Paul Driessen
Things are not going well for
Climate Chaos, Inc. The Environmental Protection Agency is implementing its
carbon dioxide regulations, and President Obama wants to make more Alaska oil and
gas prospects off limits. But elsewhere the climate alarm industry is under
siege – and rightfully so.
Shortly after Mr. Obama warned
him of imminent climate doom, Prime Minister Modi announced that India would double coal production,
to bring electricity to 300 million more people. Hydraulic fracturing has
launched a new era of petroleum abundance, making it harder to justify
renewable energy subsidies.
Global warming predictions have
become increasingly amusing, bizarre and disconnected from
real-world climate and weather. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
has confessed that its true goal is transforming the
world’s economy and redistributing its
wealth. More people are realizing that the actual problem is not climate
change, which has been ongoing throughout history; it is costly policies
imposed in the name of preventing change: policies that too often destroy jobs,
perpetuate poverty and kill people.
Those perceptions are
reinforced by recent studies that found climate researchers have systematically
revised actual measured temperatures upward to fit a global warming narrative
for Australia, Paraguay, the Arctic and
elsewhere. Another study, “Why models run hot:
Results from an irreducibly simple climate model,” concluded that, once
discrepancies in IPCC computer models are taken into account, the impact of
CO2-driven manmade global warming over the next century (and beyond) is likely
to be “no more than one-third to one-half of the IPCC’s current projections” –
that is, just 1-2 degrees C (2-4 deg F) by 2100! That’s akin to the Roman and
Medieval Warm Periods and would be beneficial, not harmful.
Written by Christopher
Monckton, Willie Soon, David Legates and William Briggs, the study was
published in the January 2015 Science Bulletin of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences. Incredibly, it has already received over 10,000 views –
thousands more than most scientific papers ever receive.
Instead of critiquing the
paper, climate alarmists attacked its authors. Climate Investigations Center
executive director (and former top Greenpeace official) Kert Davies told the Boston
Globe it “simply cannot be true” that the authors have no conflict of
interest over their study, considering their alleged industry funding sources
and outside consulting fees. Davies singled out Dr. Willie Soon, saying the
Harvard researcher received more than $1 million from companies that support
studies critical of manmade climate change claims. An allied group launched a
petition drive to have Dr. Soon fired.
Davies’ libelous assertions
have no basis in fact. Not one of these four authors received a dime in
grants or other payments for researching and writing their climate models
paper. Every one of them did the work on his own time. The only money
contributed to the Science Bulletin effort went to paying the
“public access” fees, so that people could read their study for free.
I know these men and their
work. Their integrity and devotion to the scientific method are beyond
reproach. They go where their research takes them and refuse to bend their
science or conclusions to secure grants, toe a particular line on global
warming, or fit industry, government or other viewpoints.
Regarding Dr. Soon’s supposed
“track record of accepting energy-industry grants,” the $1 million over a
period of years went to the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, which
took around 40% of the total off the top, for “overhead.” The details are all
open public records. Not a dime went to this paper.
But since Davies raised the
issues of money, conflicts of interest, failures to disclose financing, and how
money supposedly influences science – let us explore those topics from the other
side of the fence.
Climate Crisis, Inc. has a huge
vested interest in climate alarmism – not merely part of $1 million over a
ten-year span, but hundreds of billions of dollars in government,
industry, foundation and other money during the past couple decades. Some of it
is open and transparent, but much is hidden and suspect.
Between 2003 and 2010, the US government alone spent over
$105 billion in
taxpayer funds on climate and renewable energy projects. The European Union and
other entities spent billions more. Most of the money went to modelers,
scientists, other researchers and their agencies and universities; to renewable
energy companies for subsidies and loan guarantees on projects that receive
exemptions from endangered species and human health laws and penalties that
apply to fossil fuel companies; and even to environmental pressure groups that
applaud these actions, demand more and drive public policies.
Billions more went to government regulators, who
coordinate many of these activities and develop regulations that are often
based on secretive, deceptive pre-ordained “science,” sue-and-settle lawsuits
devised by con artist John Beale, and other tactics. Politicians
receive millions in campaign cash and in-kind help from these organizations and
their unions, to keep them in office and the gravy train on track.
The American Lung Association
supports EPA climate policies – but never mentions its $25 million in EPA
grants over the past 15 years. Overall, during this time, the ALA received 591
federal grants totaling $43 million, Big
Green foundations bankrolled it with an additional $76 million, and EPA paid $181 million to 15 of
its Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee members who regularly vote with it.
Far-left donors like the David and Lucille Packard
Foundation (computers), Schmidt Family Foundation (Google), Rockefeller
Brothers Fund (oil), Marisla Foundation (oil) and Wallace Global Fund II
(farming) support Greenpeace and other groups that use climate change to
justify anti-energy, anti-people policies. A gas company CEO and New York mayor
gave Sierra Club $76 million for its anti-coal campaign.
For years, Greenpeace has used
Desmogblog, ExxonSecrets, Polluterwatch and other front-group websites to
attack scientists and others who challenge its tactics and policies. Greenpeace
USA alone had income totaling $32,791,149 in 2012, Ron Arnold and I note in Cracking Big Green.
Other U.S. environmental
pressure groups driving anti-job, anti-people climate policies also had fat-cat
2012 incomes: Environmental Defense Fund ($111,915,138); Natural
Resources Defense Council ($98,701,707); Sierra
Club ($97,757,678); National Audubon Society ($96,206,883); Wilderness Society
($24,862,909); and Al Gore’s Alliance for Climate Protection ($19,150,215). All
told, more than 16,000 American environmental groups
collect total annual revenues of over $13.4 billion (2009 figures). Only
a small part of that comes from membership dues and individual contributions.
As Richard Rahn and Ron Arnold point out,
another major source of their cash is Vladimir Putin’s Russia. A
well-documented new Environmental Policy Alliance report shows
how tens of millions of dollars from Russian interests apparently flowed from
Bermuda-based Wakefield Quinn through environmental bundlers, including the Sea
Change Foundation, into major eco-pressure groups like the Sierra Club, NRDC
and League of Conservation Voters. Former White House counsel John Podesta’s
Center for American Progress also took millions from Sea Change.
It gets even more outrageous.
One of the websites attacking Dr. Soon is funded by George Soros;
it works hard to gag meteorologists who disagree with climate alarmists. And to
top it off, Davies filed a FOIA request against Dr. Soon and six other climate
scientists, demanding that they release all their emails and financial records.
But meanwhile he keeps his Climate Investigations Center funding top secret
(the website is registered to Greenpeace and the Center is known to be a
Rainbow Warriors front group) – and the scientists getting all our taxpayer
money claim their raw data, computer codes and CO2-driven algorithms are
private property, and exempt from FOIA and even U.S. Congress requests.
By all means, let’s have
honesty, integrity, transparency and accountability – in our climate science
and government regulatory processes. Let’s end the conflicts of interest, have
robust debates, and ensure that sound science (rather than government,
foundation or Russian cash) drives our public laws and policies.
And let’s begin where the real
money and power are found.
Paul Driessen is senior policy
analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org),
author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power - Black death, and coauthor of Cracking
Big Green: To save the world from the Save-the-Earth money machine.
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