New exhibition at London's Science Museum goes 'neutral'
A new climate gallery at London's Science Museum, sponsored by Royal Dutch Shell, will step back from pushing evidence of man-made to adopt a more neutral position. The £4 million exhibition, opening in November, will provide "up-to-date, accurate"...
A new climate gallery at London's Science Museum, sponsored by Royal Dutch Shell, will step back from pushing evidence of man-made to adopt a more neutral position.
The £4 million exhibition, opening in November, will provide "up-to-date, accurate" information about the science of climate change and aims to "satisfy the interests and needs of those who accept that human-induced climate change is real, those who are unsure, and those who do not," the museum said in a statement.
"The scientific community has, with some exceptions, concluded that climate change is real, largely driven by humans and requires a response," said the museum's director Chris Rapley. "Our objective is to minimise the shrill tone and emotion that bedevils discussion of this subject."
The new gallery follows an exhibition called Prove It! All The Evidence You Need To Believe In Climate Change which the museum launched last October and closed in February.
It featured a poll showing a large portion of its visitors disputed the scientific evidence behind man-made climate change.
The new gallery, called the Climate Science Gallery, is also sponsored by Germany's Siemens, the Garfield Weston Foundation and Britain's Department for , Food and Rural Affairs. Late last year, the scientific data behind climate change was called into question after hacked e-mails from a British university were seized upon by sceptics as evidence that the case had been exaggerated.
Then in January, an error saying that Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035 - a major exaggeration of the thaw - exposed shortcomings in how a UN panel of climate scientists checks its sources. This led to calls for reforms of the panel that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. London's Science Museum also reiterated this week its commitment to reducing its carbon footprint, agreeing to cut carbon emissions by a further 10 per cent this year. This follows a 24 per cent reduction in the museum's emissions in 2008/9.