The climate deniers are at it again.
In late December, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, released what it’s calling a “Climate Fact Check” report. The report, which was covered breathlessly by Fox News, purports to expose claims made by “climate alarmists and their media allies” in 2022 that “clashed with reality and science.” (Spoiler alert: all the “claims” covered are, in fact, in line with the scientific consensus. Go figure.)
CEI has a long history of perpetuating climate denial—its Director of Global Warming and International Environmental Policy, Myron Ebell, is one of the most high-profile deniers in the U.S.—and this report is no exception. The report contains a lot of tried-and-true climate denier tactics to try to discredit coverage of climate-related disasters in 2022 from outlets like the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the BBC. Many of the rhetorical techniques are such old hat that there are entire academic papers and books written them. I won’t break down every false claim, scientific misdirect, and pointless non-sequitur in the report, but here are a few highlights:
What’s important about this paper is not the unabashed climate denial, which is old news, but rather how it could serve as a sign of how climate denialists may try to evolve past these tired tactics. In the first page of the report, CEI singles out $8 million of funding that the Associated Press got last year from organizations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the Walton Family Foundation, the private family foundation of the founders of Wal-Mart, to set up more than two dozen climate reporting positions across the world. In an interview with Fox News, Steve Milloy, a longtime denier and Fox News commentator, went so far as to call the AP a “propaganda outfit.”
“It’s hard to claim it’s news when you’re being paid to report only one side of the climate discourse,” Milloy said. (This is a particularly rich statement coming from Milloy, who, in addition to holding a position at CEI, has a long history of getting paid to shill anti-science bullshit for both tobacco and oil companies.)
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The past several years have seen an explosion in reporting on the well-funded sources of climate denial, which became all the more relevant after Donald Trump got elected and began putting some of these dark money-funded deniers in actual positions of power (Myron Ebell was Trump’s transition head for the EPA). CEI lists the Heartland Institute, the Energy & Environment Legal Institute, Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, and the International Climate Science Coalition as co-presenters of the report; all of these groups have long resumes of perpetuating climate denial. These organizations have also repeatedly been called out for their connections to oil and gas companies and other forms of dark money—multiple times by the very media they are now trying to accuse of bias thanks to funding.
Philanthropic funding of news outlets, to be clear, usually comes with some form of stringent editorial firewall between the editorial staff and the funding source. The AP has taken philanthropic money since the early 2010s to fund various staff positions reporting on topics ranging from religion to water issues.
When we asked the AP for comment on the CEI report, a spokesperson wrote in an email that the AP’s reporting referenced by CEI is “factual and based in science” and that the outlet stands by it. “The Associated Press works with a variety of organizations, including nonprofits and foundations, in support of its independent journalism,” the spokesperson wrote. “In all cases, AP is transparent about the source of any outside funding received and retains complete editorial control of all content.”
This report is clearly in search of a “gotcha” moment. But there’s a big difference between a nonpartisan news organization taking money to report on climate from the Walton family—which, arguably, would have more of an incentive to suppress journalism about how consumerism impacts climate change—versus taking money directly from unknown benefactors and oil companies.
In the end, this report and many other denier claims operate under the flawed assumption that there’s somehow an advantage to be gained in perpetuating the correct science—that the huge majority of scientists who agree on decades of research and studies are really just looking to line their own pockets. But there’s a big difference between one of the most respected news outlets in the world getting a grant to report on a scientific consensus and perpetuating tired old rhetorical chestnuts that sprung full-formed from organizations fed by dark money and oil and gas interests. Someone might want to tell Fox News.
Source: Gizmodo