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5 Feb 07 AEI Think Tank Sought Critique of Climate Report Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent Yahoo News 2 Feb 07 US thinktank offering cash to dispute UN climate panel: report LONDON (AFP) - A right-wing American thinktank is offering 10,000 dollars (7,700 euros) to scientists and economists to dispute a climate change report set to be released by the UN's top scientific panel, media reported. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI), which receives funding from oil giant ExxonMobil according to the Guardian, sent letters to scientists in the United States, Britain and elsewhere offering the payments in exchange for articles emphasising the shortcoming of the UN's report. AEI also reportedly offered additional payments, and to reimburse travel expenses. The report, due to be released Friday in Paris by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), is likely to give a bleak assessment of the damage to the future of the environment. It is the culmination of four days of debate between more then 500 scientists at a closed-door meeting in Paris, who have been poring over the first review of the scientific evidence for global warming in six years. AEI's letters characterize the IPCC report as "resistant to reasonable criticism and dissent and prone to summary conclusions that are poorly supported by the analytical work" and request articles that "thoughtfully explore the limitations of climate model outputs," The Guardian said. Kenneth Green, the AEI visiting scholar who sent the letters, confirmed to The Guardian that the thinktank had approached scientists and analysts to pen essays that would be compiled into an independent review of the IPCC's report. "Right now, the whole debate is polarized," Green was quoted as saying by the newspaper. "One group says that anyone with any doubts whatsoever are deniers and the other group is saying that anyone who wants to take action is alarmist. We don't think that approach has a lot of utility for intelligent policy." PlanetArk 5 Feb 07 AEI Think Tank Sought Critique of Climate Report Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent WASHINGTON - The American Enterprise Institute, which has received US$1.6 million from ExxonMobil, offered scientists up to US$10,000 for a "policy critique" of the UN global warming report released Friday. The pro-business think tank, with numerous close ties to the Bush administration, denied it was looking for global warming skeptics to cast doubt on the UN report. AEI made the offers to scientists starting last July, but ultimately abandoned the project, according to Kenneth Green, a visiting scholar at the institute who worked on the program. First reported in the Guardian newspaper in Britain, the program aimed to publish scientists' essays to coincide with the release of the report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC. The report found, with 90 percent probability, that humans caused accelerated global warming in the last half-century. It was released in Paris on Friday. In a July 5 letter to a climate scientist in Texas, Green and colleague Steven Hayward wrote: "As with any large-scale 'consensus' process, the IPCC is susceptible to self-selection bias in its personnel, resistant to reasonable criticism and dissent, and prone to summary conclusions that are poorly supported by the analytical work of the complete ... reports." The letter offered US$10,000 for an essay of 7,500 to 10,000 words, due Dec. 15, 2006, about six weeks before the UN report was expected. The letter also offered more "honoraria" and travel expenses if the scientist participated in a series of conferences on the same topic. The letter was obtained by the environmental group Greenpeace and made available to the media. Green said in a telephone interview he did not know how many scientists were contacted, but said the responses led the institute to revamp and then shelve the project. THE RIGHT FOCUS "The people we respected on the issue didn't think we had the right focus or the project wasn't structured right for them," he said. AEI has had close ties to the Bush administration. Lynne Cheney, the wife of Vice President Dick Cheney, has an office there, and President Bush in 2003 praised the think tank for having "some of the finest minds in our nation," adding, "You do such good work that my administration has borrowed 20 such minds." It has received US$1.6 million from ExxonMobil between 1998 and 2005, according to the watchdog group Union of Concerned Scientists, as part of a campaign by the energy giant to raise doubt about climate change. ExxonMobil said it supported various public policy groups but that did not mean it had control over the groups' positions. Green said the think tank hoped the essays would stimulate debate and provide an alternative voice on global warming. "I view this discussion to have become hardened on a bipolar axis of alarmists and deniers, and I believe that is a bad dynamic in which to find good policy," Green said. "And so we were looking for voices who could illuminate a middle road, a third way ... so that we could move out of this bipolar dynamic and move on to something where you could find more reason for discourse." As to his own views on global warming, Green said he was "less compelled" by the UN report's findings. "They essentially asked the lead authors to rank their level of certainty," Green said. "... It is purely the opinion of the (UN reports') authors themselves as to how strongly they think they're right." Acknowledging that the report represents the work of 2,500 scientists from more than 130 nations, Green said, "That doesn't mean they're always right." links Related articles on climate change |
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