It’s been a year
since thousands of emails and files were leaked from
a prominent climate science group at the University
of East Anglia, with startling comments including
this one: “We can’t account for the lack of warming
at the moment.”
Other leaked emails showed potential manipulation of temperature data,
a willingness to destroy information rather than
release it under the British Freedom of Information
(FOI) law and the intimidation of publications
willing to publish skeptical articles. The files
also indicated that the temperature data was in a
“hopeless” state.
Even though many considered it a huge scandal, the three broadcast
networks didn’t think so. They ignored the story for
roughly two weeks, and have only mentioned it in a
dozen stories in the past year.
In those few stories network reporters often
downplayed the allegations against climate
scientists by calling them “mistakes” or a “series
of gaffes,” others sympathized with the accused
scientists or insisted that the science supporting
global warming alarmism was solid. Journalists even
accepted “whitewash” investigations into the matter
that supposedly “exonerated” the climate scientists.
The scandal over those leaked files was dubbed ClimateGate and
dominated headlines – particularly in Britain. But
here in the U.S., the three broadcast networks went
on as if nothing had happened for nearly 14 days.
It wasn’t until the evening of the 14th day that one network
program, NBC “Nightly News,” finally reported on the
climate science controversy. But that first story
was not the beginning of a flood of network coverage
of ClimateGate. Since Nov. 19, 2009, the broadcast
networks have only mentioned the scandal or the
University of East Anglia in a paltry 12 stories.
Twelve stories. Why so little coverage? Myron Ebell, director of energy
and global warming policy for the Competitive
Enterprise Institute (CEI), told the Business &
Media Institute, “I think it’s pretty obvious why
the networks and major papers have ignored
ClimateGate. It’s because they don’t want to
consider the possibility that the sort of monolithic
[global warming] consensus that they support and are
a part of is based on junk science.”
CBS’s Wyatt Andrews defended alarmist scientists against accusation of
“fraud” saying “if that’s true, it’s a fraud adopted
by most of the world’s leading scientists …”
Similarly, NBC’s Anne Thompson cited
“experts” to bolster global warming science on Dec.
6, 2009, saying “They say it doesn’t matter what’s
in those emails. The Earth is changing.”
On May 23, 2010, ABC “World News” presented ClimateGate scientists
including Penn State’s Michael Mann as the victims.
Dan Harris said the debate about climate had become
“increasingly venomous with many prominent climate
scientists now saying that they are being severely
harassed.”
According to Ebell, the scientists involved were not making “mistakes”
as the media emphasized, but “manipulating data.”
The CRU emails revealed “they were adjusting the
[weather] stations they were using” to show warmer
recent decades and cooler temperatures in the 1930s
and ’40s, Ebell said.
Exonerated by the Media
The allegations of tampering with data, hiding
“the decline,” evading FOI laws or trying to keep
skeptics from being published didn’t matter to the
networks, which had been airing stories about the
threat of climate change for years. Reporters were
adamant that the science was valid and the threat
was real.
Anne Thompson told NBC viewers Dec. 7, 2009, “But does the controversy
change the science? A team of explorers will present
findings on Arctic ice melt in Copenhagen, findings
that have nothing to do with the emails.”
Over on CBS, Wyatt Andrews listed a number of
scientific groups that accept manmade global warming
as fact “To most of them, ClimateGate is a sideshow
compared to one overwhelming fact.”
As the findings of so-called “independent”
investigations came out in 2010, many in the news
media claimed the climate scientists had been
“exonerated.”
Dan Harris used that word on May 23, 2010 saying: “Senator Inhofe’s
report was referring to an incident late last year
known as ClimateGate, where stolen emails gave the
impression that climate scientists may have been
trying to hide flaws in their research, although
several subsequent investigations have exonerated
the scientists.”
USA Today, The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN and many other
U.S. and international media outlets reported that
the most recent British inquiry (the Muir Russell
inquiry) “cleared scientists of any misconduct.”
But the Post and many other outlets didn’t mention crucial indications
that the so-called “independent” investigations were
a “whitewash.” Cato Institute Senior Fellow Pat
Michaels wrote an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal
July 12 cautioning people,
“Don’t believe the ‘independent’ reviews.”
Michaels, who was a professor of environmental sciences at the
University of Virginia (UVA) from 1980 to 2007,
pointed out that Muir Russell’s panel named “The
Independent Climate Change E-mails Review” was in
fact “commissioned and paid for by the University of
East Anglia (UEA), the same university whose climate
department was under investigation.”
That would be like BP handpicking and paying a panel of experts to
investigate its handling of the oil spill. Would the
news media take that panel seriously if it
“exonerated” BP? Not likely.
Public Perception of Climate Change Shifts after Climate
Scandal
Despite very little network coverage, and claims
from some media outlets that the scientists in
question had been cleared, public faith in the
threat of global warming has been dropping since the
email scandal erupted.
Rasmussen reported on Nov. 15, 2010 that only 61 percent of people
think global warming is a “somewhat serious
problem.” “These
findings have steadily dropped since last November
when the so-called ‘Climategate’ scandal broke,”
Rasmussen said. The polling group also found 45
percent of people attributed warming to “long-term
planetary trends.”
In March 2010, Gallup found that 48 percent of Americans thought the
threat of global warming was “generally
exaggerated.” That was the highest in 13 years,
according to Gallup.
In the wake of ClimateGate (and other subsequent climate science
scandals), British journalist James Delingpole wrote
that, “AGW theory is toast. So’s Dr. Rajendra
Pachauri. So’s the Stern Review. So’s the
credibility of the IPCC. But if you think I’m
cheered by this you’re very much mistaken. I’m
trying to write a Climategate book but the way
things are going by the time I’m finished there
won’t be anything left to say: the battle will
already have been won and the only people left who
still believe in Man Made Global Warming will be the
eco-loon equivalents of those wartime Japanese
soldiers left abandoned and forgotten on remote
Pacific atolls.”
Networks Hide Climate Scandals
Around Earth Day 2010, the Business & Media
Institute released a Special Report about network
bias surrounding the ClimateGate scandal and other
related scandals.
BMI found that not only did the networks ignore the story for nearly
two weeks, they buried allegations against climate
scientists with six times as many global warming
alarmism reports (86 to 13).
In those stories, reporters warned about the potential end of French
wines, the threat of rising sea levels, melting
Andes glaciers, worsening allergies, floods,
droughts, dengue fever and the danger posed to
animals from the Arctic Fox to Atlantic salmon.