RenewableCandy wrote:I don't think you understood my comment at all.
Possible. English is my first language, and I don't understand all the cute semantic tricks employed by those desperate to avoid contact between reality and their belief system.
RenewableCandy wrote:
I wasn't slagging-off the EIA. All organisations, and for that matter individuals, who receive pay that may be withdrawn, are subject to a certain bias. Sometimes it's not even intentional. I myself cheerfully ignore things like "A report by Renewables UK says we could get by on wind power alone"...etc.
Why? The objective analysis of any position involves understanding both sides of an issue. That includes not only examining the scientific work done on a topic but the advocacy positions. Of BOTH sides.
Such study would then make the average reader aware of what both sides think their strong points are, talking points versus scientific points, what each advocacy position thinks it needs to discount from the other advocate, etc etc.
How else would anyone ever make an informed opinion? You utilize different method perhaps? Darts and a big signs on the wall…"DOGMA" and a much smaller one, "Try thinking for yourself for a change"?
RenewableCandy wrote:
You also have to factor-in what else the guys at the EIA have on their resume/s. If they're in and out of the oil industry between their EIA-ing, then, well you get the idea. People are only human. Ooops, sorry.
So. We take an industry professional with, say, 20 years of experience, and hire them to guide EIA projections using expert knowledge of resources and whatnot, or we hire a 24 year old newly minted college grad, call them "industry analyst", and charge them with the same assignment.
Is it reasonable to assume that naiveté is more valuable than decades of experience in this regard?