Alan Caruba
The Guardian slams funding of anti-global warming groups
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By Alan Caruba
January 3, 2014


The Guardian, a London-based daily newspaper, has been a leading advocate of the global warming theory – now called climate change – and its December 20 edition published an article by Susanne Goldenberg, "Conservative groups spend up to $1bn a year to fight action on climate change."

The article focused on a study by Drexel University sociologist Robert Brulle that had been published in the journal Climate Change asserting that "The anti-climate effort has been largely underwritten by conservative billionaires, often working through secretive funding networks. They have displaced corporations as the prime supporters of 91 think tanks, advocacy groups and industry associations which have worked to block action on climate change."

What action these organizations or even entire governments could take to have any affect whatever on "climate change" defies common sense. Nothing they could do, for example, would have any effect on the action of the Sun, the primary determinant of climate. For the past seventeen years the Sun has been in a natural cycle of reduced radiation, less warmth for the Earth. The result has been a cooling cycle on Earth that has crushed decades of lies about "global warming."

It's not that the Earth hasn't had previous cycles of warmer climate, but they had nothing to do with anything humans do. There was warming before the Industrial Revolution introduced the use of coal, oil and natural gas to provide the energy that has marked the development and use of technologies that have improved human life in countless ways. "Global warming" is blamed on the emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other so-called greenhouse gases. The most prominent of these gases in the Earth's atmosphere is nothing more than water vapor.

Apparently, if Brulle and The Guardian are to be believed, anyone or any organization that donates to any group that doubts the claims of Big Green are the enemies of "global warming," but this conveniently ignored estimates that the U.S. government, according to an October article in The New American "will spend more money on fighting global warming than it will on tightening border security." The spending is estimated to cost approximately $22.2 billion this year, twice as much as the $12 billion estimated for customs and border enforcement."

There are, according to the White House, "currently 18 federal agencies engaged in activities related to global warming. These agencies fund programs that include scientific research, international climate assistance, renewable energy technology, and subsidies for renewable energy producers."

The Guardian article caught my eye because, among the organizations that have been active in debunking the "global warming" theory has been The Heartland Institute. I have been an advisor to the Institute which, since 2008, has organized eight international conferences on global warming that have featured some of the world's leading skeptics.

If you want to know how the Institute is funded, you can go to their website where you will find, for example, that it does not solicit or accept grants from any of those government agencies using billions of taxpayer dollars to convince Americans that "global warming" is real or that anything the government does about "climate change" can have any effect on it. In 2012, Heartland received 50% of its income from foundations, 28% from individuals, and 18% from corporations. No corporate donor contributes more than 5% of its annual budget.

In contrast, a recent article by Ron Arnold, a Washington Examiner columnist and executive vice president of the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, noted that over the past decade environmental organizations received 345,052 foundation grants totaling $20,826,664,000 – over twenty billion dollars – largely from a 200-plus member Environmental Grantmakers Association and the smaller, farther-left National Network of Grantmakers. Arnold said that "Today, foundations are the backbone of Big Green."

On a recent CNN television program, Marc Morano, the communications director of the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) took on the Sierra Club director, noting that this major environmental organization has received $26 million from natural gas corporations to support its attacks on the coal industry. So "fossil fuels" industries are okay if they are giving the Sierra Club money.

"So record cold," said Morano, "is now evidence of man-made global warming."

While the Koch-affiliated foundations that provide grants to conservative groups were singled out, along with Exxon Mobil, in The Guardian article, no mention was made of multi-billionaire George Soros who is famed for funding all manner of liberal groups and who reportedly has invested heavily in "clean energy" companies – solar and wind – whose products do not produce the so-called greenhouse gas emissions.

One of the more recent articles in The Guardian was titled "Global warming will intensify drought, says new study." The problem, of course, is that there is NO global warming.

By contrast, a July Fox News article, "Billions spent in Obama climate plan may be virtually useless, study says" was not also reported in the mainstream media. Suffice to say that those billions came from taxpayer's pockets.

I am happy to know that the Heartland Institute, a 29 year old non-profit research organization, CFACT, and other free market research and activist groups receive foundation and other support. Without them, the lies about "climate change" from the Obama administration and the many environmental organizations would not be debunked.

© Alan Caruba

 

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Alan Caruba

(Editor's note: Alan Caruba passed away on June 15, 2015. You can read his obituary here.)

Best known these days as a commentator on issues ranging from environmentalism to energy, immigration to Islam, Alan Caruba is the author of two recent books, "Right Answers: Separating Fact from Fantasy" and "Warning Signs" -- both collections of his commentaries since 2000 and both published by Merril Press of Bellevue, Washington... (more)

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