It was also left to Dr. Allen to point out that some of the
judge's nine assertions of ‘error’ were “just plain wrong".
Unfortunately, as far as we are aware, the BBC headline reports had no
balancing quotes from climate scientists disputing the judge’s claims.
(Note: Judge Burton‘s judgement actually has the word “error” in quote
marks, recognising that there might indeed be scientific justification
for these arguments — a subtle but vital point missed by the media)
Later, in an online piece, Roger Harrabin did take a somewhat more
sceptical view of the judge’s findings. On Arctic melting, which is
proceeding faster than the most recent IPCC report had expected,
Harrabin noted, “the judge is on slightly more contentious ground”. (
Harrabin, BBC news online, ‘The heat and light in global warming,’ October 11, 2007)
Of Dimmock, the lorry driver who brought the case to court,
Harrabin noted in a single tantalising, but ultimately mysterious,
sentence:
“Mr Dimmock is a member of the ‘New Party’, apparently
funded by a businessman with a strong dislike of environmentalists and
drink-drive laws.”
Fascinating, but what did this signify? The
reader was left dangling at the end of this one sentence, to wait in
vain for further clarification.
Hidden Links — “A Red Herring”?
There
was worse to come from the BBC. The day after the High Court decision,
the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded jointly to the UN’s Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change and Al Gore. Suddenly to be seen making
multiple appearances in BBC studios was Martin Livermore, director of a
group called the Scientific Alliance.
Livermore was interviewed
on BBC R4’s ‘The World At One’ by presenter Shaun Ley, who asserted
that the Scientific Alliance “campaigns to improve the quality of
debate about science”. (The World At One, BBC R4, Friday, October 12,
2007). Livermore proceeded to lampoon efforts to combat climate change
as a “fashionable cause”, and expressed “concern” that the Nobel award
“will tend to close down the debate even further”. He added:
“There
is a view from a lot of people that this is such a serious issue that
even though things are uncertain we shouldn't allow a debate, we should
push ahead with trying to do something about it, and that any person
who questions the perceived wisdom should actually be censored,
effectively. So I think this will push us further down that path, which
is not healthy.”
Contrary to the BBC’s naive description, the Scientific Alliance was
founded with the financial backing of wealthy businessman Robert
Durward, who owns Cloburn Quarry in Lanarkshire and is director of the
British Aggregates Association which defends the interests of the
quarrying industry. The Scientific Alliance also has deep links to a
network that has long been pursuing a “sceptical” agenda on
environmental issues. Livermore, for example, was the “scientific
consultant” behind Martin Durkin’s deeply flawed and much criticised
Channel 4 ‘documentary’, ‘The Great Global Warming Swindle’. (
George Marshall, 'The Great Channel 4 Swindle,' March 9, 2007)
Durward is also a financial backer and member of the National
Policy Committee of the New Party, a group so right-wing that Scottish
Tories described them as “fascist”. On its website, the New Party
states:
“The National Policy Committee (NPC) consists of
ordinary people from all walks of life and is in overall charge of the
creation and development of our policies.”
Committee members
include Alex Black, “a self employed Road Transport Contractor”; Mike
Clarke, “for most of his career he applied his knowledge of chemistry
in oilfield systems, working, training and advising on corrosion
management and chemical treatments in the North Sea and many overseas
count [sic]”; Robert Durward, “involved in the agricultural, haulage,
plant and minerals industries“, and so on. Just “ordinary people from
all walks of life”,
in other words.
Both the New Party and Scientific Alliance work closely with the PR
company Foresight Communications founded by Mark Adams OBE, who was a
private secretary for parliamentary affairs at No. 10 for nearly four
years. He also worked as private secretary to Tony Blair for six months
after the 1997 election. Adams set up the Scientific Alliance with
Durward in 2001.
The jigsaw pieces fall into place when we
recall that Stuart Dimmock, who brought the High Court Case, is also a
member of the New Party. Rather than being a solitary ‘David’ fighting
the government ‘Goliath’, it appears Dimmock fought the case with
considerable business backing.
When challenged by Media Lens on
his radio programme’s failure to explore these connections, Marc
Settle, the editor of BBC R4’s ‘The World At One’, responded:
“I
agree that the programme could have been clearer about the connection
between the New Party and the Scientific Alliance, and in future I will
ensure that editions I am involved with will make the relationship
clear.” (Settle, Email, October 14, 2007)
Andy Rowell, author of
‘Green Backlash’ and co-editor of SpinWatch.org, put the BBC to shame
by publishing a powerful blog exposing these links the day after the
court decision. (‘
Revealed: The hidden agenda behind Gore film attack,’
October 11, 2007)
We
communicated some of Rowell’s findings to the BBC’s Roger Harrabin.
This was vital material, was it not? No, Harrabin replied, the network
of links was “a red herring”. After Rowell discussed the issues with
him in a telephone conversation, Harrabin told us he was pursuing the
links and that we should “watch this space” with regard to that day’s
Ten O’Clock News (Friday, October 12, 2007).
We watched that
“space” — a climate-related item by Harrabin which appeared on the
“Ten” about Gore sharing the Nobel Prize with the IPCC. Harrabin even
had an interview with the near-ubiquitous Martin Livermore of the
Scientific Alliance. But of the links between that group, the New
Party, Martin Durkin, and wealthy businessman Robert Durward, there was
not a word.
A number of newspapers have since reported that
financial support for Dimmock’s case was provided by Lord Monckton, who
wrote the New Party‘s manifesto. Last year, Monckton argued that the
IPCC had grossly exaggerated the danger of climate change in articles
published by the Sunday Telegraph. Monckton wrote:
“This week,
I'll show how the UN undervalued the sun's effects on historical and
contemporary climate, slashed the natural greenhouse effect, overstated
the past century's temperature increase, repealed a fundamental law of
physics and tripled the man-made greenhouse effect.” (Christopher
Monckton, ‘Don’t believe it!’ Sunday Telegraph, November 5, 2006)
The
articles — decidedly Durkin-esque in theme and content — were
subsequently demolished by climate scientists. Environmental campaigner
George Monbiot commented wryly of Monckton:
“He is trying to
take on the global scientific establishment on the strength of a
classics degree from Cambridge.” (Jonathan Leake, ‘Please, sir — Gore’s
got warming wrong,’ The Times, October 14, 2007)
Monckton is now
behind moves to have copies of Durkin’s documentary, ‘The Great Global
Warming Swindle’, sent to 3,400 UK secondary schools “to counter Gore’s
flagrant propaganda”. It is hoped that the package will feature a new
film called ‘Apocalypse No!’, a slideshow of Lord Monckton challenging
Gore’s arguments.
The irony of this initiative is clear when
we consider that Monckton backed Dimmock’s court case and that, as
noted above, Dimmock insists: “In my mind it’s wrong that we push
politics into the classroom.”
The website promoting Dimmock’s campaign declares its aims:
“
1. To research and monitor examples of partisan political content being introduced into schools.
2. To support those campaigning to keep education free from political bias.
3. To promote fair and honest teaching.”
And it turns out, in a further twist, that Monckton’s schools
initiative is being funded by a right-wing American think-tank, the
innocently named Science and Public Policy Institute (SPPI). (Michael
McCarthy, ‘Climate deniers to send film to British schools,’ The
Independent, October 15, 2007)
Rather like the Scientific Alliance, the good folk at SPPI “
support the advancement of sensible public policies for energy and the environment rooted in rational science and economics”.
As anyone who has studied the corporate green backlash will know,
“sensible public policies” are actually policies that recklessly
subordinate people and planet to short-term profit for the people
promoting them (See Andy Rowell, Green Backlash, Routledge, 1996).
One entry title on the SPPI website reads: ‘
Greenhouse Warming? What Greenhouse Warming?’ (August 22, 2007)
The author? “
Christopher Monckton, 3rd Viscount Monkton of Brenchley”, listed as Chief Policy Adviser at SPPI.
In one of his Telegraph articles, Monckton wrote:
“The Royal
Society says there's a worldwide scientific consensus. It brands
Apocalypse-deniers as paid lackeys of coal and oil corporations. I
declare my interest: I once took the taxpayer's shilling and advised
Margaret Thatcher, FRS, on scientific scams and scares. Alas, not a red
cent from Exxon.” (Monckton, op.cit.)
The same, alas, cannot
be said of Craig Idso, the Science Adviser and Chairman of the Board at
SPPI where Monckton is Chief Policy Advisor. Idso is listed on
Greenpeace’s Exxonsecrets.org webpage documenting “
Exxon-Mobil's funding of climate change sceptics.”
We are deceived if we imagine climate scepticism is the product of
a few wealthy eccentrics with too much time and money on their hands.
Phil Lesley, author of a handbook on public relations and
communications, clarifies the bottom line goal for industry:
“People
generally do not favour action on a non-alarming situation when
arguments seem to be balanced on both sides and there is a clear doubt.
The weight of impressions on the public must be balanced so people will
have doubts and lack motivation to take action. Accordingly, means are
needed to get balancing information into the stream from sources that
the public will find credible. There is no need for a clear-cut
‘victory’... Nurturing public doubts by demonstrating that this is not
a clear-cut situation in support of the opponents usually is all that
is necessary.” (Lesly, 'Coping with Opposition Groups,' Public
Relations Review 18, 1992, p.331)
With the world teetering on
the brink of an environmental abyss — and, perhaps, already sinking
into that abyss — industry’s hall of crazy mirrors with their
“balancing information” is bigger and more active than ever. It might
seem insane, but the infinite, insatiable nature of the corporate
profit drive has always been just that.
This is the price we pay when society is dominated by unrestrained greed, and by the blindness that greed brings.
USEFUL RESOURCES
For further details of the Scientific Alliance, go
here.
Also see Andy Rowell, ‘
The Alliance of Science’, Guardian, March 26, 2003.
Professor John Shepherd of the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, has written a critique of
Judge Barton’s remarks.
See:
'Surviving Climate Change: The Struggle to Avert Global Catastrophe',
edited by David Cromwell and Mark Levene, which has just been published
by Pluto Books (London, 2007).
For further analysis and resources, please
go here.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The
goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
for others. If you decide to write to journalists, we strongly urge you
to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Roger Harrabin, BBC environment correspondent
Email: robert.plummer@bbc.co.uk
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Email: steve.herrmann@bbc.co.uk
Write to Marc Settle, editor of BBC R4’s ‘The World At One’
Email: marc.settle@bbc.co.uk
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Email: robin.lustig@bbc.co.uk
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Media' by David Edwards and David Cromwell (Pluto Books, London) was
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about journalism I can remember."