The Heartland Institute's Quest for "Real Science" on Global Warming
The Heartland Institute, a Chicago-headquartered think tank that has taken on the role of trying to coordinate the disparate global warming skeptics, has organized yet another conference to be held in Washington this week disputing the reality of global warming. "The real science and economics of climate change support the view that global warming is not a crisis and that immediate action to reduce emissions is not necessary," they claim.
But when the Heartland Institute talks about "real science," it is hard to ignore the fact that for years they have defended the policy agenda of the tobacco industry without disclosing that they were funded by Phillip Morris. Indeed, Heartland still claims to defend the rights of smokers, a ploy long used by the tobacco industry to keep themselves out of the spotlight.
Back in March the think tank organized its second international conference for skeptics. At the time I noted that in 2007 the think tank's President, Joseph L. Bast stated that "gifts from all energy companies -- coal, oil, natural gas, and nuclear" accounted for less than five percent of the group's budget. While it may sound like a small amount, it still represented approximately $260,000.
No sooner was the March conference over than Heartland announced that it was organizing another, to be held in Washington on Tuesday June 2. For the March conference, Heartland insisted that "no corporate sponsorships or dollars earmarked for the event were solicited or accepted." Interestingly, there is no equivalent statement on the web page for the latest conference.The real impetus for calling the latest conference at such short notice is the Waxman-Markey Climate Bill, which is wending its way through Congress.
The speakers at the latest conference, which includes veteran skeptics such as Richard Lindzen and Patrick Michaels, are not likely to say much that they haven't said before. In a recent interview, leading climate scientist Stephen H. Schneider commented that the skeptics "have very few mainstream climate scientists who publish original research in climate refereed journals with them -- a petroleum geologist's opinion on climate science is a as good as a climate scientist's opinion on oil reserves. So petitions sent to hundreds of thousands of earth scientists are frauds. If these guys think they are 'winning,' why don't they try to take on face to face real climatologists at real meetings -- not fake ideology shows like Heartland Institute -- but with those with real knowledge -- because they'd be slaughtered in public debate by Trenberth, Santer, Hansen, Oppenheimer, Allen, Mitchell, even little ol' me. It’s easy to blog, easy to write op-eds in the Wall Street Journal."
But the purpose of the Heartland Institute's conference is not about "real science," as most people understand it. Instead, its conference is more about maintaining the rage of the hard-core skeptics and their supporters in the hope that any legislation that emerges from Congress will be so compromised that it will make little if any difference in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
What the coal and oil lobby know is that the nature of what is agreed to by the Congress will play a major role in determining what the Obama administration will agree to in negotiations over the successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol to be discussed at the COP15 meeting in Copenhagen in December. As Todd Stern, the U.S. special envoy on climate change, stated at the conclusion of a recent meeting of the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, "an issue for us is always [reaching] an agreement... that can produce consensus internationally and it can also be approved back at home."
It would be easy to dismiss the Heartland Institute's conference as just another fringe event. However, with the Democrats having only a narrow majority in the Senate, a couple of votes would be enough to water down the Waxman-Markey Climate Bill even further. Added to that is the fact that for a treaty to be ratified, two-thirds of Senate members must support it.
Comments
No, you're missing the point.
Here's what he said:
I'm saying it's scary that this person can make the absurd statement that climate scientists are making the "common element carbon" the bad guy, when they're really talking about a compound of carbon, namely CO2, which is quite scarce in the atmosphere, except that humans have started pumping it out in ever more climatologically significant amounts in recent decades.
And once again, just because climate scientists are most concerned with the overarching challenge of global warming, that doesn't mean they arent concerned about other environmental issues. For example, in case you missed it, James Hanson got arrested while protesting mountaintop-removal coal mining recently.
On the other hand, if we don't deal with global warming effectively, and soon, there just might not be enough of us left to produce much more of that other bad stuff:
http://tinyurl.com/m5662o
Once again, you display your
Once again, you display your fine skills in twisting remarks around and interpreting them in a way which deliberately obscures the point that was originally being made, albeit in a brief, limited way because most of us have work to do and can't afford to sit around commenting all day. This comment relates to the public relations campaign which has insinuated itself into the media, the schools, environmental action and political action groups, etc., which has commonly promoted the use of the terms "carbon", and "carbon footprint" as catch-words. But even if you want to talk about carbon dioxide, I think that in reality we have many more ominous problems we need to face. This issue, like the whole Democrat/Republican or left/right split, is another way in which we are being misled, confused, divided, and sidetracked.
Carbon dioxide
I am almost out of patience with the world-reformers and their "global warming" theory, which I consider deliberate hoax. I have noticed that these same folks are now calling it "climate change" to defend their collectivist position that it is all the fault of people, who need to be regulated. How distressing to find that the earth has been cooling for about the last ten years!
Carbon dioxide is a bio-friendly gas, unlike sulfur dioxide. In horticulture and agriculture it is added to the atmosphere in greenhouses because it increases crop yields. Earth's atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have varied over time for as far back as scientists can extrapolate. Increases in carbon dioxide levels have always been associated with good things, like more plant growth – and has never been shown to have a bad effect on anything.
The human respiratory center in the floor of the fourth ventricle is stimulated by carbon dioxide dissolved in the blood. If these "humanitarian" planners ever succeed in reducing carbon dioxide atmospheric levels to zero, some of us would probably forget to breathe.
Now you can stop feeling guilty about breathing.
You can trust me on that. I am a retired physician and biomedical researcher.
If these "humanitarian"
You should be careful making jokes like that; climate-change deniers less well informed than you might easily take it seriously and make fools of themselves parroting the claim that "humanitarian planners want to reduce CO2 levels to zero." After all, a retired physician and biomedical researcher said it -- trust him!
So, for the record: the best outcome anyone ever hoped for has never been any reduction of CO2 in our atmosphere, merely limiting its increase to amounts that will produce less than disastrous results for the world's population as global temperatures rise.
And it is happening. Your fear of "collectivism" seems to have focused you too narrowly on individual ventricles.
Daryl Hannah got arrested
Daryl Hannah got arrested too along with many others. I am glad to see so many take a stand against such horrible destruction.
The Irony I am seeing is that coal seems to be getting a new lease on life because of clean coal technology. Politicians and coal barons claim it can be burned cleaner, and, therefore reduce its impact on global warming. They give us more environmental destruction and get away with it because they can use the global warming argument and give the illusion that they are doing their part to reduce harmful emissions.
Is Heartland a 'think tank' or a 'PR tank'
Bob: Your coverage of this event encouraged me to look into it as well. In my own reporting for Mother Nature Network, I discovered a fascinating study by three sociologists that puts meat on the argument that these anti-environmental "think" tanks aren't research organizations at all. http://cultofgreen.com/2009/06/05/media-mayhem-a-plague-of-think-tanks/ Thanks for following this!
Thanks Bob!
Thanks Bob for such an insightful bash on those nasty "deniers". With $6B and growing in federal outlays to climate alarmist groups, a donation of $260K from fossil fuel industries seems minute.
This debate isn't about climate, is it Bob? C'mon! Come clean! With so much potential treasure whether via legislative means or an endangerment finding, who could resist? Never under-estimate the opportunity in alarmism. We could debate the "science" forever. The only certain outcome in a Waxman-Markey strategy is an impoverished nation. Cooler weather than would be otherwise? No one can predict the weather next Sunday...try 2100. Sounds kinda' iffy. Study up on your Mandarin or Portugese Bob! One day they may have openings for a lefty op-ed guy like you! Not soon however, they're too busy making money.
Who's too busy making money?
Only if you ignore the fact that this "donation" is merely a tiny fraction of what the fossil fuel industries have spent over years and decades to reassure the public that everything is just fine. It bears the same relation to the industry's total propaganda effort as a single thermometer reading bears to decades of global climate tracking.
Never underestimate the opportunity in reassurance!
Good to know but....
Your organization's mission statement says:
CMD's mission is to promote transparency and an informed debate by exposing corporate spin and government propaganda and by engaging the public in collaborative, fair and accurate reporting.
As you seem committed to fair reporting, I was just wondering if there is a similar article regarding the IPCC on this site, analysing the political and financial forces involved.
Read the information for yourself
Scientists from places like MIT, Harvard, UVa, Penn, Rochester, Pasteur Institute have posted their presentations with their data indicating the AGW scare is vastly over-rated, and the proposed solutions to a non-problem are more damaging than the worse-case effects of AGW itself. Just go to http://www.heartland.org/events/NewYork08/newyork2008-ppt.html and see for yourself- if you're not afraid of the data.
Meanwhile, the U. of Albany is confronting fraud allegations against one of their professors who provided data to one of the cornerstone papers of AGW oft-cited by Real Climate and similar AGW pseudo-science/panic sites.
This is not solely a political debate- fraud and non-verifiable data will eventually be outed, no matter the amount of funding from whatever sources. And we will know more clearly (as anyone looking at their thermometer lately could tell you) that AGW is a scam...