Date: 31/12/19 Matt Ridley, Reaction
What readers of newspapers and listeners to the radio do not see is the sustained and deliberate pressure put on editors to toe the alarmist line on climate change.

I was asked to appear on the Today programme on Saturday 28 December by the guest editor, Charles Moore, and made the case that the BBC’s coverage of climate change is unbalanced. Despite a lot of interruption by Nick Robinson I just about got across the point that the BBC uncritically relays any old rubbish about the environment so long as it is alarmist, even if it comes from an uninformed source like the leader of Extinction Rebellion or falls well outside the range of the scientific consensus that we are on course for a warming of 1-4 degrees this century. But the Corporation has strict rules about letting guests on who might say that the climate change threat is being exaggerated, even if their view and their facts fall within that consensus range.
The BBC now has a rule that if by some oversight a lukewarmer or sceptic does get on the air, he or she must be followed by a corrective interview from a scientist, setting the record straight. Sure enough I was followed by Sir David King, former government chief science advisor. (He’s a qualified chemist, while I am a qualified biologist.)
I sat there open-mouthed as he beautifully demonstrated my point with one exaggeration after another. He said that Europe’s dash for diesel had nothing to do with greens, when green pressure groups pushed actively for it. He said that we will see 1-2 metres of sea level rise this century, when the current rate of rise is 3.4 millimetres a year with no acceleration (or 0.3 metres per century). He said that all of Greenland’s ice cap might melt and could cause 5-6 metres of sea level rise, though at current rates of melting, Greenland’s ice cap will be 99% intact in 2100. He said that wild fires were being caused by trees dying out because of rising temperatures, rather than a failure to manage increasingly luxuriant vegetation in fire-risk areas leading to a build up of tinder. He said scientists are agreed that Calcutta will have to be moved, when the Ganges delta is actually expanding in area, not shrinking.
What readers of newspapers and listeners to the radio do not see is the sustained and deliberate pressure put on editors to toe the alarmist line on climate change. Take Bob Ward, who works at the London School of Economics, where his salary is paid by a billionaire, Jeremy Grantham. Ward is not employed to do research, but to “communicate” climate science. He chooses to interpret this as a duty to put pressure on the media to censor people like me. He complains to the Times almost every time I mention climate change, often getting his facts wrong, and kicked up a huge fuss when the Times, after publishing half a dozen of his letters declined to publish another one.
Recently he has taken to complaining to the Independent Press Standards Organisation. Whenever Charles Moore, James Delingpole, David Rose, the late Christopher Booker, I or any other journalist writes an article arguing against exaggerated climate alarmism in one of the newspapers self-regulated by IPSO, he sends in a detailed and lengthy complaint. He never complains about the myriad alarmist mistakes that appear all the time like articles saying that “the science” tells us six billion people are going to die soon because of climate change.
IPSO was invented, remember, to give redress for people whose private lives were invaded by journalists, yet Ward is never complaining on his own behalf (though he probably will after this piece). To give one example, I wrote an article in the Times in 2017 about a scientist whistleblower in the United States who said his colleagues had deliberately distorted a data set to make climate change look more alarming.
Although all of this took place in America and had nothing to do with British scientists, let alone Ward himself, and although the scientist in question was happy with my article, Ward sent IPSO 11 separate lengthy complaints about supposed inaccuracies in my article. I responded with a very lengthy reply, which took two weeks to compile. IPSO asked him to respond to my response, which he did at great length. He raised several new issues that had not been in the original article. IPSO asked me to respond. I did so, at great length and effort. Ward responded a third time. (Remember: this is his day job.) This time, six months into the argument, I and the Times refused to reply and instead asked IPSO to rule on the matter. They did so and quickly found in my favour, dismissing all 11 of Mr Ward’s complaints. Every single one.
In 2019 he tried it again over an article of mine in the Telegraph about how giving up meat would make little difference to emissions, but this time IPSO rejected all of his complaints without even asking me for a response.
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I actually think that the organs of state propaganda, such as the BBC, CBC, ABC, etc., are useful for determining the real truth, or story. Whatever they tell us, believe the obverse.
Ridley: ‘the BBC and others have such a cosy relationship with the alarmist green pressure groups (the fraternisation on Twitter is in plain sight) that they keep making mistakes.’
I guess this disease has taken over all the western government medias such as the BBC, ABC in Oz, CBC in Canada.
They don’ t need to take heed, as they’re funded anyway. So they only mind the ‘tolerant left’ as journalists tend to be interested in lecturing others on politics.
Re BBC
Don’t throw out the baby with the bath water. BBC has produces many wonderful programs. I recall one night in a tent in the desert of Darfur. A staff member had a tiny radio. We listened to a very crackly BBC world service.
Being public funded BBC can be influenced by politics and has some responsibilities. We have the same situation with Radio New Zealand. They are as woke as the rest of them but I can legitimately make complaints, through politicians if necessary. They are a good target for our cause.
BBC is a deeply entrenched British institution of the kind that the classic conservative should try to preserve. Keep up the pressure for internal change. That’s the key IMO.
Public funded media have another very important function as the voice for authorities during a genuine catastrophe such as the Christchurch earthquake. When something big goes down here everyone tunes to RNZ. This is why over-air radio must be maintained. I read somewhere that a Scandinavian country (Norway?) had closed down all radio, relying entirely on cellphone and internet coverage. That is crazy. Don’t throw away your radio.
Cheers
M
I agree that Radio is important but the BBC is not a particularly useful for consensus. The commercial stations have proved resilience and now offer a fair range of political views (LBC). On the other hand the BBC distort the news to such an extent (Climate-gate) + political bias that a Royal Warrant (or Charter) seems perverse (when many other British independent companies are more suitable and carry more weight. LBC diverse range of interesting and counter political views. You cannot say that about the BBC. The BBC is beyond reform, but cutting its funding and putting VAT as a tax on its media subcriptions (like NetFlix or Sky) model and asking it to pay ‘Corporation’ Tax’ (as Amazon or NetFlix) is a step in the right direction. Public finding should have been removed from the BBC twenty years ago.
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Despite all the hype of the “threat” of global warming / climate change, the bottom line is that most people are unwilling to make the massive sacrifices in their lifestyle to give up completely on fossil fuels in order to avoid some future disaster, of which they see no evidence in their daily lives. Ask anyone over 30 years old who lives near a coast to say whether they have noticed the sea level rising over the last 20 years, and they will probably say they didn’t notice anything because the difference between high and low tide is much greater than any difference they remember from 20 years ago. Even at the same location, the difference between high and low tide depends strongly on the phase of the moon within the same month, so how would anyone notice a one-inch variation in the average over 20 years? Most people have no desire to go to Greenland or Antarctica twice to see whether the ice caps are melting–they are frozen wastelands largely unfit for human habitation.
The same goes for the average temperature on land–in temperate latitudes air temperatures can increase by 60 to 80 F from January to July, and decrease by the same amount from July to the following January, so who would notice a difference in the average of a few tenths of a degree over 20 years? There are year-to-year variations, but someone who endured a snowy winter last year might welcome a mild winter this year.
When the AGW alarmists claim that temperatures will rise by X degrees or sea levels will rise by Y meters by the year 2100, the point should be made that those predictions are based on computer models, which over the past 40 years have over-predicted the actual temperature rise by a factor of 2 or 3 (depending on the model). From a scientific point of view (based on experimental data), a model that failed to predict the past cannot be trusted to predict the future. What, if any, changes in the weather have people observed over the past 20, 30, or 40 years where they live? If not much, why should they worry about climate change?
Al Gore’s misleadingly-named movie “An Inconvenient Truth” tried to scare people into thinking that half of Florida would be underwater if sea levels rose by 20 feet (about 6 meters), but at the current 3 mm/yr, it would take 2,000 years for sea levels to rise 6 meters, when everyone alive now will be long dead and gone. Historians have documented that the climate in Europe was warmer in AD 1 to 400 and 1000 to 1350 than it is now, each warn period followed by a sharp cooling of the climate. If the climate has cooled twice in the past 2,000 years due to natural causes (unrelated to CO2), there is strong reason to believe that it will cool again during the next 2,000 years, which would lead to increased glaciation and lower sea levels, so that Al Gore’s Florida drowning may never occur.