But every now and then a respected
scientist pops up with a different theory. A great example is Wei-Hock
“Willie” Soon, an aeronautical engineer who works for the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. He believes climate change
is the result of variations in solar activity rather than humans pouring
carbon dioxide into our atmosphere.
Soon’s
theory has made him the darling of conservative media (which often
misidentifies him as an astrophysicist) and conservative politicians
like Sen. James Inhofe, current chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. They point to Soon as evidence that there is a real controversy over what’s causing climate change.
But it turns out Soon’s research has been bought and paid for by the fossil fuel industry — including the Koch brothers.
The New York Times
reports that not only have corporations like Exxon and Southern Company
Services — which owns many coal plants — paid for Soon’s research, but
so have organizations with deep ties to the petroleum industry, like the
American Petroleum Institute, the Charles G. Koch Foundation, and
Donors Trust, which funnels anonymous donors to conservative causes.
Corporate funding of scientific research
isn’t unusual, but what’s different in this case is Soon’s direct
acknowledgement that he would produce specific results for his funding.
In his proposals for funding, he referred to papers submitted to
journals and testimony before Congress as “deliverables” — what his
funders would get for their cash.
Just
as troublesome, Soon didn’t disclose his dependence on petrodollars to
the journals where he published, a clear breach of the ethics governing
scientific research. The journals are investigating, as are his
employers at Harvard and the Smithsonian.
The media commonly cites the statistic
that 97 percent of scientists agree that man-made climate change is a
reality. Now we know where the the other 3 percent come from — the oil
industry buys them off.
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