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Study Finds That Corporate Funding Has Affected The Perception Of Climate Change

twizz

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20-Year Study Finds That Corporate Funding Has Affected The Public's Perception Of Climate Change

November 24, 2015| by Josh L Davis

Climate change has long been a polarizing subject, with a gulf between those who “believe” in it and those who are “deniers” widening and becoming more intense in recent years. Some argue that this is because the science isn’t proven, or that there are doubts in the data, but a new study claims to have found the real reason that this rift exists: corporate funding.

After analyzing 20 years’ worth of data, Yale University’s Dr. Justin Farrell has found that there is a connection between corporate funding and messages that are likely to polarize and cast doubt**on the issue of climate change. Not only that, but those organizations that got their money from the corporate sector were also more likely to be influenced on what they actually write. In other words, funders were swaying the actual content of the climate countermovement.

While this is unsurprising news to many, the study has been able to highlight in stark terms how corporate powers have been making it look as if there is more of a debate around climate change than actually exists, muddying the waters and**leading to public uncertainty and policy stalemate. “The contrarian efforts have been so effective for the fact that they have made it difficult for ordinary Americans to even know who to trust,” Dr. Farrell, whose research has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, told.The Washington Post.

His work looked at two separate data sets. The first was a network of over 4,500 people who had links to 164 organizations that have been skeptical of climate change. The second was a collection of every single text that these same organizations have produced about climate change from 1993 to 2013, and included almost 50,000 policy statements, press releases, articles, and published papers. Dr. Farrell’s overall conclusion was that corporate funding has been influencing the actual language and thematic content of polarizing messages.

He managed to identify several “themes” among the organizations denying human-driven climate change that were receiving this corporate money, such as that climate change is cyclical in nature**and that there were positive benefits to carbon dioxide. Over time, all these separate groups giving the same message had the effect of providing an increasing sense of cohesion.

We already know that certain companies – such as ExxonMobil – knew about climate change and the harmful impact that greenhouse gas emissions were having on the environment as far back as the late 1970s, and then proceeded to mislead the public and investors. But another way for such corporate companies to prompt inaction over climate change is to polarize the debate, making it seem like there is more evidence against climate change, or less evidence for it. This has the effect of creating a stalemate, blocking the introduction of any policy that might limit fossil fuel extraction or carbon emissions that could ultimately lead to the corporations losing money.

http://www.iflscience.com/environment/why-climate-change-such-polarizing-subject-0
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
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Is this one of those right wing elitist university profs you were complaining about. He is at Yale after all.
 

Moviefan-2

Court Jester
Oct 17, 2011
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Let's not forget that the IPCC's predictions of how man-made emissions would affect the Earth's temperature have been consistently and spectacularly wrong.

I'm sure that had an impact, as well.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Let's not forget that the IPCC's predictions of how man-made emissions would affect the Earth's temperature have been consistently and spectacularly wrong.

I'm sure that had an impact, as well.
You're lying again.


As you are well aware, the present record temperatures are right about the middle of the range of projections.
And as you also know, you bet against the IPCC projections and right now they are 0.005ºC from being right on the money.

 

basketcase

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Dec 29, 2005
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Let's not forget that the IPCC's predictions of how man-made emissions would affect the Earth's temperature have been consistently and spectacularly wrong.

....
Keep repeating that. Maybe someone will believe you despite the graphs you keep posting showing that the collected data is a pretty good match for the projections.
 

Moviefan-2

Court Jester
Oct 17, 2011
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Keep repeating that. Maybe someone will believe you despite the graphs you keep posting showing that the collected data is a pretty good match for the projections.
As I'm sure you'll recall, the IPCC calculated the accuracy rate of the models at only 3%. That wouldn't meet my definition of "pretty good."

But as your hero, Frankfooter, likes to point out -- I not only say I'm right, I was willing to bet on it.
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
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Room 112
Corporate funding of the skeptic side pales in comparison to corporate and gov't funding of the believers. Once again a useless and biased study. Then again it's Yale.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Corporate funding of the skeptic side pales in comparison to corporate and gov't funding of the believers. Once again a useless and biased study. Then again it's Yale.
There was about half a billion in money funnelled into denier lobbyists over about a decade.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/dark-money-funds-climate-change-denial-effort/

The side of science spends money on research, but its not allowed to spend it on anything other then research, for the most part.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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As I'm sure you'll recall, the IPCC calculated the accuracy rate of the models at only 3%. That wouldn't meet my definition of "pretty good."

But as your hero, Frankfooter, likes to point out -- I not only say I'm right, I was willing to bet on it.
Why don't we check a chart to see how those projections are looking?


You need to look at your definition of 'pretty good', if you don't think it applies to that chart.
 

Moviefan-2

Court Jester
Oct 17, 2011
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I recall that you kept posting this graph that goes to 2011
http://wpmedia.opinion.financialpost.com/2013/09/0916graphic.jpg?w=620&h=507
and you kept post the hadcrut 4 data
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/temperature/HadCRUT4-gl.dat

Strangely the data hadcrut data you keep posting fits right into the IPCC projections you keep posting.
I wonder if you recall this post from July 19, where you tried to create fairy-tale "warming" by mixing and matching numbers from two entirely different data sets that use entirely different baselines (HadCRUT and NASA):

https://terb.cc/vbulletin/showthrea...ing-Point%92&p=5301206&viewfull=1#post5301206

Since it's a matter of record that you can't read graphs at a high-school level, I don't think your analyses are worth anything.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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I wonder if you recall this post from July 19,
And do you recall the posts where you directly lied about the findings of two studies?

False.

The survey is correct.
The results presented in the PBL-study are consistent with similar studies, which all find high levels of consensus among scientists, especially among scientists who publish more often in the peer-reviewed climate literature.
http://www.pbl.nl/en/faq-for-the-article-scientists-views-about-attribution-of-global-warming

We found high levels of expert consensus on human-caused climate change.
http://www.climatesciencewatch.org/...rts-poll-of-meteorologists-on-climate-change/

You lied about both of those studies.


In the meantime, I see you are still averting your eyes from this chart, which shows how wrong you are.
 

Moviefan-2

Court Jester
Oct 17, 2011
10,489
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And do you recall the posts where you directly lied about the findings of two studies?
Posting things that you are unable to understand isn't lying.

And your feeble attempt to change the subject doesn't alter the fact that Basketcase has no idea how to read a graph.
 

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
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There was about half a billion in money funnelled into denier lobbyists over about a decade.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/dark-money-funds-climate-change-denial-effort/

The side of science spends money on research, but its not allowed to spend it on anything other then research, for the most part.
lol!!!! A whole half a billion, eh? The government imposed cap and tax, when fully implemented among the developed countries, will generate trillions. Skimming off the top of the economy, like Mafia used to in Vegas.
 
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