An orchestrated campaign is being waged against climate change  science to undermine public acceptance of man-made global warming,  environment
experts claimed last night.
![mcintyre-2.jpg [Stephen McIntyre, who runs climateaudit.org, part of a network  of climate change sceptics. (Photo: The Independent).]](http://www.commondreams.org/files/article_images/mcintyre-2.jpg)
Stephen McIntyre, who runs climateaudit.org,  part of a network  of climate change sceptics. (Photo: The Independent).
The attack  against scientists supportive of the idea of man-made climate change has  grown in ferocity since the leak of thousands of documents on the  subject from the University of East Anglia (UEA) on the eve of the  Copenhagen climate summit last December.
Free-market, anti-climate  change think-tanks such as the Atlas Economic Research Foundation in  the US and the International Policy Network in the UK have received  grants totalling hundreds of thousands of pounds from the multinational  energy company ExxonMobil. Both organisations have funded international  seminars pulling together climate change deniers from across the globe.
Many  of these critics have broadcast material from the leaked UEA emails to  undermine climate change predictions and to highlight errors in claims  that the Himalayan glaciers could disappear by 2035. Professor Phil  Jones, who has temporarily stood down as director of UEA's climactic  research unit, is reported in today's Sunday Times to have "several  times" considered suicide. He also drew parallels between his case and  that of Dr David Kelly, found dead in the wake of the row over the  alleged "sexing up" of intelligence in the run-up to the invasion of  Iraq. Professor Jones said he was taking sleeping pills and  beta-blockers and had received two death threats in the past week alone.
Climate  sceptic bloggers broadcast stories last week casting doubts on  scientific data predicting dramatic loss of the Amazon rainforest. All  three stories, picked up by mainstream media, questioned the credibility  of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the way it does  its work. A new attack on climate science, already dubbed "Seagate" by  sceptics, relating to claims that more than half the Netherlands is in  danger of being submerged under rising sea levels, is likely to be at  the centre of the newest skirmish in coming weeks.
The  controversies have shaken the IPCC, whose chairman, Dr Rajendra  Pachauri, was subjected to a series of personal attacks on his  reputation and lifestyle last week. A poll this weekend confirmed that  public confidence in the climate change consensus has been shaken: one  in four Britons - 25 per cent - now say they do not believe in global  warming; previously this figure stood at 15 per cent.
Professor  Bob Watson, the chief scientific adviser to the Department for  Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and former chairman of the  IPCC, said yesterday that the backlash is the result of a campaign: "It  does appear that there's a concerted effort by a number of sceptics to  undermine the credibility of the evidence behind human-induced climate  change." He added: "I am sure there are some sceptics who may well be  funded by the private sector to try to cast uncertainty."
A  complicated web of relationships revolves around a number of right-wing  think-tanks around the world that dispute the threats of climate change.  ExxonMobil is a key player behind the scenes, having donated hundreds  of thousands of dollars in the past few years to climate change  sceptics. The Atlas Foundation, created by the late Sir Anthony Fisher  (founder of the Institute of Economic Affairs), received more than  $100,000 in 2008 from ExxonMobil, according to the oil company's  reports.
Atlas has supported more than 30 other foreign  think-tanks that espouse climate change scepticism, and co-sponsored a  meeting of the world's leading climate sceptics in New York last March.  Called "Global Warming: Was It Ever Really a Crisis?", it was organised  by the Heartland Institute - a group that described the event as "the  world's largest-ever gathering of global warming sceptics". The  organisation is another right-wing think-tank to have benefited from  funding given by ExxonMobil in recent years.
A large British  contingent was present at the event, with speakers including Dr Benny  Peiser, from Lord Lawson's climate sceptic think-tank, the Global  Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF); the botanist David Bellamy; Julian  Morris and Kendra Okonski from the London-based International Policy  Network; the weather forecaster Piers Corbyn; Christopher Monckton, a  former policy adviser to Margaret Thatcher; and Professor David  Henderson, a member of GWPF's advisory council. Speakers at the event  also included two prominent climate bloggers who associate with Paul  Dennis, a 54-year-old climate researcher at the University of East  Anglia who has been questioned by police investigating the theft of  climate data.
In a posting on the blog of the climate sceptic  Andrew Montford on Friday, Mr Dennis insisted: "I did not leak any  files, data, emails or any other material. I have no idea how the files  were released or who was behind it."
But he confirmed that he had  been in email contact with Stephen McIntyre, who runs climateaudit.org -  a site that was one of the first to receive an anonymous link to the  original leaked data from UEA.
Mr Dennis said he emailed Mr  McIntyre to alert him to a "departmental email saying that emails and  files were hacked" and that "police had copies of my email  correspondence with Steve McIntyre and Jeff Id [a pseudonym for the  climate sceptic Patrick Condon]. They said it was because I had sent the  emails that they were interviewing me."
The UEA researcher also  has connections with another prominent sceptic, Anthony Watts, with whom  he has posted and who spoke beside Mr McIntyre. Mr Dennis was not  available for comment.
Bob Ward, the policy director of the  Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of  Economics, said: "A lot of the climate sceptic arguments are being made  by people with demonstrable right-wing ideology which is based on  opposition to any environmental regulation of the market, and they are  clearly being given money that allows them to disseminate their views  more widely than would be the case if they didn't have oil company  funding."
But Dr Richard North, a climate change sceptic and  blogger, rejected claims of a conspiracy as "laughable" and denied  having any links to vested interests. "Anybody who knows me knows I'm a  loner. Nobody tells me what to do or dictates my agenda."
ExxonMobil  said in a statement: "We have the same concerns as people everywhere -  and that is how to provide the world with the energy it needs while  reducing greenhouse gas emissions." 
Copyright  2009 Independent News and Media Limited 
  
No comments:
Post a Comment