It's not hard to poke holes in the "science" that attempts to discredit climate change.
In their desperation to find even a tiny shred of peer-reviewed science to challenge the volumes of research from around the world about human-caused climate change, deniers have often held up Willie Soon’s work.
Soon, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, is known for studies that purportedly show that the sun, and not CO2 emissions from human activity, is the main factor in climate change, and that climate change in the 20th century wasn’t that unusual to begin with. He has also argued that mercury emissions from burning coal are no big deal.
Now, in response to a Greenpeace investigation, Soon has admitted that U.S. oil and coal companies, including ExxonMobil, the American Petroleum Institute, Koch Industries, and the world’s largest coal-burning utility, Southern Company, have contributed more than $1 million to his research over the past decade. According to Greenpeace, every grant Soon has received since 2002 has been from oil or coal interests. This, despite the fact that Soon once told a U.S. Senate hearing that he had not been hired by, been employed by, or received grants from any organization “that had taken advocacy positions with respect to the Kyoto Protocol or the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change."
Soon has also been affiliated with a number of industry front groups, including the coal-funded Greening Earth Society, and Koch-Exxon-Scaife-funded groups, including the George C. Marshall Institute, the Science and Public Policy Institute, the Center for Science and Public Policy, the Heartland Institute, and Canada’s Fraser Institute.
Correspondence uncovered by Greenpeace also found that, in 2003, Soon led a plan to undermine the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fourth Assessment Report years before it was even released in 2007.
It’s not news that the fossil-fuel industry has funded an ongoing campaign of doubt and misinformation about the effects of its products, and about the dangers of climate change – people and organizations from science historian Naomi Oreskes (author of Merchants of Doubt) to Greenpeace have been exposing these efforts for years. From hiring trolls and front groups to post comments on websites, submit letters to editors, and write opinion columns, to sponsoring “scientific” research and holding conferences, it’s all been well-documented. (The same tactics have also been used by the tobacco industry.)
The latest revelation is a bit of an embarrassment for oil-giant Exxon, though. The world’s largest oil company had admitted that it funded these efforts, but promised, in 2008, that it would stop giving money to groups that lobbied against the need to find clean energy sources.
It’s also an embarrassment for those who, in the face of overwhelming scientific evidence, deny the existence of climate change – or admit that it’s happening but say we can’t, or shouldn’t, do anything about it. Of course, they will continue to repeat the same discredited points about “climategate,” and medieval warm periods, and CO2 as plant food, and they’ll continue to take the advice of industry shills like Tom Harris to bombard the media with opinion articles and letters to editors, and to post numerous comments under online articles.
Full Article
Source: The Mark
No comments:
Post a Comment