Rumours that former Daily Telegraph editor Charles Moore is being considered as a potential candidate to chair the BBC have been met with condemnation over the Conservative peerโs views on climateย change.
A long-time critic of the BBC, Lord Moore has frequently dismissed concerns about the impact of rising emissions on the climate, arguing in an appearance on Question Time that โa sort of project fearโ was being promoted around theย issue.
Professor Steve Jones, a geneticist who was commissioned to conduct a review of the public broadcasterโs science coverage in 2011, is among those expressing concerns about the possible appointment. The report criticised the BBC for providing โfalse balanceโ on scientific fields such as climateย change.
He said it was โdepressing but predictableโ that a โnewly ennobled and contrarian non-scientistโ was beingย considered.
โPerhaps this is part of the universal sneer with which the present government treats the national broadcaster,โ heย added.
Last year, Moore claimed climate โalarmistsโ were aiming for โunprecedented government control and the relative impoverishment of western societiesโ. Over the Christmas holidays, he guest-edited an episode of BBC Radio 4โs Today Programme during which he accused its environment analyst Roger Harrabin ofย bias.
The pro-Brexit commentator and recently appointed peer wrote in 2017 that leaving the EU would mean the UK could โcopy [Donald] Trumpโs bonfire of controls, igniting it with good old fossilย fuelsโ.
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Since 2015, Moore has been a trustee of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a charity set up by former Chancellor Nigel Lawson that describes itself as โopen-minded on the contested science of global warmingโ and โdeeply concernedโ about the costs of climateย policies.
Dr James Painter, Research Associate at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, said Mooreโs views on climate โwould seem to be out of kilter with the BBCโs current direction of travelโ, pointing to its increased climate coverage and decision to minimise what he called the โunjustified presence of sceptical voices on itsย airwavesโ.
Painter highlighted research from the Reuters Institute showing Mooreโs Telegraph newspaper group had โfrequently given a platform to climate sceptics, particularly in its opinionย columns.โ
Environmental journalist and BBC presenter Lucy Siegle also expressed surprise at the rumours, telling DeSmog it was โastonishing to suggest at this juncture in the nature and climate crisis that Mr Moore who thanks Trump for โbreaking the spell of climate change maniaโ should beย chairman.โ
โIf he is so ideologically opposed to settled science, the fact that the BBC has a duty, responsibility and opportunity to increase and deepen its coverage of the dual crises in nature and climate will presumably put him in a very serious bind psychologically,โ sheย said.
Former Green Party leader and peer Natalie Bennett said a โrespected, independent public broadcasterโ was a โcrucial resource at any time, but particularly now in light of the Covid pandemic and the climate emergency and natureย crisisโ.
โTo put at its head a partisan figure who belongs to an extremist cult of climate change deniers would be a huge blow to an institution these islands urgently need to be functioning well,โ sheย said.
Campaign group Extinction Rebellion similarly condemned the move, claiming Moore was โsingularly unsuited to lead an organisation whose mission is to educate and informโ and that it would be a โsorry day for informed debate, critical thinking and the health of the nation should his appointment goย ahead.โ
Charles Moore has been contacted forย comment.
Photo credit: David Carroll/Flickr/CC BY–SAย 2.0
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