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Thursday, January 04, 2007

Denialism funded by Exxon
The Union of Concerned Scientists is exposing scientific malfeasance by Exxon in what appears to be a direct rip-off of tobacco company denialism only with global warming instead of cancer. As we discussed in our denialists post, Exxon Mobile has clearly been engaging in hiring false experts and creating false controversy and debate over settled scientific issues related to climate change. Their press release reads like the denialist playbook.

Smoke, Mirrors & Hot Air: How ExxonMobil Uses Big Tobacco's Tactics to "Manufacture Uncertainty" on Climate Change details how the oil company, like the tobacco industry in previous decades, has

* raised doubts about even the most indisputable scientific evidence
* funded an array of front organizations to create the appearance of a broad platform for a tight-knit group of vocal climate change contrarians who misrepresent peer-reviewed scientific findings
* attempted to portray its opposition to action as a positive quest for "sound science" rather than business self-interest
* used its access to the Bush administration to block federal policies and shape government communications on global warming

ExxonMobil-funded organizations consist of an overlapping collection of individuals serving as staff, board members, and scientific advisors that publish and re-publish the works of a small group of climate change contrarians. The George C. Marshall Institute, for instance, which has received $630,000 from ExxonMobil, recently touted a book edited by Patrick Michaels, a long-time climate change contrarian who is affiliated with at least 11 organizations funded by ExxonMobil. Similarly, ExxonMobil funds a number of lesser-known groups such as the Annapolis Center for Science-Based Public Policy and Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow. Both groups promote the work of several climate change contrarians, including Sallie Baliunas, an astrophysicist who is affiliated with at least nine ExxonMobil-funded groups.

Baliunas is best known for a 2003 paper alleging the climate had not changed significantly in the past millennia that was rebutted by 13 scientists who stated she had misrepresented their work in her paper. This renunciation did not stop ExxonMobil-funded groups from continuing to promote the paper. Through methods such as these, ExxonMobil has been able to amplify and prop up work that has been discredited by reputable climate scientists.

"When one looks closely, ExxonMobil's underhanded strategy is as clear and indisputable as the scientific research it's meant to discredit," said Seth Shulman, an investigative journalist who wrote the UCS report. "The paper trail shows that, to serve its corporate interests, ExxonMobil has built a vast echo chamber of seemingly independent groups with the express purpose of spreading disinformation about global warming."

ExxonMobil has used the laudable goal of improving scientific understanding of global warming—under the guise of "sound science"—for the pernicious ends of delaying action to reduce heat-trapping emissions indefinitely. ExxonMobil also exerted unprecedented influence over U.S. policy on global warming, from successfully recommending the appointment of key personnel in the Bush administration to funding climate change deniers in Congress.


Sounds about right. Maybe our new Democratic congress could investigate?

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2 Comments:

minimalist said...

what appears to be a direct rip-off of tobacco company denialism only with global warming instead of cancer.

This comes as absolutely no surprise. It's well-known that prior to his stint denying global warming, Cato Institute gasbag Steven Milloy took money from tobacco companies to deny the effects of secondhand smoke. Actually, according to that Wiki entry (which is full of delicious little denialist nuggets) he's still in their payroll, and RJR apparently has editorial control over his "junkscience.com" website.

Same shills, same tactics, same pseudoscience.

Funnily enough, so many instances of denialism (at least where money is concerned) can be traced back to libertarians. For all their Randian fantasies about being uber-rationalists who stand apart from those silly, partisan mainstream political parties, the reality is that they're either venal and stupid, or gullible and blinded by an idiotic faith in the magical Free Market. It seems like whenever you need an unprincipled, paid shill, or a basement-dwelling useful idiot with no concept of the real world to act as an apologist for the excesses of corporate America, libertarians hover near the top of the list.

2:03 PM, January 04, 2007

 
Rev. Dr. said...

Nice job in tying denialism to libertarianism minimalist. I think they naturally gravitate to such jobs because libertarianism requires a denialist mindset.

You have to deny the obvious benefits of social programs, you have to deny that they have ever benefitted you, you have to deny the benefits of regulatory agencies, you have to deny the hell of the free market before those agencies existed (poisonous food, poisonous drugs, dangerous jobs, no safety net, unsafe banks, no retirement security, and ultimately a great depression). Basically, serious libertarianism goes hand in hand with denialism.

2:50 PM, January 04, 2007

 

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