Show Hide image Energy 20 March 2015 Britain's climate sceptics' dishonest tactics need to stop Climate sceptics are turning to increasingly tricky ruses to hide their motives. Print HTML An article in last week's Mail on Sunday has again exposed the dishonest tactics used by climate change ‘sceptics’ to try to stop the UK from cutting its greenhouse gas emissions. The polemic was written by Professor Michael Kelly, an electronic engineer at the University of Cambridge who used to be Chief Scientific Advisor at the Department for Communities and Local Government. Professor Kelly is also a Fellow of the Royal Society, Britain’s national academy of science whose distinguished members have included Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and Stephen Hawking. It is notable that Professor Kelly’s newspaper article was primarily a vituperative attack on the Society for daring to highlight the scientific evidence for climate change. But it was actually part of a carefully planned media blitz by the Global Warming Policy Foundation, which was set up by Lord Lawson to lobby against Government policies that promote alternatives to fossil fuels. Professor Kelly publicised the Foundation’s new pamphlet, published on Sunday, which criticises a short guide to climate science produced by the Royal Society last December. The attack is part of a co-ordinated ongoing war by the Foundation against mainstream scientific organisations, such as the Royal Society and the Met Office, which are documenting how the UK and the rest of the world are being affected by rising greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere. The Foundation hopes to create confusion about the science to undermine the case for climate change policies, in a clear echo of tactics used by tobacco companies to delay regulation of smoking. But the Charity Commission ruled last year that the Foundation had breached its guidelines because it pushes only a ‘sceptic’ line on the science of climate change, including through the insertion of fake headlines to ‘spin’ newspaper articles that it reproduces on its website. As a result, the Foundation set up a lobbying arm, the Global Warming Policy Forum, to circumvent charity regulations. However, the Foundation continues to disseminate inaccurate and misleading information about climate change through campaign pamphlets and newspaper articles. Professor Kelly’s article reproduced many of the false claims contained in the new pamphlet, including the suggestion that the Royal Society’s statements about trends towards increasing extreme weather “simply do not match real-world facts”. In fact, the most recent assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s most authoritative source of information about the causes and consequences of global warming, concluded that “changes in many extreme weather and climate events have been observed since about 1950”, with a likely increase heatwaves in large parts of Europe, Asia and Australia, and more heavy rainfall in North America and Europe. The denial of any change in extreme weather events is one of the main ‘talking points’ for climate change ‘sceptics’ because they know that policy-makers and the public are very concerned about such impacts. But Professor Kelly also cites the fact that “since 1998 there has been no statistically significant rise in global temperature”. In fact, the linear trend in global annual surface temperature since 1998 has been a rise of 0.05 centigrade degrees per decade, and while this is lower than the long-term rate of warming, climate scientists have concluded that this slowdown is only temporary. Yet Professor Kelly ignores these facts. One could be charitable, and assume that he simply does not understand climate science. After all, while he is an eminent engineer, he has never published any academic papers on climate change. However, Professor Kelly is one of Lord Lawson’s most loyal soldiers. In 2010, he helped to organise a letter by 43 Fellows of the Royal Society to its President, Sir Paul Nurse, complaining about its public statements on climate change. But at least one of the signatories, Lord Hunt of Chesterton, thought the letter was pointing out that the Royal Society should be speaking out more strongly about the risks of climate change. Professor Kelly’s political motivation for doing Lord Lawson’s bidding at the expense of the Royal Society is obvious from the newspaper article. He complains about the Climate Change Act and wind farms, blaming them for having “contributed to electricity prices increasing by twice the level of inflation over the last decade”. But again, Professor Kelly is wrong about the evidence. Increases in the price of natural gas have been the main driver of electricity prices over the past 10 years, as Ofgem has highlighted, and support for renewables, through the Renewables Obligation and Feed-in Tariffs, accounts for only £50, or 3.7%, of an annual dual fuel bill of £1344. The truth is that lobbying by UK climate change ‘sceptics’, even those with an apparently technical background, is motivated by politics. The public should not be fooled by their efforts to undermine the science because these are simply the same tactics that are being used by similar groups in the United States, and which have been revealed by the shocking new film ‘Merchants of Doubt’. Bob Ward is policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at London School of Economics and Political Science. › How terror under the Tudors is reflected in the barbarity of Islamic State Bob Ward is policy and communications director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at London School of Economics and Political Science. More Related articles Diane James quits Ukip seven weeks after quitting the leadership too Theresa May just scrapped her own brilliant pro-business idea Is Francois Fillon Marine Le Pen's dream opponent? Subscription offer 12 issues for £12 + FREE book LEARN MORE Close This week’s magazine
Show Hide image The Staggers 21 November 2016 Jeremy Corbyn to tell businesses Brexit is "unmistakable rejection" of status quo The Labour leader is speaking ahead of the Autumn Statement. Print HTML Jeremy Corbyn will tell business leaders that Brexit and the election of Donald Trump as US President-elect are an "unmistakable rejection" of the economic system. In his speech to the Confederation of British Industry, the Labour leader is expected to say that "far, far too many people" are only just surviving - despite Labour striking a softer tone on taxes for the rich. He is to say: "Both Britain’s decision to back Brexit, and the election of Donald Trump, are an unmistakable rejection of a political establishment and an economic system that hasn’t been working for most people. "It’s a system that’s delivered ballooning inequality along with falling or stagnating living standards for the majority." Corbyn will warn against a "mishandled, chaotic Brexit" and urge businesses to partner with Labour to work towards "a better alternative". He is expected to say the party will use public intervention to promote entrepreneurship, declaring: "It's intervention for the common good." Despite the tough talk, the shadow chancellor John McDonnell told the Andrew Marr show on Sunday that he would halt tax cuts to the rich, and even reverse some of them. Instead, he said Labour would focus on curbing tax evasion and avoidance. The Chancellor, Philip Hammond, is expected to raise the income tax threshold to £50,000 for 40 per cent taxpayers in the Autumn Statement. McDonnell's position has led the Scottish Conservatives to claim that Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP First Minister, is now more left-wing than the man who named Leon Trotsky one of his biggest influences. Corbyn is speaking at the CBI alongside the Prime Minister, Theresa May. She is expected to tell the CBI she aims to reduce corporation tax to the lowest in the G20, in an attempt to rebuild relationships with the business community after Brexit. Julia Rampen is the editor of The Staggers, The New Statesman's online rolling politics blog. She was previously deputy editor at Mirror Money Online and has worked as a financial journalist for several trade magazines. More Related articles Diane James quits Ukip seven weeks after quitting the leadership too Theresa May just scrapped her own brilliant pro-business idea Is Francois Fillon Marine Le Pen's dream opponent?