Science The audacious PR plot that seeded doubt about climate change - The reason why people don't trust us after our predictions failed to come true is because oil companies brainwashed them.

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By Jane McMullen
BBC News

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Thirty years ago, a bold plan was cooked up to spread doubt and persuade the public that climate change was not a problem. The little-known meeting - between some of America's biggest industrial players and a PR genius - forged a devastatingly successful strategy that endured for years, and the consequences of which are all around us.

On an early autumn day in 1992, E Bruce Harrison, a man widely acknowledged as the father of environmental PR, stood up in a room full of business leaders and delivered a pitch like no other.

At stake was a contract worth half a million dollars a year - about £850,000 in today's money. The prospective client, the Global Climate Coalition (GCC) - which represented the oil, coal, auto, utilities, steel, and rail industries - was looking for a communications partner to change the narrative on climate change.

Don Rheem and Terry Yosie, two of Harrison's team present that day, are sharing their stories for the first time.

"Everybody wanted to get the Global Climate Coalition account," says Rheem, "and there I was, smack in the middle of it."

The GCC had been conceived only three years earlier, as a forum for members to exchange information and lobby policy makers against action to limit fossil fuel emissions.

Though scientists were making rapid progress in understanding climate change, and it was growing in salience as a political issue, in its first years the Coalition saw little cause for alarm. President George HW Bush was a former oilman, and as a senior lobbyist told the BBC in 1990, his message on climate was the GCC's message.

There would be no mandatory fossil fuel reductions.

But all that changed in 1992. In June, the international community created a framework for climate action, and November's presidential election brought committed environmentalist Al Gore into the White House as vice-president. It was clear the new administration would try to regulate fossil fuels.

The Coalition recognised that it needed strategic communications help and put out a bid for a public relations contractor.

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E Bruce Harrison was known as the “Dean of green PR”

Though few outside the PR industry might have heard of E Bruce Harrison or the eponymous company he had run since 1973, he had a string of campaigns for some of the US's biggest polluters under his belt.

He had worked for the chemical industry discrediting research on the toxicity of pesticides; for the tobacco industry, and had recently run a campaign against tougher emissions standards for the big car makers. Harrison had built a firm that was considered one of the very best.

Media historian Melissa Aronczyk, who interviewed Harrison before he died in 2021, says he was a strategic linchpin for his clients, ensuring everyone was on the same page.

"He was a master at what he did," she says.

Before the pitch, Harrison had assembled a team of both seasoned PR professionals and almost total novices. Among them was Don Rheem, who had no industry credentials. He had studied ecology before becoming an environmental journalist. A chance meeting with Harrison, who must have seen the strategic value of adding Rheem's environmental and media connections to the team, led to a job offer on the GCC pitch.

"I thought, 'Wow, this is an opportunity to get a front row seat at probably one of the most pressing science policy and public policy issues that we were facing.'

"It just felt enormously important," Rheem says.

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Don Rheem as a younger man

Terry Yosie - who had recently been recruited from the American Petroleum Institute, becoming a senior vice-president at the firm - remembers that Harrison began the pitch by reminding his audience that he was instrumental in fighting the auto reforms. He had done so, in part, by reframing the issue.

The same tactics would now help beat climate regulation. They would persuade people that the scientific facts weren't settled, and that alongside the environment, policy makers needed to consider how action on climate change would - in the GCC's view - negatively affect American jobs, trade and prices.

The strategy would be implemented through an extensive media campaign, everything from placing quotes and pitching opinion pieces (so-called op-eds), to direct contacts with journalists.

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An extract from a GCC business card for reporters, shared by former journalist Nicky Sundt

"A lot of reporters were assigned to write stories," Rheem says, "and they were struggling with the complexity of the issue. So I would write backgrounders so reporters could read them and get up to speed."

Uncertainty ran through the full gamut of the GCC's publications, a creative array of letters, glossy brochures, and monthly newsletters.

Rheem and the team were prolific - within a year, Harrison's firm claimed to have secured more than 500 specific mentions in the media.

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An extract from a 1994/5 GCC booklet made by E Bruce Harrison's team, from the collection of Nicky Sundt

In August 1993, Harrison took stock of progress in another meeting with the GCC.

"The rising awareness of the scientific uncertainty has caused some in Congress to pause on advocating new initiatives," declared an updated internal strategy pitch, shared with the BBC by Terry Yosie.

"Activists sounding the alarm over 'global warming' have publicly conceded that they lost ground in the communications arena over the past year."
Now, Harrison counselled, they needed to expand the external voices making their case.

"Scientists, economists, academics and other noted experts carry greater credibility with the media and general public than industry representatives."

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Harrison was "a master at what he did," says historian Melissa Aronczyk, who shared this undated advert with the BBC

While most climate scientists agreed that human-caused climate change was a real issue that would require action, a small group argued there was no cause for alarm. The plan was to pay these sceptics to give speeches or write op-eds - about $1,500 (£1,250) per article - and to arrange media tours so they could appear on local TV and radio stations.

"My role was to identify the voices that were not in the mainstream and to give those voices a stage," Rheem says. "There was a lot we didn't know at the time. And part of my role was to highlight what we didn't know."

He says the media was hungry for these perspectives.

"Journalists were actually actively looking for the contrarians. It was really feeding an appetite that was already there."

If you say something enough times, people will begin to believe it 1658626279764.png
John Passacantando
Executive director, Ozone Action 1992-2000

Many of these sceptics or deniers have rejected the idea that funding from the GCC and other industry groups had any impact on their views. But the scientists and environmentalists tasked with repudiating them - arguing the reality of climate change - encountered a well-organised and effective campaign they found hard to match.

"The Global Climate Coalition is seeding doubt everywhere, fogging the air… And environmentalists really don't know what's hitting them," environmental campaigner John Passacantando remembers.

"What the geniuses of the PR firms who work for these big fossil fuel companies know is that truth has nothing to do with who wins the argument. If you say something enough times, people will begin to believe it."

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Harrison's company paid experts to argue that mainstream climate scientists were overstating the problem

In a document dating from around 1995, shared with the BBC by Melissa Aronczyk, Harrison wrote that the "GCC has successfully turned the tide on press coverage of global climate change science, effectively countering the eco-catastrophe message and asserting the lack of scientific consensus on global warming."

The groundwork had been laid for the industry's biggest campaign to date - opposing international efforts to negotiate emissions reductions at Kyoto, in Japan, in December 1997. By then, a consensus had emerged among scientists that human-caused warming was now detectable. But the US public was still showing signs of doubt. As many as 44% of respondents to a Gallup poll believed scientists were divided. Public antipathy made it harder for politicians to fight for action, and America never implemented the agreement reached in Kyoto. It was a major victory for the industry coalition.

"I think E Bruce Harrison was proud of the work he did. He knew how central he had been to moving the needle on how companies intervened in the conversation about global warming," says Aronczyk.

1658626369526.png I think it's the moral equivalent of a war crime
Al Gore
Former Vice President and environmentalist​

The same year as the Kyoto negotiation, Harrison sold his firm. Rheem decided that public relations wasn't the right career, while Yosie had long since moved on to other environmental projects for the firm. Meanwhile, the GCC began to disintegrate, as some members grew uncomfortable with its hard line. But the tactics, the playbook, and the message of doubt were now embedded and would outlive their creators. Three decades on, the consequences are all around us.

"I think it's the moral equivalent of a war crime," says former US Vice-President Al Gore of the big oil companies' efforts to block action.

"I think it is, in many ways, the most serious crime of the post-World War Two era, anywhere in the world. The consequences of what they've done are just almost unimaginable."

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Don Rheem is now a workplace and leadership consultant

"Would I do anything differently? It's a hard question to answer," reflects Don Rheem, who says he was "way down the totem pole" of the GCC's operation. "There's some sadness that not much has happened."

He maintains that climate science was too uncertain in the 1990s to warrant "drastic actions", and that developing countries - particularly China and Russia - have ultimately been responsible for the decades of climate inaction, rather than American industry.

"I think it's really easy to create a conspiracy theory about really pernicious intent of industry to completely halt any progress," Rheem says. "Personally, I didn't see that.

"I was very young. I was very curious... Knowing what I know today, would I have done some things differently then?

"Perhaps, probably."

Source (Archive)
 
This in no way is due to our outrageous fear campaigns that did what all fear campaigns have done, caused a temporary uptick in people caring before cratering interest and trust when people realize it was all bullshit.

Nope, it was all the oil companies fault. Not that oil companies are not also dirtbags, but these fear campaign fuckers are even more responsible for climate change skepticism than oil companies ever were or could be.
 
Damn and here I thought it was the numerous false claims made by climate hysterics, the revelations that tons of data was manipulated to lead people along, the spiraling derangement and totalitarian tilt of the climate hysterics.
 
This in no way is due to our outrageous fear campaigns that did what all fear campaigns have done, caused a temporary uptick in people caring before cratering interest and trust when people realize it was all bullshit.

Nope, it was all the oil companies fault. Not that oil companies are not also dirtbags, but these fear campaign fuckers are even more responsible for climate change skepticism than oil companies ever were or could be.
They will never ever take responsibility for their actions.
 
In the 2010s the green speds were absolutely SCREAMING about the CLATHRATE GUNS. Methane Clathrate release from melting arctic ice was supposed to be THE doomsday scenario. Once all that methane was released the world would end up uninhabitable by 2025.

They fired, nothing happened, they moved on to the next talking point.

Also growing up I was told San Fran and NYC would be underwater by now due to ice caps melting but instead we have droughts.
 
Also growing up I was told San Fran and NYC would be underwater by now due to ice caps melting but instead we have droughts.
I knew it was bullshit when politicians made these claims, then bought beachfront property. Or when we hit peak oil for, what, the fifth or sixth time?

If you really want to help the environment, quit being such consoomers. You don't need to buy a $60,000 EV. Just stop buying so much useless shit, stop adding to all the waste, and make small changes to be less of an asshole to our Earth.
 
Nah, you "environmentalists" have done a fine job with that thanks to your hypocritical actions (like flying private jets or buying beachfront property in places "supposed" to be flooded in X years), blatantly ignoring all the horrible shit countries like China & India do to their environments, growing insistence that the Western plebs lose damn near all of their rights & comforts while ignoring the "important" people, and the countless times your doomsday dates have come & gone (remember how New York City was going to be underwater by the 2000s?).

Use whatever teenage mouthpiece you want, your words mean nothing until you cut the shit and take China & India to task.
 
Or maybe it’s because the fear porn which has been fed to three generations of youth is quickly falling apart since none of the predictions came true?

We were told that the world would be like Day After Tomorrow by 2012, yet it never fucking happened.

You never were able to prove just how carbon emissions actually affect the climate, and relied on the science loving Millenials to just trust what government funded “scientists” say while making the cost of living higher for the ever disappearing middle class.

You called all skeptics “science deniers”, which pops out to me because that is cult behaviour.

Not to PL too much, but I remember as a kid actually being terrified of the world ending because of these fuckers pounding it into our heads from grade school.

Now I realize that they know they’re lying to the masses and are using the narrative to push for Neo feudalism. For that, they are evil.
 
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BP popularized the carbon footprint to pass the buck of its environmental damage to the consumer.
 
Or maybe it’s because the fear porn which has been fed to three generations of youth is quickly falling apart since none of the predictions came true?

We were told that the world would be like Day After Tomorrow by 2012, yet it never fucking happened.

You never were able to prove just how carbon emissions actually affect the climate, and relied on the science loving Millenials to just trust what government funded “scientists” say while making the cost of living higher for the ever disappearing middle class.

You called all skeptics “science deniers”, which pops out to me because that is cult behaviour.

Not to PL too much, but I remember as a kid actually being terrified of the world ending because of these fuckers pounding it into our heads from grade school.

Now I realize that they know they’re lying to the masses and are using the narrative to push for Neo feudalism. For that, they are evil.
Funny you say that. I was like that too when I was younger. The blatant "green" propaganda they threw at you was ridiculous. There was a point where I thought we wouldn't be driving cars anymore because of all the green stuff being pushed so I ended up getting my license late when I actually realized cars aren't going away anytime soon. That of course opened up another can of worms on questioning the veracity of the green movement.
 
The truth of climate change is irrelevant to me as long as the hypocrisy of the 'green lobby' remains so extreme.

I'll start to consider whether climate change is worthy of being an urgent concern when the technologies being suggested to fight it by the loudest voices warning of it aren't as, or more, damaging to the environment as climate change itself-- just not in the same way, or in the first world-- AND those same voices start recommending the usage of nuclear power with the same urgency they have for climate change... Or at least give a cogent argument against nuclear.
 
This has major "Trump and Tucker Carlson are creating an army of far right extremists!" energy. It's missing the point so badly it would be funny if I hadn't heard this joke every day for the past six years. If the left ever realizes that they're the ones dispensing red pills, we might actually have to worry about them making anything but temporary gains. But that'll never happen, because hubris and lack of understanding cause and effect are what make them leftists to begin with.
 
Wolf. Boy. Cried.

You fucked it up, captain planet wanna-be's. Now no-one will believe it even when we start having 90 degree weather in winter here in the fucking mid Atlantic. No sympy, you had an important issue and you acted stupid with it.

AND those same voices start recommending the usage of nuclear power with the same urgency they have for climate change... Or at least give a cogent argument against nuclear.
There isn't one, but even right wingers who still kneel at the fossil fuel golden calf give me shit for being an advocate for nuclear.
 
Shut the fuck up climate alarmists.
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You love to see it.
 
You guys notice how many of these climate change articles have come out recently? It's the middle of summer, so not exactly shocking to be seeing a heat wave right now, but it's ridiculous how much this shit is being pushed when they see the opportunity to trick a few more people. Gotta keep the grift going when it's easier to. It's why you also see these articles whenever there's some natural disaster like a hurricane or tornado hitting landfall. Can't let a good disaster go to waste. Just like when Texas had to deal with snowfall that one winter, it was more of an indictment of the power grid, but God forbid they let human suffering distract from their gay little plans. They need to USE that.
 
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