In 1988, after four years lecturing in geography at the University of Salford, he became for 12 years a senior researcher in the Climatic Research Unit, part of the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia. In October 2000 he founded the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, a distributed virtual network organisation headquartered at UEA, which he directed until July 2007.[4] Hulme served on the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change(IPCC) from 1995 to 2001.[5] He also contributed to the 2nd and 3rd Assessment Reports of the IPCC, for which Hulme received a personalised certificate acknowledging his contribution to the organisation, which was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007,[6][7]
He was the founding editor-in-chief (from 2008 to 2022) of the review journal Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews (WIREs) Climate Change,[8] published by John Wiley & Sons. He was Head of the Department of Geography at King's College London in 2016 and 2017, and Head of the Department of Geography at the University of Cambridge from 2022 to 2023.
He is best known as the author of Why We Disagree About Climate Change[12] published in 2009 by Cambridge University Press and which was named by The Economist in December 2009 as one of their four Books of Year for science and technology.[13] He is also the author of Weathered: Cultures of Climate[14] (SAGE, 2017), Reducing the Future to Climate: a Story of Climate Determinism and Reductionism [15] (Osiris, 2011), and Can Science Fix Climate Change? A Case Against Climate Engineering (Polity, 2014). He has edited the books Climates of the British Isles: Present, Past and Future,[16] "Climate policy options post-2012: European strategy, technology and adaptation after Kyoto" co-edited with Bert Metz and Michael Grubb[17] and in 2010, co-edited with Henry Neufeldt, Making Climate Change Work For Us: European Perspectives on Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies. In 2013 he published Exploring Climate Change Through Science and in Society: An Anthology of Mike Hulme's Essays, Interviews and Speeches, which brings together many of his more popular writings on climate change since the late 1980s. In recent years he has edited the volume Contemporary Climate Change Debates: A Student Primer (Routledge, 2020) and is the author of Climate Change (Key Ideas in Geography) (Routledge, 2021). In 2023 he published Climate Change Isn’t Everything: Liberating Climate Politics from Alarmism, where he expands on what he terms climatism.[18]
Views about climate change
In 2008, Hulme made a personal statement on what he called the "5 lessons of climate change", as:[19]
"climate change is a relative risk, not an absolute one"
"climate risks are serious, and we should seek to minimise them"
"our world has huge unmet development needs"
"our current energy portfolio is not sustainable"
"massive and deliberate geo-engineering of the planet is a dubious practice"
At the very least, the publication of private CRU e-mail correspondence should be seen as a wake-up call for scientists – and especially for climate scientists. The key lesson to be learnt is that not only must scientific knowledge about climate change be publicly owned – the IPCC does a fair job of this according to its own terms – but that in the new century of digital communication and an active citizenry, the very practices of scientific enquiry must also be publicly owned.
In another article for the BBC, in November 2006, he warned against the dangers of using alarmist language when communicating climate change science.[21]
Mike Hulme is one of the authors of the Hartwell Paper, published by the London School of Economics in collaboration with the University of Oxford in May 2010.[22] The authors argued that, after what they regard as the failure of the 2009 Copenhagen Climate Summit, the Kyoto Protocol crashed. They claimed that Kyoto had "failed to produce any discernible real world reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases in fifteen years."[22][23] They argued that this failure opened an opportunity to set climate policy free from Kyoto and the paper advocates a controversial and piecemeal approach to decarbonization of the global economy.[24][25][26]
Religious views
Hulme is a self-proclaimed evangelical Christian, and member of the Church of England, who has been theologically influenced by the Fulcrum movement.[27][28]
References
^"Mike Hulme". Madras College Former Pupils. Archived from the original on 8 June 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2012.