Sorry, wrong number: The use and misuse of numerical facts in analysis and media reporting of energy issues

Date Published
11/2002
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
Editors
DOI
10.1146/annurev.energy.27.122001.083458
LBL Report Number
LBNL-50499
Abstract

Students of public policy sometimes envision an idealized policy process where competent data collection and incisive analysis on both sides of a debate lead to reasoned judgments and sound decisions. Unfortunately, numbers that prove decisive in policy debates are not always carefully developed, credibly documented, or correct. This paper presents four widely cited examples of numbers in the energy field that are either misleading or wrong. It explores the origins of these numbers, how they missed the mark, and how they have been misused by both analysts and the media. In addition, it describes and uses a three-stage analytical process for evaluating such statistics that involves defining terms and boundaries, assessing underlying data, and critically analyzing arguments.

Journal
Annual Review of Energy and the Environment 2002
Volume
27
Year of Publication
2002
Pagination
119-158
Publisher
Annual Reviews, Inc.
Place Published
Palo Alto, CA
Keywords
Organizations
Research Areas
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