Untitled Document
Summary:
So obfuscate, confuse and divert attention to clean air is the order of the day.
Why would 41 foreign deniers be concerned about what happens in Canada? Because
what happens in Canada will shift the momentum towards or away from Kyoto.
There’s a larger issue, too. In 2007, the UN’s Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change is expected to warn governments that global warming
could drive the Earth’s temperature far higher than previously forecast.
[Posted By gaanjah_mama]
_______________________
By Donald Gutstein
Republished from the
Tyee
The people out to 'poison the debate on climate change.'
In early April, the Financial Post published a letter addressed to
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and signed by 60 “accredited experts in
climate and related scientific disciplines,” as they describe themselves.
They want Harper to begin a debate on the Kyoto Protocol.
Begin a debate? What do they think has been happening since 1988, when US National
Aeronautics and Space Administration scientist James Hansen testified before
the US Congress that he was “99 percent certain that global warming was
here.” That statement has been subjected to extensive, prolonged and worldwide
scrutiny ever since.
The point of their letter is to deny “alarmist forecasts” of global
warming and to attack “the confident pronouncements of scientifically
unqualified environmental groups” whose goal is to capture “sensational
headlines.”
The letter is classic climate change denial and among the 60 signatories—only
19 of whom are Canadian—are the most prominent climate change sceptics,
as they are frequently called.
The deniers’ letter was followed two weeks later by one from 90 supporters
of Kyoto. This group calls itself “climate science leaders from the academic,
public and private sectors across Canada.” No foreigners, no weasel phrases
like “related scientific disciplines” (economics? agronomy?). Their
point? The evidence is conclusive that warming has occurred and most of it is
attributable to human activity.
These conclusions, they say, are supported by the vast majority of the world’s
climate scientists. Harper’s assignment is to get on with developing an
“effective national strategy” to deal with climate change.
More debate or action?
Financial Post editor Terence Corcoran seems to think that more debate is required.
He did run the letter from the Kyoto supporters but accompanied it with an editorial
attacking their credibility. Their crime is that some of them are federal government
scientists and some have received peer-reviewed government grants. Therefore,
what they have to say must be rubbish.
The problem with libertarians like Corcoran is that they can be so blinded
by their ideology—anything government does is bad—that they don’t
see the problems a powerful corporate sector can cause. Call it a case of libertarian
looneyism.
Funded by Exxon Mobil
The 60 deniers had no Corcoran editorial accompanying their letter. A question
Corcoran might have asked is how many of the deniers are funded by Exxon Mobil
and the coal industry?
It’s a natural question to pose. The fossil fuel industry doesn’t
want mandatory limits on CO2 emissions because they would affect profits. It
wants Canada and the rest of the world to do what George W. Bush did, establish
voluntary standards and provide government subsidies to develop cleaner technologies.
To update his knowledge on this issue, Corcoran could read the works of Ross
Gelbspan, who has been covering climate change for more than a decade as a reporter
for the Boston Globe. Gelbspan discovered in 1995 that some of the
leading skeptics were funded by the coal industry. He wrote a book in 1997,
The Heat is On, and runs the companion
web site, The Heat is Online. Gelbspan’s recent book is Boiling Point:
How Politicians, Big Oil and Coal, Journalists and Activists are Fueling the
Climate Crisis, and What We Can Do to Avoid Disaster.
Corcoran could also check out the May/June 2005 issue of Mother
Jones, which tabulated the organizations that received funding from Exxon
Mobil between 2000 and 2003 to fight CO2 emission controls.
And he could look at the SourceWatch
site created by John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton.
Using these sources, Corcoran could put together some interesting profiles
of the skeptics. Sallie Baliunas is a non-Canadian signatory to the deniers
letter. She is a Harvard-Smithsonian Institute astrophysicist who has been giving
global warming deniers scientific cover since the mid-1990s. She is a senior
scientist at the George C. Marshall Institute (received $310,000 from Exxon
Mobil). She co-wrote (with colleague Willie Soon, who did not sign the skeptics
letter) the Fraser Institute pamphlet “Global warming: a guide to the
science.” (The Fraser Institute receives $60,000 a year from Exxon Mobil.)
Baliunas is “enviro-sci” host of TechCentralStation.com (received
$95,000 from Exxon Mobil) and is on science advisory boards of the Committee
for a Constructive Tomorrow ($252,000) and the Annapolis Center for Science-Based
Public Policy ($427,500). She has given speeches before the American Enterprise
Institute ($960,000) and the Heritage Foundation ($340,000). The Heartland Institute
($312,000) publishes her op-ed pieces.
Why is Exxon Mobil so taken with Baliunas? With her colleague Willie Soon,
she first claimed that solar effects could account for the earth’s warming.
When that theory was debunked, they next wrote a paper, partially funded by
the American Petroleum Institute says Mother Jones, that claims the twentieth
century hasn’t been all that warm. The paper quickly became a mini-bible
for deniers. But the editor of the journal where the paper was published resigned,
saying it never should have been published because of a deficient peer-review
process.
Exxon Mobil has been astonishingly successful in delaying action on global
warming for more than a decade. During that time, oil revenues soared, Exxon
took over Mobil for US $82 billion and in 2005, the combined company earned
the largest profit in human history at $36 billion.
That was the year Exxon Mobil CEO Lee Raymond retired. As thanks for his work
on behalf of shareholders—the stock price soared over 500 percent over
the decade—he received a retirement package valued at nearly $400 million.
Sceptic in demand
Closer to home, one of the 19 Canadian signatories to the skeptics letter is
Tim Ball, a retired professor of climatology from the University of Winnipeg,
now living in Victoria. As a global-warming sceptic, he is in high demand by
the front groups sponsored by the fossil fuel industry.
Ball’s particular niche is the argument that since 1940, the world’s
climate has actually been cooling. The conclusion of the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change, reached by over 2,000 climate scientists, that the world
is heating up is wrong, he says, because it used “distorted records.”
Undistorted records in hand, Ball is promoted by the National Center for Public
Policy Research ($225,000 from Exxon Mobil), and Tech Central Station (which
also receives support from General Motors). He’s a hot topic on the Coalblog
web site, sponsored by the coal companies. In the past year, he’s given
policy briefings to the Fraser Institute and the Frontier Centre for Public
Policy in Winnipeg.
You could have found him and Baliunas at a conference in Ottawa in November
2002, just days before parliament ratified the Kyoto Protocol. That conference,
urging the government not to proceed with ratification, was paid for by Imperial
Oil (Exxon Mobil’s Canadian subsidiary) and Talisman Energy and put together
by public relations firm APCO Worldwide.
APCO’s assignment for Imperial Oil was to bring together a roster of
climate change skeptics to reveal Kyoto’s “science and technology
fatal flaws.”
An APCO specialty is supporting rogue scientists who are financed by industry
and purport to challenge established scientific thinking. APCO organized The
Advancement of Sound Science Coalition, which was originally funded by the Philip
Morris Company, to attack epidemiological studies which implicated environmental
tobacco smoke in slightly increased rates of lung cancer in non-smokers. Such
studies could not be allowed to stand, given the tobacco industry’s claim
that harm from smoking was regrettable but due to individual choice, not second-hand
smoke. This work was essential in Philip Morris’ efforts to limit the
impact of passive smoking regulations. APCO then widened the financial catchment
to include other companies with poisoning or polluting problems. The Advancement
of Sound Science Coalition was so successful that it was assigned a lead role
in opposing Kyoto.
Vancouver PR whistleblower
And that makes Jim Hoggan mad. Hoggan runs one of the largest PR firms in Western
Canada. PR practitioners rarely criticize the work of their colleagues, but
Hoggan pulls no punches in his scathing denunciation of the global warming deniers
and their public relations advisors.
In December 2005, he set up his blog, which he calls deSmogBlog.
In his personal manifesto, “Slamming the Climate Skeptic Scam,”
he writes “it is infuriating—as a public relations professional—to
watch my colleagues use their skills, their training and their considerable
intellect to poison the international debate on climate change.”
It’s powerful reading.
Hoggan recently broke the story that one of the 19 Canadian deniers had recanted,
saying he was misled about the letter’s content when he signed on.
True, the Hoggan firm does work for organizations that do not spring to mind
when thinking about environmental protection—Delta Land Development and
Sea-to-Sky Highway Improvement Project, for instance. And organized labour would
be no fan of his. He has an “extensive” background representing
companies involved in labour disputes. And he has Partnerships BC as a client.
But he’s not afraid to list his clients on his web site, in contrast to
many PR firms.
And Hoggan has a large pro bono practice in which he represents clients like
the David Suzuki Foundation, one of the most consistent targets of the deniers.
He’s also creating a market niche around the issue of sustainability.
In a recent post, Hoggan discusses a column by Globe and Mail columnist John
Ibbitson, who complains that here’s a letter from 90 scientists urging
action; there’s a letter from 60 scientists urging Harper to ignore calls
to action. “What’s a layman to do?” Ibbitson whines.
His solution? Forget about global warming and instead work with the US to improve
air quality. “After all,” he writes, “a continental agreement
on air quality would do far more to improve the lives of both Americans and
Canadians than any actions specifically targeted at reducing greenhouse-gas
emissions.”
It’s called bait and switch. We’re alarmed about the health of
the planet our grandchildren will inherit. But (thanks to the lies and deceptions
of the deniers) nobody can agree on what’s happening, let alone what should
be done. So let’s do something that we can all agree on instead.
Ibbitson’s column makes clear the political purpose of the deniers’
letter—to help Harper out of a tight corner. His goal of capturing a majority
government depends on winning seats in Ontario and Quebec, the provinces where
support for Kyoto is strongest. He could court their support by giving them
Kyoto, but this would infuriate his oil industry masters.
These are people like Gwyn Morgan, retired CEO of EnCana Corp., long-time Fraser
institute trustee and generous Conservative Party funder who Harper placed in
charge of vetting all senior government appointments.
So obfuscate, confuse and divert attention to clean air is the order of the
day.
Why Canada is key
Why would 41 foreign deniers be concerned about what happens in Canada? Because
what happens in Canada will shift the momentum towards or away from Kyoto.
There’s a larger issue, too. In 2007, the UN’s Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change is expected to warn governments that global warming
could drive the Earth’s temperature far higher than previously forecast.
The UK’s Royal Society, in a confidential internal
memo leaked to The Guardian last month, predicts that the lobbyists
will try to undermine the IPCC’s report. “There are already signs
these groups will be targeting European countries and Canada to seek to provoke
opposition to the Kyoto protocol.”
And thanks to deniers for hire and newspapers like the National Post that spread
their baloney, their task will be made that much easier.