WASHINGTON, Jan 3 (IPS) - Like the tobacco
industry that for decades denied a link between smoking and lung
cancer, ExxonMobil has waged a "sophisticated and successful
disinformation campaign" to mislead the public about global warming,
according to a major new report by the U.S.-based Union of Concerned
Scientists (UCS).
The report, which echoes similar charges made by Britain's
Royal Society in September, found that the world's largest publicly
traded corporation contributed nearly 16 million dollars between 1998
and 2005 to a network of 43 advocacy groups that questioned the
increasingly solid consensus that greenhouse gas emissions contribute
to global warming.
Among the most prominent recipients were the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), to which Exxon-Mobil has contributed more
than 1.6 million dollars; the George C. Marshall Institute (630,000
dollars); and the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), which has
received more than two million dollars, more than any other
beneficiary.
With often overlapping directors, advisors, and staff, the 43
groups, according to the report, have acted as an "echo chambre" that,
with the help of right-wing media, such as the Wall Street Journal, and
columnists, deliberately spread disinformation about climate change.
The 63-page report, "Smoke, Mirrors & Hot Air", called on
the new Democrat-led Congress to hold hearings on the company's alleged
disinformation campaign, just as its predecessors exposed the tobacco
industry's storied efforts to block government regulation of its
products.
"ExxonMobil has manufactured uncertainty about the human
causes of global warming just as tobacco companies denied their product
caused lung cancer," said Alden Meyer, UCS's director of strategy and
policy.
"A modest but effective investment has allowed the oil giant
to fuel doubt about global warming to delay government action just as
Big Tobacco did for over 40 years," he added.
Indeed, according to the report, even some of same individuals
involved in the tobacco industry's efforts contributed to ExxonMobil's
campaign.
Steven Milloy, for example, whose Advancement of Sound Science
Coalition (ASSC) was created by tobacco giant Philip Morris in 1993 to
raise questions about the link between second-hand smoke and cancer,
has served as a member of the Global Climate Science Team (GCST), which
ExxonMobil helped create in 1998, and run the Free Enterprise Action
Institute to which the company has contributed 130,000 dollars -- or
almost two-thirds of the group's total expenses.
The new report comes amid indications that both the U.S.
public and the mainstream media have become increasingly concerned
about global warming and that the Democratic sweep in November's
mid-term elections has shifted the balance of power in the new Congress
in favour of those lawmakers who support legislation to limit or reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
As the world's largest energy company, ExxonMobil has long
been a target of environmental activists, particularly since 1998 when,
in the wake of the ratification by most of the world's industrial
nations of the Kyoto Protocol to reduce greenhouse emissions, its major
rivals, notably Shell and BP, began dropping out of the Global Climate
Coalition (GCC), an industry group that campaigned against the treaty.
Unlike his counterparts in the other oil giants, the company's
CEO until last year, Lee Raymond, was openly disdainful of the theory
that the combustion of fossil fuels was a major contributor to global
warming and rejected shareholder pressure to invest more in alternative
fuels.
That same year, Exxon participated in a meeting at the
American Petroleum Institute that, according to a subsequently leaked
memo of the proceedings, called for companies to provide "logistical
and moral support" to dissenters from the growing scientific consensus
regarding the human causes of global warming, "thereby raising
questions about and undercutting the 'prevailing scientific wisdom'."
As the new study details, that is precisely what ExxonMobil
did over the subsequent seven years through its sponsorship of the 43
groups which not only have overlapping boards and advisers, but that
also quote from each other's work in order to achieve an "echo chambre"
effect.
One example cited by the report is that of Sallie Baliunas, an
astrophysicist based primarily at Stanford University's Hoover
Institution, which has itself received nearly 300,000 dollars from
ExxonMobil since 1998. A specialist on sunspots who also is affiliated
with at least eight other ExxonMobil-funded groups, she is best known
for co-authoring a 2003 paper alleging that temperatures have not
changed significantly over the past millennia.
That article, according to report author Seth Shulman, "was
rebutted by no fewer than 13 of the scientists whose research she
reviewed. They all claimed that she had misrepresented their work,"
according to Shulman, who noted that the paper's findings still show up
regularly in the materials published by other ExxonMobil beneficiaries.
"These groups promote spokespeople who misrepresent
peer-reviewed scientific findings or cherry-pick facts in an attempt to
mislead the media and public into thinking there is vigorous debate in
the mainstream scientific community about global warming, when in fact
there is none." added Meyer.
Like Mulloy's Free Enterprise institute, some of the groups,
such as the Hearland Institute, the Annapolis Centre for Science-Based
Public Policy, and the Centre for the Defence of Free Enterprise, are
small organisations for which ExxonMobil provides a substantial -- from
20 percent to 60 percent -- proportion of their total budget.
In a letter to the company in September, the Royal Society,
Britain's most prestigious scientific group, called on ExxonMobil both
to stop financing such groups and disseminating its own "inaccurate and
misleading" materials about climate change. A Society spokesman claimed
that the company had pledged to stop financing the groups at a meeting
in July.
Nor are UCS and the Royal Society, as well as environmental
groups, alone in calling for the company to end its financial support.
In an October letter that explicitly compared ExxonMobil's
tactics to those of the tobacco industry, Democratic Sen. Jay
Rockefeller and Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe urged the company's new
CEO, Rex Tillerson, to "end its dangerous support of the [global
warming] deniers" and "repudiate its climate change denial campaign and
make public its funding history."
The letter was strongly denounced on the editorial pages of
the Wall Street Journal, which is closely allied to AEI, as an effort
to stifle scientific debate.
In a statement issued Wednesday, company spokesman David
Gardner charged that UCS report was "yet another attempt to smear our
name and... to connect unrelated facts, draw inaccurate conclusions and
mislead the audience with a fiction about ExxonMobil's true position."
"What is clear today is that greenhouse gas emissions are one
of the factors that contribute to climate change, and that the use of
fossil fuels is a major source of these emissions," he said in a
lengthy statement that also stressed that most of the organisations
funded by ExxonMobil "are independent of their corporate sponsors" and
that "our financial support does not connote any substantive control
over or responsibility for the policy recommendations or analyses they
produce."
At the same time, CEI, the company's main beneficiary for
climate-related issues, denounced the report as "mostly rubbish" and
accused the UCS, as well as other environmental groups, of "trying to
silence anyone who disagrees with them."
ExxonMobil Accused of Disinformation on Warming
from "change", a myspace friend
I found
the recent flap about What Bush said in a recent speech on his trip to
Israel pretty funny. Apparently the Democrats are a bit bent about
Bush's remarks about them appeasing the "terrorists" much like certain
politicians attempted appeasement of Hitler in WW2.
But the part I found funny is that while feigning their outrage about
Bush's ridiculous comments, not one of them has had the balls to
mention Bush's grandfather Prescott who was guilty of Nazi
collaboration and funding Hitlers war machine. Talk about Appeasement?!
Lol Grandpappy Bush funnels millions to Hitler and he's just a
businessman, but talk of diplomatic avenues of solution and your an
appeasing terror collaborator. Go figure.
Stop The Insanity and Wake Up to The New World Order



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