Difference between revisions of "Bjorn Lomborg"

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'''Bjorn Lomborg''' is associate professor of statistics in the Department of Political Science at the University of Aarhus, Denmark. His formal education is political science. He earned his Ph.D. in game theory.  From 2002 - 2004 he was head of the [[Environmental Assessment Institute]]. In 2004, following the [[Copenhagen Consensus]], he resigned the post to return to academia. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,12374,1245140,00.html]
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'''Bjorn Lomborg''' is associate professor of statistics in the Department of Political Science at the University of Aarhus, Denmark; his books have been "hugely influential in providing cover to politicians, climate-change deniers, and corporations that don't want any part of controls on greenhouse emissions".<ref name=begley>{{cite web
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|publisher=Newsweek
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|title=Debunking Lomborg, the Climate-Change Skeptic
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|url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/233942
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|accessdate=2010-02-24
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|author=Sharon Begley
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|date=2010-02-22
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|quote=Friel's conclusion, as per his book's title, is that Lomborg is "a performance artist disguised as an academic."
 +
}}</ref>
  
== The Skeptical Environmentalist ==
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Lomborg is not a climate scientist or economist and has published little or no peer-reviewed research on environmental or climate policy.  His extensive and extensively documented<ref name=karefog>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Lomborg Errors website
 +
|title=Lomborg Errors
 +
|url=http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/
 +
|accessdate=2010-11-14
 +
|author=Kare Fog
 +
|date=unknown
 +
|quote=because the errors seem not to be inadvertent, but to follow a general pattern, they give a bias in a certain direction, probably an intended bias. If the errors remain uncommented, the readers of Lomborg´s books will be misled in this distinct direction . There are many examples where the misleading seems to be deliberate
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}}</ref>,<ref>{{cite web
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|publisher=Yale University Press
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|title=The Lomborg Deception: Setting the Record Straight About Global Warming
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|url=http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300161038
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|accessdate=2010-11-06
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|author=Friel, Howard
 +
|date=2010-03-01
 +
}}</ref> errors and misrepresentations, which are aimed at a lay audience, "follow a general pattern"<ref name=karefog/> of minimizing the need to cut carbon emissions.
  
In 2001, Cambridge University Press published an English translation of his book, titled ''The Skeptical Environmentalist: measuring the real state of the world''.
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==Essential argument and rebuttal==
 +
Lomborg's essential argument is that we should be directing our resources toward fighting poverty now, rather than acting now to lessen future climate change, since "[the future] larger economy will allow future generations to deal with an exacerbated climate problem"<ref name="rr2011-0716">{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Rabett Run
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|title=The Models Suck: Part I
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|url=http://rabett.blogspot.com/2011/07/models-suck-part-i.html
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|accessdate=2011-07-16
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|author=Eli Rabett (pseudonym)
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|date=2011-07-15
 +
}}</ref>.  But this argument ignores the likelihood that "if climate change limits economic growth, there ''is'' no larger economy, and even if there is a larger economy, it may not be enough to deal with the chaos associated with climate disruption. The Dark Ages in Europe were not nearly as pleasant as Roman times."<ref name="rr2011-0716"/>
 +
==2010==
 +
===Book and film===
 +
Lomborg is editor of a 2010 book titled ''Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits'' (see "Books" section below).
  
In it Lomborg argued that a statistical analysis of key global environmental indicators revealed that while there were environmental problems they were not as serious as was popularly believed.  "The world is not without problems, but on almost all accounts, things are going better and they are likely to continue to do so into the future. The facts and information presented here should give us an opportunity to set free our unproductive worries and allow us to focus on the important issues, so that we may indeed help make an even better world for tomorrow".
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[[Cool It (movie) | Cool It]], a film about Lomborg and his ideas, was released in November 2010A box office failure<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Box Office Mojo
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|title=Cool It (2010)
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|url=http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=main&id=coolit.htm
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|accessdate=2010-12-04
 +
|author=none
 +
|date=2010-12-02
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|quote=Domestic Total as of Dec. 2, 2010: $58,408
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}}</ref>, it still has influence:
 +
<blockquote>"A film is a ticket to widespread media attention, far more than even a new book provides.  For instance, the movie means that credulous reviewers who don’t follow the energy and climate debate closely will write columns that millions will read...compared to the...hundreds that are flocking to the film.
 +
The movie also gives newspapers a ‘reason’ to run more disinformation..."<ref>{{cite web
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|publisher=Climate Progress
 +
|title=Climate Science Rapid Response Team debunks Bjorn Lomborg’s Washington Post op-ed
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|url=http://climateprogress.org/2010/11/22/bjorn-lomborg-debunked-op-ed-cool-it/
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|accessdate=2010-12-04
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|author=Joe Romm
 +
|date=2010-11-22
 +
}}</ref></blockquote>
  
According to the frontspiece in Lomborg's book his only published work is in "game theory and computer simulations".  
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===Op-Ed debunked===
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Claims made by Lomborg in a November 2010 Op-Ed in the Washington Post<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Washington Post
 +
|title=Bjorn Lomborg - Cost-effective ways to address climate change
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|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/16/AR2010111604973.html
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|accessdate=2010-12-04
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|author=Bjorn Lomborg
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|date=2010-11-17
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}}</ref> were subsequently debunked by the [[Climate Science Rapid Response Team]], "a scientist-run initiative to link top climate scientists with the media".<ref>{{cite web
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|publisher=Wonk Room
 +
|title=Climate Science Rapid Response Team Debunks Bjorn Lomborg
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|url=http://wonkroom.thinkprogress.org/2010/11/22/scientists-debunk-lomborg/
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|accessdate=2010-12-04
 +
|author=Brad Johnson
 +
|date=2010-11-22
 +
|quote=Because Washington Post editorial editor [[Fred Hiatt]] did not bother to fact-check Lomborg’s column...We chose to test the new Climate Science Rapid Response Team, a scientist-run initiative to link top climate scientists with the media...we submitted questions about Lomborg’s claims to the team...[and] received comprehensive answers from three top climate scientists...[who] independently confirmed that Bjorn Lomborg had misrepresented the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) report.}}</ref>
  
Australian National University academic, John Quiggin, writing in the ''Australian Financial Review'' in March 2002, pointed out the number of refereed publications Lomborg has produced on statistical or other scientific analysis of environmental issues "is zero".
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===Announced shift in views; little change in bottom line===
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''(for more information on how Lomborg's views have changed, see the section "Shift in views over time" below)''
  
In particular, Lomborg argues in his book that while global warming is occurring, projections of its magnitude "are rather unrealistically pessimistic" and that "the typical cure of early and radical fossil fuel cutbacks is way worse than the original affliction and moreover its total impact will not pose a devastating problem for our future".
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Until 2010, Lomborg used cost-benefit analyses to suggest we should delay climate action until after tending to other environmental or public health problems, and was noted as a leading skeptic on significant climate change action. In Fall 2010 in his new book<ref name=romm>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Climate Progress
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|title=Lomborg flip-flop: 'Climate change is undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today'
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|url=http://climateprogress.org/2010/08/31/lomborg-new-book-smart-solutions-to-climate-change-debunk-errors-flaw/
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|accessdate=2010-11-06
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|author=Joe Romm
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|date=2010-08-31
 +
}}</ref>, he switched to supporting immediate action against climate change<ref>Juliette Jowit "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/aug/30/bjorn-lomborg-climate-change-u-turn "Bjørn Lomborg: $100bn a year needed to fight climate change"] The Guardian, August 30, 2010.</ref>, saying "we all need to start seriously focusing, right now, on the most effective ways to fix global warming".  However, his basic prescription hasn't changed, it's still to levy a small tax on carbon emissions to raise funds for energy R&D - but now his proposed CO2 tax is $7/ton not $2, and R&D budget $100 billion/year not 25 - but it's still considered "alarmingly risky" and insufficient to reduce GHG emissions enough.<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=The Guardian
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|title=Letters: Still wary of Bjørn Lomborg's pronouncements on climate change
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|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/sep/02/climate-change-bjorn-lomborg
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|accessdate=2010-11-07
 +
|author=Dr Alex Bowen, Dr Simon Dietz, Dimitri Zenghelis and Bob Ward of Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
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|date=2010-09-02
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|quote=Dr Lomborg last year began to call for an investment of $100bn per year on research and development for low-carbon technologies, instead of the $25bn he was advocating 18 months ago. He now proposes that this should be raised through a carbon tax of $7 per tonne of carbon dioxide, rather than the $2 per tonne for which he previously argued.
  
Despite this, his book received widespread and largely favourable coverage as a critique of global environmental policies and priorities. Much of the commentary embraced Lomborg's claim that scientists and environmentalists were being unduly pessimistic and making claims that were not based on good science. Routinely, journalists reported that Lomborg had -- before he undertook the research for his book -- been a supporter of Greenpeace. Greenpeace has no record of Lomborg ever being actively involved in the organisation. When challenged on this point on ABC Radio National's ''Earthbeat'' Lomborg said "I'm a suburban kind of Greenpeace member, your stereotypical person who contributes and nothing else."  
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However, his strategy is alarmingly risky – invest heavily in R&D and hope that this alone will keep atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases low enough to avoid the risk of serious and damaging impacts from climate change. This might work, but it might not.
 +
 
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A more robust approach to managing the risks of climate change would be not only to invest in R&D, but also to use a carbon tax (or cap-and-trade) to discourage greenhouse gas emissions in the short run. The latter, not raising revenue, would be the primary purpose of introducing a carbon price. But to encourage enough emissions cuts in the next few years to keep greenhouse gases at low enough atmospheric concentrations, a carbon price considerably higher than Dr Lomborg's $7 per tonne is required.
 +
 
 +
We welcome the fact that Dr Lomborg has implicitly acknowledged that his previous arguments about climate change were flawed, but it would be wise to remain wary of his pronouncements...
 +
}}</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Australian Consensus Centre==
 +
On 2nd April 2015 an Australian Consensus Centre was contracted to be established at the University of Western Australia, with Bjorn Lomborg being made an Adjunct Professor.<ref>University of WA news, 2 April 2015 ''[http://www.news.uwa.edu.au/201504027455/events/new-economic-prioritisation-research-centre-uwa New economic prioritisation research centre at UWA]'' Accessed 29 May 2015</ref> It was then discovered that this centre was being funded by the Australian Government for $4 million.<ref>John Englart, Nofibs.com.au, 17 April 2015 ''[http://nofibs.com.au/2015/04/17/australian-government-funds-4-million-sweet-deal-for-climate-contrarian-bjorn-lomborg-takvera/ Australian Government funds $4 million sweet deal for #climate contrarian Bjorn Lomborg – @Takvera]'' Accessed 29 May 2015</ref>
 +
 
 +
Strong protests from Academic staff and students of the University resulted in the University Vice-chancellor cancelling the contract to establish the centre at the university.<ref>Graham Readfearn, Desmogblog.com, Thursday, May 28, 2015  ''[http://www.desmogblog.com/2015/05/28/climate-science-deniers-and-free-market-activists-backing-bjorn-lomborg The Climate Science Deniers And Free Market Activists Backing Bjorn Lomborg]'' Accessed 29 May 2015</ref>
 +
 
 +
At the end of May 2015,  [[Tim Andrews]] authorised for the free market and climate denial oriented [[Australian Taxpayers' Alliance]] a half page advert in The Australian newspaper arguing the cancellation of Bjorn Lomborg's Australian Consensus Centre at the University of Western Australia was academic censorship.<ref>See a copy of the advert at Desmogblog ''[http://www.desmogblog.com/sites/beta.desmogblog.com/files/ATA%20lomborg%20ad.jpg Stop Academic Censorship]'' Accessed 29 May 2015</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Lomborg vs. experts on geoengineering==
 +
Lomborg also advocates geoengineering, despite the concerns of heavy hitters. 
 +
 
 +
Geoengineering research proponent [[Ken Caldeira]] has said "the vision of Lomborg’s Climate Consensus is “a dystopic world out of a science fiction story... Geoengineering is not an alternative to carbon emissions reductions ... If emissions keep going up and up, and you use geoengineering as a way to deal with it, it’s pretty clear the endgame of that process is pretty ugly.”"<ref name=romm/>. 
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 +
Presidential Science and Technology advisor John Holdren has said "The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear to be afflicted with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high likelihood of serious side effects."<ref name=rommgeo>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Climate Progress
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|title=Caldeira calls Lomborg’s vision "a dystopic world out of a science fiction story"
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|url=http://climateprogress.org/2010/11/15/exclusive-redux-caldeira-calls-lomborg%e2%80%99s-vision-%e2%80%9ca-dystopic-world-out-of-a-science-fiction-story%e2%80%9d/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+climateprogress%2FlCrX+%28Climate+Progress%29
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|accessdate=2010-11-16
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|author=Joe Romm
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|date=2010-11-15
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|quote=John Holdren resasserted in 2009 of strategies such as space mirrors or aerosol injection, "The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear to be afflicted with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high likelihood of serious side effects."
 +
Second, of course, those ’solutions’ do nothing to stop the consequences of ocean acidification, which recent studies suggest will be devastating all by itself (see Geological Society: Acidifying oceans spell marine biological meltdown "by end of century").
 +
Third, a major analysis in Science this year by leading experts on volcanoes and/or climate - Alan Robock, Martin Bunzl, Ben Kravitz, and Georgiy L. Stenchikov - "A Test for Geoengineering?" ... concluded: "Stratospheric geoengineering cannot be tested in the atmosphere without full-scale implementation."
 +
}}</ref>. 
 +
 
 +
Joe Romm points out that geoengineering "’solutions’ do nothing to stop the consequences of ocean acidification, which recent studies suggest will be devastating all by itself". and he notes that "a major analysis in Science this year by leading experts on volcanoes and/or climate - Alan Robock, Martin Bunzl, Ben Kravitz, and Georgiy L. Stenchikov - "A Test for Geoengineering?" ... concluded: "Stratospheric geoengineering cannot be tested in the atmosphere without full-scale implementation.""<ref name=rommgeo/>
 +
 
 +
== Background ==
 +
 
 +
Lomborg earned his Ph.D. in political science - specifically, game theory - at the University of Copenhagen in 1994.<ref>[PhD information from Wikipedia]</ref>.  He got an M.A. in political science in 1991<ref>{{cite web |title=Biography - Bjørn Lomborg |url=http://www.lomborg.com/about/biography/ |accessdate=2009-12-04}}</ref> from University of Aarhus, with the thesis "An evolution of Cooperation"; it is unclear whether he has a bachelor's degree.<ref>[email from Lomborg associate Zsuzsa Horvath dated 2009-12-02</ref>.   
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 +
From 2002 - 2004 he was head of the [[Environmental Assessment Institute]].  In 2004, following the [[Copenhagen Consensus]], he resigned the post to return to academia. <ref>{{cite web |title=Critic of Kyoto pledge quits as green adviser |publisher=The Guardian |author=Jan Olsen |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,12374,1245140,00.html |date=2004-06-23}}</ref>
 +
==Scientific papers==
 +
Lomborg's only published work is in "game theory and computer simulations", according to the ''Skeptical Environmentalist'' frontispiece.  Australian National University academic John Quiggin, writing in the ''Australian Financial Review'' in March 2002, pointed out the number of refereed publications Lomborg has produced on statistical or other scientific analysis of environmental issues "is zero".
 +
 
 +
==Shift in views over time==
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Kåre Fog notes that Lomborg's argument has shifted over time, from:<ref name=shift>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Lomborg Errors
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|title=Hidden Agenda
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|url=http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/Hiddenagenda.htm
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|accessdate=2010-11-14
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|author=Kåre Fog
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|date=date unknown
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}}</ref>,<ref name=quotes>{{cite web
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|publisher=Lomborg Errors
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|url=http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/Attitudestoglobalwarming.htm
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|accessdate=2010-11-14
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|author=Kåre Fog
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|date=date unknown
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}}</ref><blockquote>"1) There is no problem. <br/><small>''[Jan. 1998: "The greenhouse effect is extremely doubtful"<ref name=quotes/>]''</small>
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<br/>
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2) If there is a problem, it is only minor. <br/><small>''[Sept 1998: "There is no doubt that mankind has influenced the CO2 content of the atmosphere and is well on his way to double it. But it is still not clear whether this will lead to severe temperature rises."; Sept 2001: "There is no doubt that mankind has influenced and is still increasing atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and that this will influence temperature. Yet, we need to separate hyperbole from realities..."<ref name=quotes/>]''</small>
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<br/>
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3) If it is not minor, it will pay better to remedy other problems that are even larger. <small>''[June 2004: "Copenhagen Consensus...organised by...Bjorn Lomborg...recommended that global governments spend money on combating HIV/AIDS before tackling issues such as climate change."<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=New Zealand Herald News
 +
|title=AIDS 'bigger problem than global warming'
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|url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=3571345
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|accessdate=2010-11-15
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|author=Paula Oliver
 +
|date=2004-06-09
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|quote=A "dream team" of the world's top economists has recommended that global governments spend money on combating HIV/AIDS before tackling issues such as climate change.
 +
The economist panel, which included three Nobel laureates, met in Copenhagen last week to decide on the 10 biggest challenges facing the world.
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The conference, known as the Copenhagen Consensus, was organised by Denmark's Environmental Assessment Institute - led by controversial and outspoken critic of the Kyoto Protocol Bjorn Lomborg.
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}}</ref>; Aug. 2007: "Doing too much about [climate change] means we are focusing too much effort on climate change and forgetting all the other things that we have a responsibility to deal with, like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and malnutrition. If we spend too much time and resources focusing on climate change, then we do the future a disservice" <ref>{{cite web
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|publisher=Salon.com
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|title=Bjørn Lomborg feels a chill
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|url=http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/29/bjorn_lomborg/print.html
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|accessdate=2010-11-14
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|author=Kevin Burger
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|date=2007-08-29
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}}</ref>]''</small>
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<br/>
 +
4) If it pays to resolve the climate change problem, this should not be done by reducing CO2 emissions, but rather by adaptation and by applying geo-engineering.  <br/><small>''[date/quote/ref needed]''</small>
 +
<br/>
 +
5) If adaptation and geo-engineering is not enough, then [mandated] reductions in CO2 emissions should be very modest, and the main emphasis should be on research to find better alternative energy sources, rather than those that could be implemented right now. <br/><small>''[Oct 2010: Global warming is "undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today" and "a challenge humanity must confront". . . "Investing $100bn annually would mean that we could essentially resolve the climate change problem by the end of this century." <ref name=quotes/>]''</small>
 +
<br/>
 +
<br/>
 +
These shifting arguments over the years look like a tactical retreat. In every case, the conclusion is ...the best that the fossil fuel industry could obtain..."<ref name=shift/></blockquote>
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 +
==Books==
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=== 2001: The Skeptical Environmentalist ===
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 +
In 2001, Cambridge University Press published an English translation of  ''The Skeptical Environmentalist: measuring the real state of the world''. In it Lomborg argued that a statistical analysis of key global environmental indicators revealed that while there were environmental problems they were not as serious as was popularly believed:<blockquote>The world is not without problems, but on almost all accounts, things are going better and they are likely to continue to do so into the future. The facts and information presented here should give us an opportunity to set free our unproductive worries and allow us to focus on the important issues, so that we may indeed help make an even better world for tomorrow".</blockquote>
 +
 
 +
In particular, Lomborg argued that while global warming is occurring, projections of its magnitude "are rather unrealistically pessimistic" and that "the typical cure of early and radical fossil fuel cutbacks is way worse than the original affliction and moreover its total impact will not pose a devastating problem for our future".
 +
====Uncritical media acceptance====
 +
''The Skeptical Environmentalist'' received widespread and largely favourable coverage as a critique of global environmental policies and priorities. Much of the commentary embraced Lomborg's claim that scientists and environmentalists were being unduly pessimistic and making claims that were not based on good science.  
 +
=====The 'lapsed environmentalist' narrative =====
 +
Routinely, journalists reported that Lomborg had -- before he undertook the research for his book -- been a supporter of Greenpeace. However, Greenpeace has no record of Lomborg ever being actively involved in the organisation. When challenged on this point on ABC Radio National's ''Earthbeat'' Lomborg said "I'm a suburban kind of Greenpeace member, your stereotypical person who contributes and nothing else."  
  
 
Participating in a panel on the ''Earthbeat'' program, Dr [[Tom Burke]], a member of the Executive Committee of [[Green Alliance]] in the UK and an environmental adviser to [[Rio Tinto]] and [[BP]], challenged the suggestion that that made Lomborg an environmentalist: "That doesn't make you an environmentalist Bjorn, I mean that would make me a statistician because I've done some calculations".
 
Participating in a panel on the ''Earthbeat'' program, Dr [[Tom Burke]], a member of the Executive Committee of [[Green Alliance]] in the UK and an environmental adviser to [[Rio Tinto]] and [[BP]], challenged the suggestion that that made Lomborg an environmentalist: "That doesn't make you an environmentalist Bjorn, I mean that would make me a statistician because I've done some calculations".
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====Rejection by scientists====
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=====''Scientific American'' critique=====
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The extensive and uncritical acceptance of Lomborg's claims prompted a reaction from the scientific community. In January 2002 ''Scientific American'''s editor, John Rennie, wrote the preface to a ten page critique written by four specialists.  Rennie commented that "the errors described here, however, show that in its purpose of describing the real state of the world, the book is a failure". <ref name="sciam">{{cite web|url=http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=misleading-math-about-the |accessdate=2013-10-20 |title=Misleading Math about the Earth: Scientific American |date=2013-10-20 |description=Science defends itself against  The Skeptical Environmentalist }}</ref>
  
The extensive and uncritical acceptance of Lomborg's claims prompted a reaction from many in the scientific community. In January 2002 ''Scientific American'''s editor, John Rennie, wrote the preface to a ten page critique written by four specialists.  Rennie commented that "the errors described here, however, show that in its purpose of describing the real state of the world, the book is a failure". [http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D47-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000&catID=2]
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When Lomborg reproduced the ''Scientific American'' critiques on his website with his responses interleaved, the magazine threatened to sue him for ''copyright infringement''. Lomborg withdrew the file from his website but it was later re-published on the [[Patrick Moore]]'s website. ''Scientific American'' stated that the unauthorised reproduction was damaging its ability to sell copyrighted material, while Moore portrayed Lomborg as being persecuted for his views.
 
 
When Lomborg reproduced the ''Scientific American'' critiques on his [http://www.lomborg.com website] with his responses interleaved, the magazine threatened to sue him for copyright infringement. Lomborg withdrew the file from his website but it was later re-published on the [[Patrick Moore]]'s website. ''Scientific American'' stated that the unauthorised reproduction was damaging its ability to sell copyrighted material, while Moore portrayed Lomborg as being persecuted for his views.
 
  
 
John P. Holdren, author of one of the rebuttal articles in ''Scientific American'', noted:
 
John P. Holdren, author of one of the rebuttal articles in ''Scientific American'', noted:
  
:"Bjørn Lomborg has posted on his Web page a long response to the critiques (http://www.lomborg.com/critique.htm)that appeared in Scientific American of four of the chapters in his book,''The Skeptical Environmentalist'', including my critique of his chapter on energy. No part of my critique escapes rebuttal. Perhaps Lomborg felt obliged to use all of the submissions he received in response to the appeal for help he broadcast to a long e-mail list after the ''Scientific American'' critiques appeared. It is instructive that he apparently did not feel he could manage an adequate response by himself. (In this, at least, he was correct. But he could not manage it with help, either.) Just as the book itself betrays the seeming inability of its author to discriminate sensible arguments from nonsensical ones, so also does the posted response to my critique suggest that Lomborg just tossed in, uncritically, whatever replies popped into his head or into his e-mail 'in' box."[http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000DC658-9373-1CDA-B4A8809EC588EEDF]
+
:"Bjørn Lomborg has posted on his Web page a long response to the critiques that appeared in ''Scientific American'' of four of the chapters in his book, ''The Skeptical Environmentalist'', including my critique of his chapter on energy. No part of my critique escapes rebuttal. Perhaps Lomborg felt obliged to use all of the submissions he received in response to the appeal for help he broadcast to a long e-mail list after the ''Scientific American'' critiques appeared. It is instructive that he apparently did not feel he could manage an adequate response by himself. (In this, at least, he was correct. But he could not manage it with help, either.) Just as the book itself betrays the seeming inability of its author to discriminate sensible arguments from nonsensical ones, so also does the posted response to my critique suggest that Lomborg just tossed in, uncritically, whatever replies popped into his head or into his e-mail 'in' box."<ref name="sciam" />
  
:"In a "Dear Sir or Madam" broadcast e-mail sent out by Lomborg on December 18, he wrote, inter alia, "Naturally, I plan to write a rebuttal to be put on my web-site. However, I would also love your input to the issues -- maybe you can contest some of the arguments in the SA pieces, alone or together with other academics. Perhaps you have good ideas to counter a specific argument. Perhaps you know of someone else that might be ideal to talk to or get to write a counter-piece." [http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000DC658-9373-1CDA-B4A8809EC588EEDF&pageNumber=7&catID=9]
+
:"In a "Dear Sir or Madam" broadcast e-mail sent out by Lomborg on December 18, he wrote, inter alia, "Naturally, I plan to write a rebuttal to be put on my web-site. However, I would also love your input to the issues -- maybe you can contest some of the arguments in the SA pieces, alone or together with other academics. Perhaps you have good ideas to counter a specific argument. Perhaps you know of someone else that might be ideal to talk to or get to write a counter-piece."<ref name="sciam" />
  
Stephen Schneider, a professor in the Department of Biological Sciences and Senior Fellow at the Institute for International Studies at Stanford University, criticised Lomborg for inaccurately portraying the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and misrepresenting the Kyoto Protocol. (Schneider is also editor of Climate Change and lead author of several of the IPCC chapters and the IPCC guidance paper on uncertainties).
+
=====Schneider on misrepresentation of IPCC=====
 +
The late Dr. Stephen Schneider, professor in the Department of Biological Sciences and Senior Fellow at the Institute for International Studies at Stanford University, criticised Lomborg for inaccurately portraying the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and misrepresenting the Kyoto Protocol. (Schneider is also editor of Climate Change and lead author of several of the IPCC chapters and the IPCC guidance paper on uncertainties).
  
 
The IPCC produced a range of six equally ranked paths of climate change spanning an increase in carbon dioxide concentrations from doubling in 2100 to well beyond a tripling in the 22nd century. "Lomborg, however, dismisses all but the lowest of the scenarios," he wrote. [http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D47-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000&catID=2]
 
The IPCC produced a range of six equally ranked paths of climate change spanning an increase in carbon dioxide concentrations from doubling in 2100 to well beyond a tripling in the 22nd century. "Lomborg, however, dismisses all but the lowest of the scenarios," he wrote. [http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D47-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000&catID=2]
  
 +
Dr. Schneider also writes  "most scientists I know working on these problems are outraged by Lomborg's work and consider it to be faulty and misrepresentative of their published views. In addition to referencing a biased sample of literature that wasn't nearly broad enough, Lomborg used quotes out of context and proved numerous times that he did not fully understand the science behind climate change"<ref>"[http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Climate/Climate_Science/CliSciFrameset.html?http://stephenschneider.stanford.edu/Climate/Climate_Science/Contrarians.html]"</ref>
 +
 +
=====Raven on distortions=====
 
Dr Peter Raven, President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002 said of Lomborg: "...he's not an environmental scientist and he doesn't understand the fields that he's talking about so in that case, if you have a point to make and you want to get to that point, which is: everything's fine, everybody's wrong, there is no environmental problem, you just keep making that point. It's like a school exercise or a debating society, which really doesn't take into account the facts". [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s495345.htm]
 
Dr Peter Raven, President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002 said of Lomborg: "...he's not an environmental scientist and he doesn't understand the fields that he's talking about so in that case, if you have a point to make and you want to get to that point, which is: everything's fine, everybody's wrong, there is no environmental problem, you just keep making that point. It's like a school exercise or a debating society, which really doesn't take into account the facts". [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s495345.htm]
  
 
"Raven said that the success of Lomborg's book 'demonstrates the vulnerability of the scientific process -- which is deliberative and hypothesis driven -- to outright misrepresentation and distortion.'" [http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/02/15/MN217283.DTL]
 
"Raven said that the success of Lomborg's book 'demonstrates the vulnerability of the scientific process -- which is deliberative and hypothesis driven -- to outright misrepresentation and distortion.'" [http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/02/15/MN217283.DTL]
  
==Lomborg and the Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty==
+
=====The Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty=====
  
 
The concern over Lomborg's misrepresentation of the science was so great that three complaints were lodged with the Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty, which Lomborg describes as "a national review body, with considerable authority". [http://opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110002949]
 
The concern over Lomborg's misrepresentation of the science was so great that three complaints were lodged with the Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty, which Lomborg describes as "a national review body, with considerable authority". [http://opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110002949]
Line 55: Line 235:
  
 
In March 2004, the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty declined to reconsider its verdict against Lomborg. [http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/247-03122004-263649.html]
 
In March 2004, the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty declined to reconsider its verdict against Lomborg. [http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/247-03122004-263649.html]
 +
 +
===2007: "Cool It", on climate change===
 +
In 2007, Lomborg published the book "Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming."
 +
====Salon review's criticisms====
 +
A Salon.com review was critical of the book's assumptions and conclusions: [http://www.salon.com/books/review/2007/08/29/cool_it/index.html]
 +
:Lomborg presents scientific and economic debates as much more settled than they are....
 +
 +
:The glaring error in "Cool It," and the one that disqualifies the book from making a serious contribution, is that Lomborg ignores the main concern driving the debate. Incredibly, he never mentions even the possibility that the world might heat up more than 4.7 degrees. Although he claims IPCC science as gospel, in fact the scientific body gives no single "standard" estimate as its official forecast for this century's warming. Instead, the IPCC provides a range of up to 10.5 degrees -- more than double the number on which Lomborg bases his entire argument.
 +
====Misleading citations====
 +
Sharon Begley of Newsweek noted that "a big reason Lomborg was taken seriously is that both of his books, The Skeptical Environmentalist (in 2001) and Cool It(in 2007), have extensive references, giving a seemingly authoritative source for every one of his controversial assertions" in reviewing Howard Friel's book [[The Lomborg Deception]], which exposes ''Cool It'''s citations as consistently misleading.<ref name=begley/>,<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Deltoid
 +
|title=The Lomborg Deception
 +
|url=http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2010/02/the_lomborg_deception.php
 +
|accessdate=2010-02-24
 +
|author=Tim Lambert
 +
|date=2010-02-23
 +
}}</ref>
 +
===2010: "Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits"===
 +
In 2010, a Lomborg-edited book titled "Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits" was published.
 +
Howard Friel said that in this book,
 +
<blockquote>[Lomborg] writes: "The risks of unchecked global warming are now widely acknowledged" and "we have long moved on from any mainstream disagreements about the science of climate change". ...[Yet] Lomborg still argues in this book, as he did in the others, that cost-benefit economics analysis shows that it is prohibitively expensive for the world to sharply reduce CO2 emissions to the extent required by the scientific evidence: "Drastic carbon cuts would be the poorest way to respond to global warming."
 +
 +
...Lomborg does not seriously address the fundamental problem of rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the absence of global greenhouse reductions: what will happen to the earth and human civilisation when atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise – essentially unchecked, if we followed Lomborg's recommendations – to 450 parts per million, 550ppm, 700ppm, 800ppm; and when the average global temperature rises by 2C, 3C, and 4C to 7C?
 +
 +
Climate scientists have set 350ppm and a 2C average temperature rise (from 1750 to 2100) as the upper range targets to prevent a global climate disaster{{fact}}. Since we are already at 390ppm and since a 2C plus rise is a near certainty, how does Lomborg's appeal to forgo sharp reductions in CO2 emissions reflect climate science? He argues that there are "smarter solutions to climate change" than a focus on reducing CO2. This is hardly smart: it's insanity.<ref>{{cite web
 +
|publisher=Comment is free - The Guardian
 +
|title=Bjørn Lomborg's missing questions
 +
|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cif-green/2010/aug/30/lombard-missing-questions-climate-change
 +
|accessdate=2010-11-14
 +
|author=Howard Friel
 +
|date=2010-08-30
 +
|quote="[Lomborg] writes: "The risks of unchecked global warming are now widely acknowledged" and "we have long moved on from any mainstream disagreements about the science of climate change". This is the lipstick, but the pig is still a pig. This is because Lomborg still argues in this book, as he did in the others, that cost-benefit economics analysis shows that it is prohibitively expensive for the world to sharply reduce CO2 emissions to the extent required by the scientific evidence: "Drastic carbon cuts would be the poorest way to respond to global warming."
 +
Here's where the missing question comes into play, since Lomborg does not seriously address the fundamental problem of rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the absence of global greenhouse reductions: what will happen to the earth and human civilisation when atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise – essentially unchecked, if we followed Lomborg's recommendations – to 450 parts per million, 550ppm, 700ppm, 800ppm; and when the average global temperature rises by 2C, 3C, and 4C to 7C?
 +
Climate scientists have set 350ppm and a 2C average temperature rise (from 1750 to 2100) as the upper range targets to prevent a global climate disaster. Since we are already at 390ppm and since a 2C plus rise is a near certainty, how does Lomborg's appeal to forgo sharp reductions in CO2 emissions reflect climate science? He argues that there are "smarter solutions to climate change" than a focus on reducing CO2. This is hardly smart: it's insanity.
 +
}}</ref>
 +
</blockquote>
  
 
==Lomborg and the Philanthropy Roundtable==
 
==Lomborg and the Philanthropy Roundtable==
Line 80: Line 296:
 
"Climate strategies are compared with measures to address problems that everyone agrees are crucial. But climate strategies should also be compared with other goals that society spends (or wastes) money on. One relevant example is to ask what can be delayed with the least harm: climate measures or exploration of Saturn’s rings? Or what about ranking climate measures in relation to spending tens of millions of dollars a year developing new kinds of nuclear weapons, as the Bush administration seems prepared to do?," wrote Pål Prestrud and Hans Seip from the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO).[http://www.gnet.org/news/newsdetail.cfm?NewsID=27505&image1=2]
 
"Climate strategies are compared with measures to address problems that everyone agrees are crucial. But climate strategies should also be compared with other goals that society spends (or wastes) money on. One relevant example is to ask what can be delayed with the least harm: climate measures or exploration of Saturn’s rings? Or what about ranking climate measures in relation to spending tens of millions of dollars a year developing new kinds of nuclear weapons, as the Bush administration seems prepared to do?," wrote Pål Prestrud and Hans Seip from the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO).[http://www.gnet.org/news/newsdetail.cfm?NewsID=27505&image1=2]
  
=="Cool It"==
 
In 2007, Lomborg published the book "Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming." A Salon.com review was critical of the book's assumptions and conclusions: [http://www.salon.com/books/review/2007/08/29/cool_it/index.html]
 
:Lomborg presents scientific and economic debates as much more settled than they are....
 
 
:The glaring error in "Cool It," and the one that disqualifies the book from making a serious contribution, is that Lomborg ignores the main concern driving the debate. Incredibly, he never mentions even the possibility that the world might heat up more than 4.7 degrees. Although he claims IPCC science as gospel, in fact the scientific body gives no single "standard" estimate as its official forecast for this century's warming. Instead, the IPCC provides a range of up to 10.5 degrees -- more than double the number on which Lomborg bases his entire argument.
 
  
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
Line 90: Line 301:
  
 
==Articles and Resources==
 
==Articles and Resources==
===SourceWatch resources===
+
===Related SourceWatch Articles===
 
*[[Climate change]]
 
*[[Climate change]]
*[[Climate change sceptics]]
+
*[[Heretic (frame)]]
 
*[[Geosequestration]]
 
*[[Geosequestration]]
 
*[[Nutrients for Life Foundation]]
 
*[[Nutrients for Life Foundation]]
 +
*[[The Lomborg Deception]]
 +
*[[Project Syndicate]]
 +
*[[Cool It (movie)]]
  
 
===References===
 
===References===
<references/>
+
{{reflist|2}}
 +
 
 +
===External resources===
 +
* [http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/ Lomborg Errors] website, documenting same, by Danish biologist Kåre Fog
  
=== External links ===
 
====Articles by Lomborg====
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, The Skeptical Environmentalist: measuring the real state of the world, Cambridge University Press, 2001, page xxiii.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dda_e/pres_bjorn_lomborg.ppt Trade & Environment]",  Presentation to World Trade Organization seminar“The Doha Development Agenda and Beyond” , 29 April to 1 May 2002. (Powerpoint presentation).
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110002949 Smearing a Skeptic: Something is rotten in the state of Denmark]", ''Wall Street Journal'', January 23, 2003.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1133057/posts Time for the climate doomsters to face reality]", ''The Times'', May 11, 2004.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://www.opinion.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2004/12/12/do1202.xml&sSheet=/opinion/2004/12/12/ixopinion.html Save the world, ignore global warming]", The ''Telegraph'' (UK), December 12, 2004.
 
*Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6652003/site/newsweek/ False Prophets, Bad Economics]", ''Newsweek'', December 13, 2004.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,11762486^7583,00.html Let's first tackle hunger and disease]", ''The Australian'', December 23, 2004.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-1423085,00.html Tsunami disaster: Remember, Asia’s old stealthy killers claim more victims than any catastrophe]", The ''Sunday Times'' (UK), January 2, 2005.
 
*"[http://www.sfexaminer.com/articles/2005/02/04/peninsula/20050204_ne05_lomborg.txt 'We can do immense good': 2005: Challenges and Opportunites]", ''San Francisco Examiner'', February 4, 2005. (This is an interview with Lomborg).
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, "[http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/07/04/1120329381846.html HIV-AIDS should be the top priority]", ''Sydney Morning Herald'', July 5 2005.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, op/ed: "[http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121720170185288445.html How to Get the Biggest Bang for 10 Billion Bucks]," ''Wall Street Journal'' (sub req'd), July 28, 2008.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24497983-7583,00.html "Take the greenhouse gasbags with a grain of salt"], ''The Australian'', October 15, 2008.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2009/02/17/2003436307 "Focusing on R&D a smarter choice in climate talks"], ''Taipei Times'', February 17, 2009, Page 9.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/feb/17/climate-change-ipcc "How to save the world in Copenhagen:] The summiteers need cool heads to combat global warming. Science must take precedence over politics and panic", ''Guardian'', February 18, 2009.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25247677-7583,00.html "Hour of no power increases emissions"], ''The Australian'', March 27, 2009.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/opinion/25lomborg.html?_r=2&em "Don’t Waste Time Cutting Emissions"], ''New York Times'', April 24, 2009.
 
* Bjorn Lomborg, [http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/lomborg39 "Earth is Enough"], ''Project Syndicate'', April 2009.
 
  
====General articles on Lomborg====
+
[[Category:Global warming skeptics|Lomborg, Bjorn]]
*Jeremy Paxman, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/audiovideo/programmes/newsnight/archive/2002184.stm The Sceptical Environmentalist], BBC, May 23, 2002.
 
*Andrew Goldstein's [http://www.time.com/time/2002/greencentury/enlomborg.html Reviled for sticking it to ecological dogma, Bjorn Lomborg laughs all the way to the bank], ''Time'', August 18, 2002. "I'm making a fair amount of money from the book, a lot more than Cambridge thought," Lomborg told Goldstein.
 
*Robyn Williams, [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/science/ss/stories/s495345.htm The Skeptical Environmentalist], ABC Radio National, March 2, 2003.
 
*Danish Committees on Scientific Dishonesty, [http://www.forsk.dk/uvvu/nyt/udtaldebat/bl_decision.htm Decision regarding complaints against Bjorn Lomborg], January 7, 2003.
 
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3340305.stm Lomborg celebrates ministry ruling], BBC, December 22, 2003.
 
*[http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/14803/story.htm Environmental sceptic new Danish green group chief], Reuters, March 1, 2002.
 
*[http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/22004/newsDate/27-Aug-2003/story.htm Danish Environmentalist Work 'Unscientific'- Panel], ''Reuters'', August 27, 2003.
 
*"[http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/247-03122004-263649.html Denmark Panel Won't Review Researcher]", ''Phillyburbs.com'', March 12, 2004. (This is an Associated Press story).
 
*Jan Olsen, "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,12374,1245140,00.html Critic of Kyoto pledge quits as green adviser]", ''The Guardian'', June 23, 2004.
 
*Andrew Walker, "[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4094589.stm Is money fighting climate change well spent?]", ''BBC News'', December 14, 2004.
 
*[http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/28844/story.htm Danish Academic Slams Tsunami Warning System Plans]", Reuters, January 7, 2005.
 
* [http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-9111-SF-Environmental-Policy-Examiner~y2009m5d6-Bjorn-Lomborg-and-global-warming-Part-1 "Bjorn Lomborg and global warming: Part 1"], ''Examiner.com'' (San Francisco), May 6, 2009.
 
* [http://www.examiner.com/x-9111-SF-Environmental-Policy-Examiner~y2009m5d6-Bjorn-Lomborg-Interview-Part-2-Global-warming-politics-and-assessing-his-critics "Bjorn Lomborg interview, Part 2: Global warming politics and assessing his critics"], ''Examiner.com'' (San Francisco), May 6, 2009.
 
  
====Critics of Lomborg====
+
===External articles===
*Perhaps the best single site with links to many of the critiques of Lomborg's work, as well as those in support of him, is [http://info-pollution.com/lomborg.htm Jim Norton's site]
+
''Moved to [[Bjorn Lomborg (external articles)]]''
*Danish biologist Kåre Fog also has a comprehensive site on Lomborg. One section, which is still being developed, has a chapter by chapter review of errors in Lomborg's book. See [http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/ This is the Lomborg-errors web site]. The site also has the best single overview of Lomborg's career and controversy [http://www.lomborg-errors.dk/lomborgstory.doc The Lomborg story].
+
{{wikipedia}}
*The Danish Committees on Scientific Dishonesty [http://www.forsk.dk/uvvu/nyt/udtaldebat/bl_decision.htm report] into complaints against Lomborg's has The Skeptical Environmentalist
 
*[http://www.sciam.com Scientific American] - Jan 2002 edition
 
*Green Alliance (UK) [http://www.green-alliance.org.uk]
 
*Tom Burke (UK), [http://www.opendemocracy.net/forum/document_details.asp?DocID=609&CatID=94 Ten Pinches of Salt]:Critique of Lomborg's The Skeptical Environmentalist
 
*Prof Stephen Schneider, [http://www.stanford.edu/dept/biology/faculty/schneider.html resources]
 
*[http://www.anti-lomborg.com Anti-Lomborg]
 
*Centre for Social Science Research on the Environment, University of Aarhus, Danish [http://www.au.dk/~cesamat/debate.html scientists contest Lomborg's assertions ]
 
*World Resource Institute, "[http://www.wri.org/press/mk_lomborg.html MEDIA KIT: Debunking Pseudo-Scholarship: Things a journalist should know about The Skeptical Environmentalist]", undated, accessed February 23, 2004.
 
*"[http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/books/lomborg121201.asp Something Is Rotten in the State of Denmark: A skeptical look at The Skeptical Environmentalist]", ''Grist magazine'', December 12, 2001.  Contains commentary by: E.O. Wilson, Stephen H. Schneider, Norman Myers, Lester R. Brown, Emily Matthews, Al Hammond, Devra Davis.
 
*Union of Concerned Scientists, "[http://www.ucsusa.org/global_environment/archive/page.cfm?pageID=533 UCS examines The Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjørn Lomborg]", undated, accessed February 20, 2004.
 
*Dr Peter H. Gleick, "[http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/report.cfm?publicationID=393 Where's Waldo? A Review of The Skeptical Environmentalist (Bjørn Lomborg)]", Union of Concerned Scientists, November 6, 2001.
 
*Jerry D. Mahlman, "[http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/report.cfm?publicationID=394 Global Warming: Misuse of Data and Ignorance of Science: A review of the "global warming" chapter of Bjørn Lomborg's The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of theWorld]", Union of Concerned Scientists, December 6, 2001.
 
*E.O. Wilson, Thomas E. Lovejoy, Norman Myers, Jeffrey A. Harvey and Stuart L. Pimm, "[http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/report.cfm?publicationID=395 Biodiversity Distortions in Lomborg's The Skeptical Environmentalist]", Union of Concerned Scientists, December 10, 2001.
 
*Stephen Schneider, "[http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D47-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000&catID=2 Global warming: neglecting the complexities]", ''Scientific American'', pages 62-65.
 
*John Quiggan, "Bogus science to book", ''Australian Financial Review'', March 27, 2002.
 
*John Rennie, "[http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000F3D47-C6D2-1CEB-93F6809EC5880000&catID=2 Misleading Math about the Earth: Science defends itself against The Skeptical Environmentalist]", ''Scientific American'', May 2002, page 61.
 
*Colin Woodard, "[http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/7089 The Shifty Environmentalist]", ''TomPaine.com'', January 14, 2003.
 
*Jim Green, [http://www.geocities.com/jimgreen3/lomborg.html resources]
 
*The Australia Institute, a centre-left think tank, have published two critiques of Lomborg's work - ''Environmentalism and scientific truth'' (January 2003) and ''With Friends Like Bjorn Lomborg, Environmentalists Don't Need Enemies''. (Go to "publications" then "other papers and submissions" section of the Australian Institute [http://www.tai.org.au website)
 
*John Quiggin, Australian Research Council Senior Fellow based at the Australian National University and the Queensland University of Technology has posted a summary of his critique of Lomborg on his [http://mentalspace.ranters.net/quiggin/ weblog]
 
*Ian Lowe, "[http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=773 Bjorn Lomborg is neither sceptical nor an environmentalist]", ''Online Opinion'', October 08, 2003.
 
*John Quiggan, "[http://www.crookedtimber.org/archives/001902.html Copenhagen Con?]",  ''Crooked Timber'',  May 24, 2004.
 
*Tom Burke, "[http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1334209,00.html This is neither scepticism nor science - just nonsense:  Why is Bjorn Lomborg's work on climate change taken seriously?]", ''Guardian'' (UK), October 23, 2004.
 
*Hans Martin Seip and Pål Prestrud, "[http://www.gnet.org/news/newsdetail.cfm?NewsID=27505&image1=2 Climate Measures Bad Investments? Hardly ]", GNet,  undated, accessed December 2004.
 
*John Quiggin, "[http://johnquiggin.com/index.php/archives/2005/01/21/copenhagen-review/#more-2157 Copenhagen review]", ''John Quiggin'' (blog) , January 21, 2005. (Another version of this article was published in the ''Australian Financial Review'' on the same day as "A curious consensus" but is available to subcribers only).
 
*Kevin Berger, "[http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/08/29/bjorn_lomborg/index.html Bjørn Lomborg feels a chill]: Global warming doesn't faze the infamous author, who argues that polar bears are doing fine and Al Gore is way too hot under the collar. But can the 'skeptical environmentalist' back up his rosy views?" Salon.com, August 29, 2007.
 
*Eban Goodstein, "[http://www.salon.com/books/review/2007/08/29/cool_it/index.html Hot air: Global warming is not as bad as it's made out to be, argues Bjørn Lomborg. But he cherry-picks evidence to manufacture a scientific and economic consensus that doesn't exist]," Salon.com, August 29, 2007.
 
* Stefan Rahmstorf, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/cif-green/2009/mar/03/sea-levels-rising "We must shake off this inertia to keep sea level rises to a minimum:} Björn Lomborg's claim that sea levels are not rising faster than predicted are unfounded and used by those wanting to downplay climate change", ''Guardian'', March 3, 2009.
 
  
====Defenders of Lomborg====
+
[[Category:Climate change]]
*Lomborg's website [http://www.lomborg.com www.lomborg.com]
+
[[Category:Environment]]
* The conservative Australian think tank the [[Institute of Public Affairs]]  edition of [http://www.ipa.org.au/pubs/reviewdocs/53-4/Review53-4.pdf Review]
+
[[Category:Denmark]]
*[[Patrick Moore]]'s [http://www.greenspirit.com/lomborg website]
 
*[[Marc Morano]], "[http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewSpecialReports.asp?Page=%5CSpecialReports%5Carchive%5C200412%5CSPE20041214b.html 'Ignore Global Warming,' Says Former Greenpeace Member]", [[CNSNews.com]], December 14, 2004.
 
*[[Paul Driessen]], "[http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCommentary.asp?Page=%5CCommentary%5Carchive%5C200412%5CCOM20041215e.html Prophets, False Prophets and Profiteers]", ''CNSNews.com'', December 15, 2004.
 

Latest revision as of 21:12, 25 December 2019

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Learn more from the Center for Media and Democracy's research on climate change.

Bjorn lomborg.jpg

Bjorn Lomborg is associate professor of statistics in the Department of Political Science at the University of Aarhus, Denmark; his books have been "hugely influential in providing cover to politicians, climate-change deniers, and corporations that don't want any part of controls on greenhouse emissions".[1]

Lomborg is not a climate scientist or economist and has published little or no peer-reviewed research on environmental or climate policy. His extensive and extensively documented[2],[3] errors and misrepresentations, which are aimed at a lay audience, "follow a general pattern"[2] of minimizing the need to cut carbon emissions.

Essential argument and rebuttal

Lomborg's essential argument is that we should be directing our resources toward fighting poverty now, rather than acting now to lessen future climate change, since "[the future] larger economy will allow future generations to deal with an exacerbated climate problem"[4]. But this argument ignores the likelihood that "if climate change limits economic growth, there is no larger economy, and even if there is a larger economy, it may not be enough to deal with the chaos associated with climate disruption. The Dark Ages in Europe were not nearly as pleasant as Roman times."[4]

2010

Book and film

Lomborg is editor of a 2010 book titled Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits (see "Books" section below).

Cool It, a film about Lomborg and his ideas, was released in November 2010. A box office failure[5], it still has influence:

"A film is a ticket to widespread media attention, far more than even a new book provides. For instance, the movie means that credulous reviewers who don’t follow the energy and climate debate closely will write columns that millions will read...compared to the...hundreds that are flocking to the film. The movie also gives newspapers a ‘reason’ to run more disinformation..."[6]

Op-Ed debunked

Claims made by Lomborg in a November 2010 Op-Ed in the Washington Post[7] were subsequently debunked by the Climate Science Rapid Response Team, "a scientist-run initiative to link top climate scientists with the media".[8]

Announced shift in views; little change in bottom line

(for more information on how Lomborg's views have changed, see the section "Shift in views over time" below)

Until 2010, Lomborg used cost-benefit analyses to suggest we should delay climate action until after tending to other environmental or public health problems, and was noted as a leading skeptic on significant climate change action. In Fall 2010 in his new book[9], he switched to supporting immediate action against climate change[10], saying "we all need to start seriously focusing, right now, on the most effective ways to fix global warming". However, his basic prescription hasn't changed, it's still to levy a small tax on carbon emissions to raise funds for energy R&D - but now his proposed CO2 tax is $7/ton not $2, and R&D budget $100 billion/year not 25 - but it's still considered "alarmingly risky" and insufficient to reduce GHG emissions enough.[11]

Australian Consensus Centre

On 2nd April 2015 an Australian Consensus Centre was contracted to be established at the University of Western Australia, with Bjorn Lomborg being made an Adjunct Professor.[12] It was then discovered that this centre was being funded by the Australian Government for $4 million.[13]

Strong protests from Academic staff and students of the University resulted in the University Vice-chancellor cancelling the contract to establish the centre at the university.[14]

At the end of May 2015, Tim Andrews authorised for the free market and climate denial oriented Australian Taxpayers' Alliance a half page advert in The Australian newspaper arguing the cancellation of Bjorn Lomborg's Australian Consensus Centre at the University of Western Australia was academic censorship.[15]

Lomborg vs. experts on geoengineering

Lomborg also advocates geoengineering, despite the concerns of heavy hitters.

Geoengineering research proponent Ken Caldeira has said "the vision of Lomborg’s Climate Consensus is “a dystopic world out of a science fiction story... Geoengineering is not an alternative to carbon emissions reductions ... If emissions keep going up and up, and you use geoengineering as a way to deal with it, it’s pretty clear the endgame of that process is pretty ugly.”"[9].

Presidential Science and Technology advisor John Holdren has said "The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear to be afflicted with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high likelihood of serious side effects."[16].

Joe Romm points out that geoengineering "’solutions’ do nothing to stop the consequences of ocean acidification, which recent studies suggest will be devastating all by itself". and he notes that "a major analysis in Science this year by leading experts on volcanoes and/or climate - Alan Robock, Martin Bunzl, Ben Kravitz, and Georgiy L. Stenchikov - "A Test for Geoengineering?" ... concluded: "Stratospheric geoengineering cannot be tested in the atmosphere without full-scale implementation.""[16]

Background

Lomborg earned his Ph.D. in political science - specifically, game theory - at the University of Copenhagen in 1994.[17]. He got an M.A. in political science in 1991[18] from University of Aarhus, with the thesis "An evolution of Cooperation"; it is unclear whether he has a bachelor's degree.[19].

From 2002 - 2004 he was head of the Environmental Assessment Institute. In 2004, following the Copenhagen Consensus, he resigned the post to return to academia. [20]

Scientific papers

Lomborg's only published work is in "game theory and computer simulations", according to the Skeptical Environmentalist frontispiece. Australian National University academic John Quiggin, writing in the Australian Financial Review in March 2002, pointed out the number of refereed publications Lomborg has produced on statistical or other scientific analysis of environmental issues "is zero".

Shift in views over time

Kåre Fog notes that Lomborg's argument has shifted over time, from:[21],[22]

"1) There is no problem.
[Jan. 1998: "The greenhouse effect is extremely doubtful"[22]]


2) If there is a problem, it is only minor.
[Sept 1998: "There is no doubt that mankind has influenced the CO2 content of the atmosphere and is well on his way to double it. But it is still not clear whether this will lead to severe temperature rises."; Sept 2001: "There is no doubt that mankind has influenced and is still increasing atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and that this will influence temperature. Yet, we need to separate hyperbole from realities..."[22]]
3) If it is not minor, it will pay better to remedy other problems that are even larger. [June 2004: "Copenhagen Consensus...organised by...Bjorn Lomborg...recommended that global governments spend money on combating HIV/AIDS before tackling issues such as climate change."[23]; Aug. 2007: "Doing too much about [climate change] means we are focusing too much effort on climate change and forgetting all the other things that we have a responsibility to deal with, like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and malnutrition. If we spend too much time and resources focusing on climate change, then we do the future a disservice" [24]]
4) If it pays to resolve the climate change problem, this should not be done by reducing CO2 emissions, but rather by adaptation and by applying geo-engineering.
[date/quote/ref needed]
5) If adaptation and geo-engineering is not enough, then [mandated] reductions in CO2 emissions should be very modest, and the main emphasis should be on research to find better alternative energy sources, rather than those that could be implemented right now.
[Oct 2010: Global warming is "undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today" and "a challenge humanity must confront". . . "Investing $100bn annually would mean that we could essentially resolve the climate change problem by the end of this century." [22]]

These shifting arguments over the years look like a tactical retreat. In every case, the conclusion is ...the best that the fossil fuel industry could obtain..."[21]

Books

2001: The Skeptical Environmentalist

In 2001, Cambridge University Press published an English translation of The Skeptical Environmentalist: measuring the real state of the world. In it Lomborg argued that a statistical analysis of key global environmental indicators revealed that while there were environmental problems they were not as serious as was popularly believed:

The world is not without problems, but on almost all accounts, things are going better and they are likely to continue to do so into the future. The facts and information presented here should give us an opportunity to set free our unproductive worries and allow us to focus on the important issues, so that we may indeed help make an even better world for tomorrow".

In particular, Lomborg argued that while global warming is occurring, projections of its magnitude "are rather unrealistically pessimistic" and that "the typical cure of early and radical fossil fuel cutbacks is way worse than the original affliction and moreover its total impact will not pose a devastating problem for our future".

Uncritical media acceptance

The Skeptical Environmentalist received widespread and largely favourable coverage as a critique of global environmental policies and priorities. Much of the commentary embraced Lomborg's claim that scientists and environmentalists were being unduly pessimistic and making claims that were not based on good science.

The 'lapsed environmentalist' narrative

Routinely, journalists reported that Lomborg had -- before he undertook the research for his book -- been a supporter of Greenpeace. However, Greenpeace has no record of Lomborg ever being actively involved in the organisation. When challenged on this point on ABC Radio National's Earthbeat Lomborg said "I'm a suburban kind of Greenpeace member, your stereotypical person who contributes and nothing else."

Participating in a panel on the Earthbeat program, Dr Tom Burke, a member of the Executive Committee of Green Alliance in the UK and an environmental adviser to Rio Tinto and BP, challenged the suggestion that that made Lomborg an environmentalist: "That doesn't make you an environmentalist Bjorn, I mean that would make me a statistician because I've done some calculations".

Rejection by scientists

Scientific American critique

The extensive and uncritical acceptance of Lomborg's claims prompted a reaction from the scientific community. In January 2002 Scientific American's editor, John Rennie, wrote the preface to a ten page critique written by four specialists. Rennie commented that "the errors described here, however, show that in its purpose of describing the real state of the world, the book is a failure". [25]

When Lomborg reproduced the Scientific American critiques on his website with his responses interleaved, the magazine threatened to sue him for copyright infringement. Lomborg withdrew the file from his website but it was later re-published on the Patrick Moore's website. Scientific American stated that the unauthorised reproduction was damaging its ability to sell copyrighted material, while Moore portrayed Lomborg as being persecuted for his views.

John P. Holdren, author of one of the rebuttal articles in Scientific American, noted:

"Bjørn Lomborg has posted on his Web page a long response to the critiques that appeared in Scientific American of four of the chapters in his book, The Skeptical Environmentalist, including my critique of his chapter on energy. No part of my critique escapes rebuttal. Perhaps Lomborg felt obliged to use all of the submissions he received in response to the appeal for help he broadcast to a long e-mail list after the Scientific American critiques appeared. It is instructive that he apparently did not feel he could manage an adequate response by himself. (In this, at least, he was correct. But he could not manage it with help, either.) Just as the book itself betrays the seeming inability of its author to discriminate sensible arguments from nonsensical ones, so also does the posted response to my critique suggest that Lomborg just tossed in, uncritically, whatever replies popped into his head or into his e-mail 'in' box."[25]
"In a "Dear Sir or Madam" broadcast e-mail sent out by Lomborg on December 18, he wrote, inter alia, "Naturally, I plan to write a rebuttal to be put on my web-site. However, I would also love your input to the issues -- maybe you can contest some of the arguments in the SA pieces, alone or together with other academics. Perhaps you have good ideas to counter a specific argument. Perhaps you know of someone else that might be ideal to talk to or get to write a counter-piece."[25]
Schneider on misrepresentation of IPCC

The late Dr. Stephen Schneider, professor in the Department of Biological Sciences and Senior Fellow at the Institute for International Studies at Stanford University, criticised Lomborg for inaccurately portraying the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and misrepresenting the Kyoto Protocol. (Schneider is also editor of Climate Change and lead author of several of the IPCC chapters and the IPCC guidance paper on uncertainties).

The IPCC produced a range of six equally ranked paths of climate change spanning an increase in carbon dioxide concentrations from doubling in 2100 to well beyond a tripling in the 22nd century. "Lomborg, however, dismisses all but the lowest of the scenarios," he wrote. [2]

Dr. Schneider also writes "most scientists I know working on these problems are outraged by Lomborg's work and consider it to be faulty and misrepresentative of their published views. In addition to referencing a biased sample of literature that wasn't nearly broad enough, Lomborg used quotes out of context and proved numerous times that he did not fully understand the science behind climate change"[26]

Raven on distortions

Dr Peter Raven, President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002 said of Lomborg: "...he's not an environmental scientist and he doesn't understand the fields that he's talking about so in that case, if you have a point to make and you want to get to that point, which is: everything's fine, everybody's wrong, there is no environmental problem, you just keep making that point. It's like a school exercise or a debating society, which really doesn't take into account the facts". [3]

"Raven said that the success of Lomborg's book 'demonstrates the vulnerability of the scientific process -- which is deliberative and hypothesis driven -- to outright misrepresentation and distortion.'" [4]

The Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty

The concern over Lomborg's misrepresentation of the science was so great that three complaints were lodged with the Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty, which Lomborg describes as "a national review body, with considerable authority". [5]

The committee found "the publication is deemed clearly contrary to the standards of good scientific practice". [6] They stated "there has been such perversion of the scientific message in the form of systematically biased representation that the objective criteria for upholding scientific dishonesty ... have been met".

In the wake of the decision the conservative Danish Prime Minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, requested a review of the work of the Institute for Environmental Valuation (IEV) which Lomborg had been appointed to head in February 2002. [7]

Subsequently, the Danish government appointed a panel of five scientists to evaluate the reports produced by IEV. In August 2003 the committee announced that "the panel must conclude that none of the reports represent scientific work or methods in the traditional scientific sense". [8]

In December 2003, the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (a branch of the government that had appointed Lomborg) repudiated the findings of the Danish Committee for Scientific Dishonesty, saying its treatment of the case was "dissatisfactory", "deserving criticism" and "emotional" and contained a number of significant errors. [9]. It told the DCSD to reconsider their verdict.[10]

In March 2004, the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty declined to reconsider its verdict against Lomborg. [11]

2007: "Cool It", on climate change

In 2007, Lomborg published the book "Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming."

Salon review's criticisms

A Salon.com review was critical of the book's assumptions and conclusions: [12]

Lomborg presents scientific and economic debates as much more settled than they are....
The glaring error in "Cool It," and the one that disqualifies the book from making a serious contribution, is that Lomborg ignores the main concern driving the debate. Incredibly, he never mentions even the possibility that the world might heat up more than 4.7 degrees. Although he claims IPCC science as gospel, in fact the scientific body gives no single "standard" estimate as its official forecast for this century's warming. Instead, the IPCC provides a range of up to 10.5 degrees -- more than double the number on which Lomborg bases his entire argument.

Misleading citations

Sharon Begley of Newsweek noted that "a big reason Lomborg was taken seriously is that both of his books, The Skeptical Environmentalist (in 2001) and Cool It(in 2007), have extensive references, giving a seemingly authoritative source for every one of his controversial assertions" in reviewing Howard Friel's book The Lomborg Deception, which exposes Cool It's citations as consistently misleading.[1],[27]

2010: "Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits"

In 2010, a Lomborg-edited book titled "Smart Solutions to Climate Change: Comparing Costs and Benefits" was published. Howard Friel said that in this book,

[Lomborg] writes: "The risks of unchecked global warming are now widely acknowledged" and "we have long moved on from any mainstream disagreements about the science of climate change". ...[Yet] Lomborg still argues in this book, as he did in the others, that cost-benefit economics analysis shows that it is prohibitively expensive for the world to sharply reduce CO2 emissions to the extent required by the scientific evidence: "Drastic carbon cuts would be the poorest way to respond to global warming."

...Lomborg does not seriously address the fundamental problem of rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the absence of global greenhouse reductions: what will happen to the earth and human civilisation when atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise – essentially unchecked, if we followed Lomborg's recommendations – to 450 parts per million, 550ppm, 700ppm, 800ppm; and when the average global temperature rises by 2C, 3C, and 4C to 7C?

Climate scientists have set 350ppm and a 2C average temperature rise (from 1750 to 2100) as the upper range targets to prevent a global climate disaster[citation needed]. Since we are already at 390ppm and since a 2C plus rise is a near certainty, how does Lomborg's appeal to forgo sharp reductions in CO2 emissions reflect climate science? He argues that there are "smarter solutions to climate change" than a focus on reducing CO2. This is hardly smart: it's insanity.[28]

Lomborg and the Philanthropy Roundtable

In November 2004 Lomborg was the after dinner speaker at a special pre conference environmental meeting ahead of the annual meeting of the Philanthropy Roundtable, the coordinating committee of conservative foundations.[13]

"We need to stop our obsession with global warming", says Lomborg

In May 2004, Lomborg's Environmental Assessment Institute hosted the Copenhagen Consensus, an attempt to redirect global priorities away from current environmental concerns. As expected the majority of the conference participants agreed that climate change was less important to take action on than a range of other priorities such as combatting HIV/AIDS or providing clean drinking water.

In mid-December 2004 Lomborg attended the Conference of Parties meeting on the Kyoto Protocol in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In both an opinion column in the British newspaper the Telegraph and public presentations Lomborg argued that the outcome of the Copenhagen Consensus demonstrated why calls for action on climate change should be ignored.

Unlike earlier climate change sceptics, Lomborg accepts the reality of climate change but adopts a triple track argument for doing little. First, he adopts a fatalistic position that little can be done. "Global warming is real and caused by CO2. The trouble is that the climate models show we can do very little about the warming," he wrote in the Telegraph.[14]

Then, he argues, the first round of commitments in the Kyoto agreement for the period to 2012 are too little to make much difference by the year 2100. (This ignores the understanding that additional cuts will be negotiated in subsequent committment periods). "Even if everyone (including the United States) did Kyoto and stuck to it throughout the century, the change would be almost immeasurable, postponing warming by just six years in 2100," he wrote.

Finally, he argues that the costs are too great compared to other initiatives that have broad public appeal. "Likewise, the economic models tell us that the cost is substantial. The cost of Kyoto compliance is at least $150billion a year. For comparison, the UN estimates that half that amount could permanently solve the most pressing humanitarian problems in the world: it could buy clean drinking water, sanitation, basic health care and education to every single person in the world," he wrote.

"We need to stop our obsession with global warming, and start dealing with the many more pressing issues in the world, where we can do most good first and quickest," Lomborg concluded.

While Lomborg's views are dismissed by the overwhelming majority of those researching climate change, his attendance in Buenos Aires ensured that his views where not only projected into the 'echo chamber' by conservative news sites such as CNSNews.com, but picked up by the BBC as well.[15]

Others don't think the outcome of the Copenhagen Consensus should be taken all that seriously. Not only were the invited presenters all economists, critics of the process point to the constrained choices they were presented with in ranking priorities that the global community should address.

"Climate strategies are compared with measures to address problems that everyone agrees are crucial. But climate strategies should also be compared with other goals that society spends (or wastes) money on. One relevant example is to ask what can be delayed with the least harm: climate measures or exploration of Saturn’s rings? Or what about ranking climate measures in relation to spending tens of millions of dollars a year developing new kinds of nuclear weapons, as the Bush administration seems prepared to do?," wrote Pål Prestrud and Hans Seip from the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO).[16]


Affiliations

Articles and Resources

Related SourceWatch Articles

References

  1. Jump up to: 1.0 1.1 Sharon Begley (2010-02-22). Debunking Lomborg, the Climate-Change Skeptic. Newsweek. Retrieved on 2010-02-24. “Friel's conclusion, as per his book's title, is that Lomborg is "a performance artist disguised as an academic."”
  2. Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 Kare Fog (unknown). Lomborg Errors. Lomborg Errors website. Retrieved on 2010-11-14. “because the errors seem not to be inadvertent, but to follow a general pattern, they give a bias in a certain direction, probably an intended bias. If the errors remain uncommented, the readers of Lomborg´s books will be misled in this distinct direction . There are many examples where the misleading seems to be deliberate”
  3. Friel, Howard (2010-03-01). The Lomborg Deception: Setting the Record Straight About Global Warming. Yale University Press. Retrieved on 2010-11-06.
  4. Jump up to: 4.0 4.1 Eli Rabett (pseudonym) (2011-07-15). The Models Suck: Part I. Rabett Run. Retrieved on 2011-07-16.
  5. none (2010-12-02). Cool It (2010). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2010-12-04. “Domestic Total as of Dec. 2, 2010: $58,408”
  6. Joe Romm (2010-11-22). Climate Science Rapid Response Team debunks Bjorn Lomborg’s Washington Post op-ed. Climate Progress. Retrieved on 2010-12-04.
  7. Bjorn Lomborg (2010-11-17). Bjorn Lomborg - Cost-effective ways to address climate change. Washington Post. Retrieved on 2010-12-04.
  8. Brad Johnson (2010-11-22). Climate Science Rapid Response Team Debunks Bjorn Lomborg. Wonk Room. Retrieved on 2010-12-04. “Because Washington Post editorial editor Fred Hiatt did not bother to fact-check Lomborg’s column...We chose to test the new Climate Science Rapid Response Team, a scientist-run initiative to link top climate scientists with the media...we submitted questions about Lomborg’s claims to the team...[and] received comprehensive answers from three top climate scientists...[who] independently confirmed that Bjorn Lomborg had misrepresented the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) report.”
  9. Jump up to: 9.0 9.1 Joe Romm (2010-08-31). Lomborg flip-flop: 'Climate change is undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today'. Climate Progress. Retrieved on 2010-11-06.
  10. Juliette Jowit ""Bjørn Lomborg: $100bn a year needed to fight climate change" The Guardian, August 30, 2010.
  11. Dr Alex Bowen, Dr Simon Dietz, Dimitri Zenghelis and Bob Ward of Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment (2010-09-02). Letters: Still wary of Bjørn Lomborg's pronouncements on climate change. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2010-11-07. “Dr Lomborg last year began to call for an investment of $100bn per year on research and development for low-carbon technologies, instead of the $25bn he was advocating 18 months ago. He now proposes that this should be raised through a carbon tax of $7 per tonne of carbon dioxide, rather than the $2 per tonne for which he previously argued. However, his strategy is alarmingly risky – invest heavily in R&D and hope that this alone will keep atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases low enough to avoid the risk of serious and damaging impacts from climate change. This might work, but it might not. A more robust approach to managing the risks of climate change would be not only to invest in R&D, but also to use a carbon tax (or cap-and-trade) to discourage greenhouse gas emissions in the short run. The latter, not raising revenue, would be the primary purpose of introducing a carbon price. But to encourage enough emissions cuts in the next few years to keep greenhouse gases at low enough atmospheric concentrations, a carbon price considerably higher than Dr Lomborg's $7 per tonne is required. We welcome the fact that Dr Lomborg has implicitly acknowledged that his previous arguments about climate change were flawed, but it would be wise to remain wary of his pronouncements...”
  12. University of WA news, 2 April 2015 New economic prioritisation research centre at UWA Accessed 29 May 2015
  13. John Englart, Nofibs.com.au, 17 April 2015 Australian Government funds $4 million sweet deal for #climate contrarian Bjorn Lomborg – @Takvera Accessed 29 May 2015
  14. Graham Readfearn, Desmogblog.com, Thursday, May 28, 2015 The Climate Science Deniers And Free Market Activists Backing Bjorn Lomborg Accessed 29 May 2015
  15. See a copy of the advert at Desmogblog Stop Academic Censorship Accessed 29 May 2015
  16. Jump up to: 16.0 16.1 Joe Romm (2010-11-15). Caldeira calls Lomborg’s vision "a dystopic world out of a science fiction story". Climate Progress. Retrieved on 2010-11-16. “John Holdren resasserted in 2009 of strategies such as space mirrors or aerosol injection, "The ‘geo-engineering’ approaches considered so far appear to be afflicted with some combination of high costs, low leverage, and a high likelihood of serious side effects." Second, of course, those ’solutions’ do nothing to stop the consequences of ocean acidification, which recent studies suggest will be devastating all by itself (see Geological Society: Acidifying oceans spell marine biological meltdown "by end of century"). Third, a major analysis in Science this year by leading experts on volcanoes and/or climate - Alan Robock, Martin Bunzl, Ben Kravitz, and Georgiy L. Stenchikov - "A Test for Geoengineering?" ... concluded: "Stratospheric geoengineering cannot be tested in the atmosphere without full-scale implementation."”
  17. [PhD information from Wikipedia]
  18. Biography - Bjørn Lomborg. Retrieved on 2009-12-04.
  19. [email from Lomborg associate Zsuzsa Horvath dated 2009-12-02
  20. Jan Olsen (2004-06-23). Critic of Kyoto pledge quits as green adviser. The Guardian.
  21. Jump up to: 21.0 21.1 Kåre Fog (date unknown). Hidden Agenda. Lomborg Errors. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.
  22. Jump up to: 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 Error on call to Template:cite web: Parameters url and title must be specifiedKåre Fog (date unknown). . Lomborg Errors. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.
  23. Paula Oliver (2004-06-09). AIDS 'bigger problem than global warming'. New Zealand Herald News. Retrieved on 2010-11-15. “A "dream team" of the world's top economists has recommended that global governments spend money on combating HIV/AIDS before tackling issues such as climate change. The economist panel, which included three Nobel laureates, met in Copenhagen last week to decide on the 10 biggest challenges facing the world. The conference, known as the Copenhagen Consensus, was organised by Denmark's Environmental Assessment Institute - led by controversial and outspoken critic of the Kyoto Protocol Bjorn Lomborg.”
  24. Kevin Burger (2007-08-29). Bjørn Lomborg feels a chill. Salon.com. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.
  25. Jump up to: 25.0 25.1 25.2 Misleading Math about the Earth: Scientific American (2013-10-20). Retrieved on 2013-10-20. Science defends itself against The Skeptical Environmentalist
  26. "[1]"
  27. Tim Lambert (2010-02-23). The Lomborg Deception. Deltoid. Retrieved on 2010-02-24.
  28. Howard Friel (2010-08-30). Bjørn Lomborg's missing questions. Comment is free - The Guardian. Retrieved on 2010-11-14. “"[Lomborg] writes: "The risks of unchecked global warming are now widely acknowledged" and "we have long moved on from any mainstream disagreements about the science of climate change". This is the lipstick, but the pig is still a pig. This is because Lomborg still argues in this book, as he did in the others, that cost-benefit economics analysis shows that it is prohibitively expensive for the world to sharply reduce CO2 emissions to the extent required by the scientific evidence: "Drastic carbon cuts would be the poorest way to respond to global warming." Here's where the missing question comes into play, since Lomborg does not seriously address the fundamental problem of rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the absence of global greenhouse reductions: what will happen to the earth and human civilisation when atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise – essentially unchecked, if we followed Lomborg's recommendations – to 450 parts per million, 550ppm, 700ppm, 800ppm; and when the average global temperature rises by 2C, 3C, and 4C to 7C? Climate scientists have set 350ppm and a 2C average temperature rise (from 1750 to 2100) as the upper range targets to prevent a global climate disaster. Since we are already at 390ppm and since a 2C plus rise is a near certainty, how does Lomborg's appeal to forgo sharp reductions in CO2 emissions reflect climate science? He argues that there are "smarter solutions to climate change" than a focus on reducing CO2. This is hardly smart: it's insanity.”
  29. Project Syndicate, "Who We Are", Project Syndicate website, accessed April 2009.

External resources

  • Lomborg Errors website, documenting same, by Danish biologist Kåre Fog

External articles

Moved to Bjorn Lomborg (external articles) Wikipedia also has an article on Bjorn Lomborg. This article may use content from the Wikipedia article under the terms of the GFDL.