Veteran Climate Science Denialist Bob Carter Dies of Heart Attack

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Bob Carter hasย died.

To most members of the general public, the name of that Australian geologist and paleontologist will barely register a flicker of neurons in the temporalย lobe.

But to the global community of professional and amateur climate science denialists, misinformers and opponents of climate policy, Carter was an influentialย giant.

He died, aged 74, in hospital in his hometown of Townsville, Queensland, after suffering a heartย attack.

I have written many stories featuring Bob Carter over the last decade or so and none of them have beenย complimentary.

So when I say that I extend my thoughts and sympathies to his wife, Anne, and his family and friends, I doubt many will think that I mean it. But I do. Losing loved ones isnโ€™tย easy.

Others who write and report on climate science denialism might cheer in private. Some have even done it in public.ย 

But Carter had a long and storied career in science and certainly for the first few decades he was, as far as I can tell, widely and rightly respected in his field. He supported many young scholars, particularly in the field of stratigraphy. The Australian Institute of Geoscientists has aย tribute.

But it will be for his rejection of climate science that he will be remembered.ย ย 

Despite a virtually non-existent academic publishing record on climate change, he was held up as an expert by denialist groups around the world and by conservative commentators andย media.

Carter was an advisor to many of the most prominent denialist think tanks around the world.ย  From the Global Warming Policy Foundation in the UK, to the Heartland Institute in the United States, to the Institute of Public Affairs in Australia.ย  At one count, Carter had affiliations with at least ten differentย organisations.

He was a regular face at climate science denial conferences and is described by his legion of fans as cheery andย supportive.

The Heartland Institute also has a tribute.ย  Many notable activists in the climate science denial movement have also paid tribute โ€” Fred Singer, Marc Morano, James Delingpole, Mark Steyn and Lord Christopher Monckton.

Carter didnโ€™t exist in the shadows where his views were confined to fringe blog sites.ย  Carterโ€™s views were given regular and prominent sunlight in mainstreamย media.ย 

One of his most vocal supporters was News Corp. Australia climate science mangler-in-chief Andrew Bolt, who unfailingly promoted Carter on his blog and had him as a guest on his Channel Ten television talk show The Boltย Report.

The mysteriously popular radio host Alan Jones would regularly turn to Carter for an โ€œexpertโ€ view on climate change. Even the ABC gave him space. The BBC interviewed him too, to the disgust ofย some.

So hereโ€™s the bit the denialists wonโ€™tย like.

Now, it is generally expected that after a person dies, you only stick to writing about the good stuff. ย Others argue that failing to point out criticisms ignores those indirectly impacted and could help myths to embedย themselves.

Take, for example, the way Fairfax and The Australian have broken the news of Carterโ€™s death to itsย readers.

Both stories state as a matter of fact that Carter was fired from his unpaid adjunct professor role at James Cook University because of his views on climateย change.

This ignores how the university itself said at the time that Carter was let go because he wasnโ€™t doing enough to fulfill the requirements of an adjunct.ย The university said: โ€œDr Carter has not been sacked, or black-balled and the university has not caved in. The simple truth is his term as an adjunct expired at the beginning of thisย year.โ€

The Fairfax story also states that Carter was โ€œremovedโ€ as JCUโ€™s โ€œhead of earth sciences in 2013โ€ when in fact, Carter retired in 2002 and ceased to be the โ€œhead of Earth Sciencesโ€ inย 1998.

But the convenient narrative for the climate science denialist community was that this was another example of the liberal establishment persecuting views they didnโ€™t agree with.ย They were indignant and many refused to entertain the less enticing idea that Carter just wasnโ€™t justifying the title of adjunct with enough relevantย work.

Scienceย bastion?

Bob Carter liked to hold himself up as a bastion of the scientific method โ€” as one of the few โ€œscientistsโ€ in possession of the โ€œtruthโ€ about climate change.ย His supporters, such asย Mark Steynย andย James Delingpole, have also taken the opportunity to push home some of these favourite talking points on climate change in their Carterย tributes.

In Carterโ€™s view, the climate was not influenced by the billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide added to the atmosphere and oceans every year from fossil fuel burning. He argued any changes that were happening, wereย natural.

Denialists will describe Carter as โ€œone of the worldโ€™s leading authoritiesโ€ on climate change. Heย wasnโ€™t.

In 2011, Professor David Karoly, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Melbourne, set Carterโ€™s views in the context of an alternativeย reality.

In the Carter reality, there are many other strange conclusions based on selecting some evidence and ignoring most. The rules of science have been replaced by non-science. In that world, there are large benefits from more carbon dioxide and no adverse impacts, no sea level rise nor increasing acidification of theย ocean.

In the Carter reality, it is better to adapt to climate change as it occurs, rather than to act on the best scientific understanding. In the Carter reality, consensus is not needed around scientific understanding, yet he tries to establish that there is aย counter-consensus.

To me, Carter was a guy full of his own contradictions. Carter would say, for example, that โ€œscientists are paid not to have agendas or opinionsโ€ while writing fiery opinion column after fiery opinion column.ย 

After the fossil fuel funded Heartland Institute ran a billboard comparing โ€œbeliefโ€ in climate change to the values of terrorist Ted โ€œUnabomberโ€ Kaczynski, Carter was one of the few โ€œscepticsโ€ who refused to criticise the Chicago-based group who paidย him.

Climate change, Carter would regularly claim, โ€œshows all the hallmarks of orchestrated propagandaโ€, ignoring, of course, that he himself was playing a role in a grand propaganda effort to convince the public that fossil fuel emissions did not need to beย cut.ย 

His personal website says he โ€œreceives no research funding from special interest organisations.โ€ย In 2012, DeSmog published internal budget papers from the Heartland Institute showing how it intended to pay Carter $1667 a month that year for work on a climate reportย project.

The Heartland Institute has historically taken money from the likes of ExxonMobil and continues to take money from ideologically-tied funding groups likeย Donors Capital Fund.

Carter was evasive as to the sources of his own funding. When I pressed him on this point back in 2012 when the Heartland documents were made public, he said the details of any of the Heartland payments were โ€œprivateโ€ but he said: โ€œHeartland is one of a number of think-tanks and institutions that I work with. Sometimes Iโ€™m paid an honorarium, sometimes expenses and sometimes I do itย pro-bono.โ€

In any case, he said the long-standing practice where scientists declare who has funded their research was โ€œquaint and old-fashionedโ€ and that rather, research should stand on itsย merits.

Yet Carter would also claim that while he was impervious to the influences of funding, the scientists who agreed climate change was serious and caused by humans (which is to say, practically all of them) wereย not.

Carter wrote a couple of books too.ย  Most recently, he wrote Taxing Air: Facts and Fallacies about climate change. Denialists thought it was great. The IPA sent it to all Australian MPs.

Mathematical physicist Ian Enting analysed the book and described it as a โ€œpolemicโ€ characterised by โ€œhalf-truths and slanted misrepresentationโ€ and โ€œappallingย hypocrisyโ€.

Carter was part of a tiny handful of scientists with academic credentials who were called on to advise Australian coalitionย politicians.ย 

He gave evidence to a 2009 select committee. He influenced the likes of Liberal party powerbroker Nick Minchin and Family First Senator Steve Fielding while the pair were inย office.

As I wrote for The Guardian, Carter was called in by Australian coalition backbenchers in October 2015 to give a briefing on climateย science.

On one of the rare occasions (and possibly the only occasion) when Carter did venture into the real world of peer-reviewed science, his efforts were roundlyย slammed.ย 

In 2009, Carter was a co-author on a paper that argued much of the recent warming (which he would elsewhere claim wasnโ€™t happening) was down to naturalย variations.

In a response in the same Journal of Geophysical Research, a team of genuine expert climate scientists concluded the central claim made by Carter and colleagues was โ€œnot supported by their analysis or any physical theory presented in theirย paperโ€.

Carter was a key member of the climate change denial movementโ€™s infantry.ย  It is that movement that has fought for decades to delay any government policy to cut greenhouse gas emissions.ย  The movement has helped to politicize the science, confuse the public and delay action that has real consequences for the public around theย world.

So thatโ€™s how Iโ€™ll remember Bobย Carter.ย 

But that doesnโ€™t mean I canโ€™t extend my sympathies, even if some people reading throw them back in myย face.

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