There
Is Climate Change Censorship - And It’s The Deniers Who Dish It
Out
By George Monbiot
12 April, 2007
Monbiot.com
The drafting of reports by the
world’s pre-eminent group of climate scientists is an odd process.
For months scientists contributing to the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change tussle over the evidence. Nothing gets published unless
it achieves consensus. This means that the panel’s reports are
conservative - even timid. It also means that they are as trustworthy
as a scientific document can be.
Then, when all is settled
among the scientists, the politicians sweep in and seek to excise from
the summaries anything that threatens their interests.
The scientists fight back,
but they always have to make concessions. The report released on Friday,
for example, was shorn of the warning that “North America is expected
to experience locally severe economic damage, plus substantial ecosystem,
social and cultural disruption from climate change related events”.
This is the opposite of the
story endlessly repeated in the rightwing press: that the IPCC, in collusion
with governments, is conspiring to exaggerate the science. No one explains
why governments should seek to amplify their own failures. In the wacky
world of the climate conspiracists no explanations are required. The
world’s most conservative scientific body has somehow been transformed
into a conspiracy of screaming demagogues.
This is just one aspect of
a story that is endlessly told the wrong way round. In the Sunday Telegraph
and the Daily Mail, in columns by Dominic Lawson, Tom Utley and Janet
Daley, the allegation is repeated that climate scientists and environmentalists
are trying to “shut down debate”. Those who say that man-made
global warming is not taking place, they claim, are being censored.
Something is missing from
their accusations: a single valid example. The closest any of them have
been able to get is two letters sent - by the Royal Society and by the
US senators Jay Rockefeller and Olympia Snowe - to that delicate flower
ExxonMobil, asking that it cease funding lobbyists who deliberately
distort climate science. These correspondents had no power to enforce
their wishes. They were merely urging Exxon to change its practices.
If everyone who urges is a censor, then the comment pages of the newspapers
must be closed in the name of free speech.
In a recent interview, Martin
Durkin, who made Channel 4’s film The Great Global Warming Swindle,
claimed he was subject to “invisible censorship”. He seems
to have forgotten that he had 90 minutes of prime-time television to
expound his theory that climate change is a green conspiracy. What did
this censorship amount to? Complaints about one of his programmes had
been upheld by the Independent Television Commission. It found that
“the views of the four complainants, as made clear to the interviewer,
had been distorted by selective editing” and that they had been
“misled as to the content and purpose of the programmes when they
agreed to take part”. This, apparently, makes him a martyr.
If you want to know what
real censorship looks like, let me show you what has been happening
on the other side of the fence. Scientists whose research demonstrates
that climate change is taking place have been repeatedly threatened
and silenced and their findings edited or suppressed.
The Union of Concerned Scientists
found that 58% of the 279 climate scientists working at federal agencies
in the US who responded to its survey reported that they had experienced
one of the following constraints: 1. Pressure to eliminate the words
“climate change”, “global warming”, or other
similar terms from their communications; 2. Editing of scientific reports
by their superiors that “changed the meaning of scientific findings”;
3. Statements by officials at their agencies that misrepresented their
findings; 4. The disappearance or unusual delay of websites, reports,
or other science-based materials relating to climate; 5. New or unusual
administrative requirements that impair climate-related work; 6. Situations
in which scientists have actively objected to, resigned from, or removed
themselves from a project because of pressure to change scientific findings.
They reported 435 incidents of political interference over the past
five years.
In 2003, the White House
gutted the climate-change section of a report by the Environmental Protection
Agency. It deleted references to studies showing that global warming
is caused by manmade emissions. It added a reference to a study, partly
funded by the American Petroleum Institute, that suggested that temperatures
are not rising. Eventually the agency decided to drop the section altogether.
After Thomas Knutson at the
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) published
a paper in 2004 linking rising emissions with more intense tropical
cyclones, he was blocked by his superiors from speaking to the media.
He agreed to one request to appear on MSNBC, but a public affairs officer
at NOAA rang the station and said that Knutson was “too tired”
to conduct the interview. The official explained to him that the “White
House said no”. All media inquiries were to be routed instead
to a scientist who believed there was no connection between global warming
and hurricanes.
Last year Nasa’s top
climate scientist, James Hansen, reported that his bosses were trying
to censor his lectures, papers and web postings. He was told by Nasa’s
PR officials that there would be “dire consequences” if
he continued to call for rapid reductions in greenhouse gases.
Last month, the Alaskan branch
of the US fish and wildlife service told its scientists that anyone
travelling to the Arctic must understand “the administration’s
position on climate change, polar bears, and sea ice and will not be
speaking on or responding to these issues”.
At hearings in the US Congress
three weeks ago, Philip Cooney, a former White House aide who had previously
worked at the American Petroleum Institute, admitted he had made hundreds
of changes to government reports about climate change on behalf of the
Bush administration. Though not a scientist, he had struck out evidence
that glaciers were retreating and inserted phrases suggesting that there
was serious scientific doubt about global warming.
The guardians of free speech
in Britain aren’t above attempting a little suppression, either.
The Guardian and I have now received several letters from the climate
sceptic Viscount Monckton threatening us with libel proceedings after
I challenged his claims about climate science. On two of these occasions
he has demanded that articles are removed from the internet. Monckton
is the man who wrote to Senators Rockefeller and Snowe, claiming that
their letter to ExxonMobil offends the corporation’s “right
of free speech”.
After Martin Durkin’s
film was broadcast, one of the scientists it featured, Professor Carl
Wunsch, complained that his views on climate change had been misrepresented.
He says he has received a legal letter from Durkin’s production
company, Wag TV, threatening to sue him for defamation unless he agrees
to make a public statement that he was neither misrepresented nor misled.
Would it be terribly impolite
to suggest that when such people complain of censorship, a certain amount
of projection is taking place?
Monbiot.com
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