This is a guest post byย Davidย Suzuki.
A little over a year ago, I wrote about a Heartland Institute conference in Las Vegas where climate change deniers engaged in a failed attempt to poke holes in the massive body of scientific evidence for human-caused climate change. I quoted Bloomberg News: โHeartland’s strategy seemed to be to throw many theories at the wall and see whatย stuck.โ
A recent study came to a similar conclusion about contrarian โscientificโ efforts to do the same. โLearning from mistakes in climate research,โ published in Theoretical and Applied Climatology, examined some of the tiny percentage of scientific papers that reject anthropogenic climate change, attempting to replicate theirย results.
In a Guardian article, co-author Dana Nuccitelli said their study found โno cohesive, consistent alternative theory to human-caused global warming.โ Instead, โSome blame global warming on the sun, others on orbital cycles of other planets, others on ocean cycles, and soย on.โ
Nuccitelli and fellow researchers Rasmus Benestad, Stephan Lewandowsky, Katharine Hayhoe, Hans Olav Hygen, Rob van Dorland and John Cook note that about 97 per cent of experts worldwide agree on a cohesive, science-based theory of global warming, but those who donโt โare all over the map,ย even contradicting each other. The one thing they seem to have in common is methodological flaws like cherry picking, curve fitting, ignoring inconvenient data, and disregarding knownย physics.โ
Itโs astounding and tragic that, with all the evidence โ from volumes of scientific research to the very real effects we are experiencing everywhere โ some people stubbornly refuse to believe thereโs a problem worth addressing. Sadder still: many of them are politicalย leaders.
Part of the problem is that fossil fuel interests spend enormous amounts of money to sow doubt and confusion, often by funding or setting up organizations like the Heartland Institute in the U.S., the Global Warmingย Policy Foundation in the U.K., Ethical Oil and Friends of Science in Canada and the International Climate Science Coalition, based in this country but affiliated with similar organizations in Australia and New Zealand and with close ties to Heartland. A number of industry-funded websites also promote fossil fuels at the expense of human life, including Climate Depot and Watts Up Withย That?
These secretive organizations rarely reveal funding sources, prey on the uninformed and ignorant, and blanket the media with opinion articles, letters to editors and comments, often referring to misleading charts and graphs and bogus โstudiesโ from organizations with names that imply theyโre scientific when theyโre anything but. Theyโre assisted by a compliant news media and politicians who also receive fossil fuel industry funding. Itโs likely the people behind these organizations know theyโre lying but care more about making money and preserving the lopsided benefits of a polluting sunset industry than finding ways to contribute to human health, well-being andย survival.
Those who argue that seven billion people pumping massive amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere arenโt having a serious negative impact are out toย lunch.
Fortunately, most thinking people donโt buy the lies. People from all sectors and walks of life โ religious, academic, business, political, activist, social justice and citizenry โ are calling for an urgent response to the greatest threat humanity faces. From Pope Francis and the Dalai Lama to Islamic scholars and Hindu, Sikh and Jewish leaders; from Volvo, Ikea and Apple to the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and World Health Organization; from every legitimate scientific academy and institution to enlightened political leaders โ all have warned about the serious nature of global warming and the urgent need to do something aboutย it.
Polls and marches, demonstrations and citizen initiatives show that people want action. Yet, despite this tremendous recognition of the reality of our situation, governments have failed to come up with a legally binding, ambitious and universal climate agreement, thanks in part to efforts by countries like Canada, Japan and Australia to stall or water down agreements at economic summits and UN climateย conferences.
As world leaders prepare for the December UN climate meeting in Paris, Canadians must impress upon all those who hope to govern us after October 19 the importance of making a positive contribution. As voters, we have the power to make a difference in this critical conversation. Letโs exerciseย it.
Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Editor Ianย Hanington.
Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.
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