August 6–14, 2008 . October 30, 2011.
  3. News: Models trump measurements . Lawrence Solomon . . October 30, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111023195204/http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=433b593b-6637-4a42-970b-bdef8947fa4e . October 23, 2011 .
  4. News: En kald vinter er ikke avgjørende . Ellen Kongsnes . . February 20, 2010 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.
  5. News: En politisk miljøbløff . Inge Berge . . March 31, 2008 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.
  6. News: Stoltenbergs ekspert er reveforsker . NTB . Hegnar Online . April 5, 2008 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.
  7. News: Hudfletter FNs klimapanel . Øystein Sjølie . . July 1, 2008 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.
  8. News: CO2-økningen er ikke naturlig . Bellerby, Richard . Olsen, Are . Nondal, Gisle . Forskning . August 12, 2008 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.
  9. News: Atmosfærens CO2-økning er menneskeskapt . Bellerby, Richard . Olsen, Are . Nondal, Gisle . Forskning . May 7, 2008 . Norwegian . October 30, 2011.