tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/climate%20change%20denial1 climate change denial news from mongabay.com 2013-05-16T17:39:50Z tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11445 2013-05-16T17:17:00Z 2013-05-16T17:39:50Z Scientists have reached an overwhelming consensus on human-caused climate change <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0516.High_Park_Wildfire_Arapaho_and_Roosevelt_National_Forests_June_10,_2012.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Despite outsized media and political attention to climate change deniers, climate scientists long ago reached a consensus that not only is climate change occurring, but it's largely due to human actions. A new study in <i>Environmental Research Letters</i> further strengthens this consensus: looking at 4,000 peer-reviewed papers researchers found that 97 percent of them supported anthropogenic (i.e. human caused) global warming. Climate change denialists, many of them linked to fossil fuel industries, have tried for years&#8212;and often successfully&#8212;to undercut action on mitigating climate change through carefully crafted misinformation campaigns. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11312 2013-04-29T12:54:00Z 2013-04-29T13:03:45Z Climate Myths: how climate denialists are getting away with bad science <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/jlh/2011/150/new_mexico_102.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In Climate Myths: The Campaign Against Climate Science, Dr. John J. Berger deconstructs the climate change denialists' myths in simple, easy-to-read terms. According to the Pew Research Center: "Nearly seven-in-ten (69%) [Americans] say there is solid evidence that the earth’s average temperature has been getting warmer over the past few decades, up six points since November 2011 and 12 points since 2009." Yet implementing national-level climate change mitigation legislation is not occurring in the U.S. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11132 2013-03-28T18:24:00Z 2013-04-01T03:04:33Z Scientists find the 'missing heat' of global warming 700 meters below the sea <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0328.climateocean.graph.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Critics of climate change often claim that warming has stopped since the late 1990s. While this is categorically false (the last decade was the warmest on record and 2005 and 2010 are generally considered tied for the warmest year), scientists do admit that warming hasn't occurred over land as rapidly as predicted in the last ten years, especially given continually rising greenhouse gas emissions. But a recent study in <i>Geophysical Research Letters</i> has found this so-called missing heat: 700 meters below the surface of the ocean. Jeremy Hance -19.47695 -121.142582 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10300 2012-10-23T18:54:00Z 2012-10-23T19:08:24Z Lack of climate change in presidential debates part of larger trend The final presidential debate between President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney, focusing on foreign policy, ended like all the others: without a mention of climate change or its likely impacts on Americans, from rising sea levels to worsening extreme weather to the threat of instability abroad. While environmental groups have kicked-off a campaign to target this "climate silence," the lack of discussion on climate change is a part of a larger trend in the U.S. where media coverage of the issue has declined even as scientists argue that impacts are increasing. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10233 2012-10-04T17:44:00Z 2012-10-04T17:52:14Z Nary a mention of climate change during U.S. presidential debate The hour-and-a-half long debate between President Barack Obama and ex-governor Mitt Romney last night ended without a single reference to climate change. Frustrated with the lack of discussion on the issue from both candidates, environmental activists sent a petition with over 160,000 signatures to debate moderator, Jim Lehr, urging him to ask a question about climate change. The petition fell on deaf ears. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9941 2012-07-30T21:52:00Z 2012-08-16T14:02:12Z Prominent climate skeptic reverses course, says global warming worse than IPCC forecast After starting his own project to study global warming, a once-prominent climate change skeptic and physicist says he now accepts the reality of anthropogenic climate change. "Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I'm now going a step further: Humans are almost entirely the cause," Richard Muller writes in the New York Times as his team, the Berkeley Earth Project, releases a new paper that finds an even stronger link between greenhouse gas emissions and rising temperatures worldwide than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Jeremy Hance 37.872279 -122.270136 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9512 2012-05-14T12:52:00Z 2012-05-14T13:15:21Z President of Czech Republic to give keynote at Heartland climate summit despite backlash over murderer billboards Companies are abandoning the Heartland Institute left-and-right following the conservative group's controversial climate change billboard campaign, but Czech President, Václav Klaus, is sticking with the group, reports the Guardian. Although he criticized the Heartland's short-lived campaign, Klaus is still planning to be the keynote speaker at the Heartland Institute's upcoming annual climate change summit, which gathers prominent climate denialists from around the world. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9488 2012-05-08T15:05:00Z 2012-05-08T15:38:16Z Heartland Institute losing major corporate sponsors after comparing climate change advocates to mass-murderers <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/ipcc-temp.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The Heartland Institute has lost two corporate supporters since it unveiled a billboard campaign that compared those who accept the science of climate change to mass murderer Ted Kaczynski also known as the Unabomber. Yesterday, State Farm Insurance confirmed it was severing ties with the group, while on Sunday, Diageo, a major alcoholic drink company, announced it was also cutting its support of the conservative think tank. Even before this, General Motors (GM) cut ties with the group over its climate stance. The exodus of the three corporate supporters has lost the Heartland Institute an estimated $180,000 for 2012, according to fundraising documents leaked to the media. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9483 2012-05-07T12:12:00Z 2012-05-08T17:08:56Z Fallout for Heartland Institute after it likens those who accept climate change to 'murderers' and 'madmen' According to the Heartland Institute, a conservative think tank, those who accept the science of climate change are 'on the radical fringe' with the movements most 'prominent advocates' being 'murderers, tyrants, and madmen.' The Heartland Institute's statements came as it launched a billboard campaign featuring notorious mass-murderer, Ted Kaczynski also known as the Unabomber, on a billboard in Chicago that read 'I still believe in Global Warming? Do you?' The Kaczynski billboard remained live for 24 hours before widespread condemnation, including from the Heartland Institute's own supporters, pushed the group to pull the billboard. It has now suspended the short-lived campaign which was also going to feature similar billboards with Fidel Castro, Osama Bin Laden, and hostage-taker James J. Lee. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9342 2012-04-02T14:03:00Z 2012-04-02T14:22:54Z General Motors cuts funding to Heartland Institute due to climate change denialism After being outed as a financial contributor to the conservative advocacy group Heartland Institute, known for its denial of global climate change, General Motors has faced harsh criticism from environmentalists. The car company, which is pushing its new all-electric model, the Chevy Volt, has now announced it will no longer be contributing to the Heartland Institute. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9285 2012-03-20T15:24:00Z 2012-03-20T15:32:15Z 2010, not 1998, warmest year on record An updated temperature analysis by the Met Office and the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit has confirmed that 2010, not 1998, was the warmest year since record keeping began in the late 19th Century. The new analysis adds in temperature data from 400 stations across northern Canada, Russia, and the Arctic, which had been left out of the previous analysis. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9061 2012-02-06T14:11:00Z 2012-02-06T15:53:31Z Wall Street Journal climate op-ed: the "equivalent of dentists practicing cardiology" Climate scientists have struck back at the Wall Street Journal after it published an op-ed authored by 16 mostly non-climatologists arguing that global warming was not an urgent concern. The response letter, entitled Check With Climate Scientists for Views on Climate, responds that the Wall Street Journal should seek input on global warming from climate scientists. Six of the 16 authors who published the original article have ties to Exxon Mobil and their professions range from engineers to astronauts. In turn the letter to Wall Street Journal was signed by 38 well-noted climatologists. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9036 2012-01-31T20:17:00Z 2012-01-31T20:36:55Z Wall Street Journal under attack for climate op-ed The Wall Street Journal is under attack for publishing an op-ed attacking climate science last Friday, while turning down another op-ed explaining climate change and signed by 255 researchers with the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, which was eventually published in the journal <i>Science</i>. The op-ed last Friday first garnered attention because it was signed by 16 scientists, however other journalists have shown that most of these signatories are not climatologists (the list includes an astronaut, a physician, and an airplane engineer), many are well-known deniers, and at least six have been tied to the fossil fuels industry. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8801 2011-12-05T21:19:00Z 2011-12-05T21:19:13Z At least 74 percent of current warming caused by us A new methodology to tease out how much current climate change is linked to human activities has added to the consensus that behind global warming is us. The study, published in Nature Geoscience found that humans have caused at least three-quarters (74 percent) of current warming, while also determining that warming has actually been slowed down by atmospheric aerosols, including some pollutants, which reflect sunlight back into space. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8583 2011-10-23T14:06:00Z 2011-10-28T20:55:11Z Independent climate study comes to same conclusion as world's climatologists An 'independent' climate study known as the Berkeley Earth Project has re-confirmed decades of research on climate change. Undertaken largely by physicists, the study, which approached temperature data in a new way, confirms the long-standing science behind a warming world, while negating a number of criticisms put forward by climate skeptics. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/8213 2011-07-28T14:04:00Z 2011-07-29T17:26:38Z Adaptation, justice and morality in a warming world <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/kenya_elf_0143a.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>If last year was the first in which climate change impacts became apparent worldwide&#8212;unprecedented drought and fires in Russia, megaflood in Pakistan, record drought in the Amazon, deadly floods in South America, plus record highs all over the place&#8212;this may be the year in which the American public sees climate change as no longer distant and abstract, but happening at home. With burning across the southwest, record drought in Texas, majors flooding in the Midwest, heatwaves everywhere, its becoming harder and harder to ignore the obvious. Climate change consultant and blogger, Brian Thomas, says these patterns are pushing 'prominent scientists' to state 'more explicitly that the pattern we're seeing today shows a definite climate change link,' but that it may not yet change the public perception in the US. Jeremy Hance