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Environment

Does Al Gore's "Incovenient Truth" Really Have Errors?

By Tom Barrett, The Tyee. Posted October 21, 2007.


Climate change deniers are using a recent ruling by a British judge that Inconvenient Truth contains "errors" to attack Al Gore. But it all depends on how you define "errors."
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Al Gore's Oscar-winning film contains some "errors."

Whether that's the same as containing errors -- without the quotation marks -- is a more complex question than you might imagine.

The confusion was inevitable. Two days before Gore shared in the Nobel Peace Prize last week, a British high court judge ruled that Gore's film, An Inconvenient Truth, contains nine "errors." The court also observed that the film was "political."

News stories reported that the judge found the movie to be "riddled" with errors. Some accounts said the judge found nine mistakes, others said 11. Climate change deniers, who have found themselves increasingly ignored over the past year, tried to use the judgment to rekindle a debate over whether there is such a thing as man-made climate change.

For Gore's supporters, the decision became what ABC News called "an inconvenient verdict."

The resulting spin and counter-spin have temporarily derailed the question of what is to be done about climate change. Instead of arguing about ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions, the media and the blogosphere have been debating the proposition that Gore is a dangerous nut who is not intimately acquainted with the truth when it comes to global warming.

This is where it might help to actually read the judgment.

'Political indoctrination'

The legal proceedings were started by a fellow named Stuart Dimmock (the ruling spells his name "Stuart," but most media accounts spell it "Stewart"). He's a Dover resident, a truck-driving father of two and a school governor, who objected to British schools showing Gore's movie in classes. Dimmock wanted the court to ban the film from schools on the grounds that it amounts to "political indoctrination."

Dimmock's fight against the British education ministry, according to the Observer, was financed by "a powerful network of business interests with close links to the fuel and mining lobbies." While that's an interesting comment on what has been depicted as a David and Goliath struggle, it doesn't really affect the court decision.

Justice Michael Burton watched An Inconvenient Truth and found it to be a "powerful, dramatically presented and highly professionally produced film."

He also found it to be "political," a word that has been thrown around a lot ever since.

Justice Burton said:


It is now common ground that it is not simply a science film -- although it is clear that it is based substantially on scientific research and opinion -- but that it is a political film, albeit of course not party political.

Its theme is not merely the fact that there is global warming, and that there is a powerful case that such global warming is caused by man, but that urgent, and if necessary expensive and inconvenient, steps must be taken to counter it, many of which are spelt out.

Justice Burton went on to say that, in its main points, the film is supported by the scientific evidence -- a point glossed over in some accounts and ignored in others.

The judge agreed with the following statement, offered by the lawyer for the British education ministry:

The Film advances four main scientific hypotheses, each of which is very well supported by research published in respected, peer-reviewed journals and accords with the latest conclusions of the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]:

(1) global average temperatures have been rising significantly over the past half century and are likely to continue to rise ("climate change");

(2) climate change is mainly attributable to man-made emissions of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide ("greenhouse gases");

(3) climate change will, if unchecked, have significant adverse effects on the world and its populations; and

(4) there are measures which individuals and governments can take which will help to reduce climate change or mitigate its effects.

Said the judge:


These propositions, [which the government] submits (and I accept), are supported by a vast quantity of research published in peer-reviewed journals worldwide and by the great majority of the world's climate scientists.

Nine 'errors' counted

Justice Burton goes on to say that:

There are errors and omissions in the film, to which I shall refer, and respects in which the film, while purporting to set out the mainstream view (and to belittle opposing views), does in fact itself depart from that mainstream, in the sense of the "consensus" expressed in the IPCC reports.

He then considers nine statements in the film that he describes as "The 'Errors.'"

Some of these statements, the judge found, are backed up by insufficient evidence or by no evidence that could be produced by the government's lawyer. Other statements are "distinctly alarmist, and part of Mr. Gore's 'wake-up call.'"

The judge ruled that it is OK to show An Inconvenient Truth in British schools, as long as teachers are alerted to the nine "errors" he identified.

Some of those who have waded into the issue argue that, when he put quotes around the word "errors" in his judgment, Justice Burton meant to say that the nine controversial statements aren't wrong -- they just lie outside the mainstream scientific consensus.

The judgment, however, makes it clear that the judge meant more than that. He says two of the "errors" are "apparently based on non-existent or misunderstood evidence" and the rest "are or may be based upon lack of knowledge or appreciation of the scientific position."

What is balance?

The ruling has upset some British scientists, who argue that Justice Burton himself is wrong on several points. A number of bloggers have made similar arguments.

On balance, though, it is clear that the decision, while quite critical of specific statements made by Gore, is not the resounding repudiation of An Inconvenient Truth that the former vice-president's opponents claim it is.

And speaking of balance, Justice Burton makes a point that's aimed at the school system but could also apply to the media.

In challenging Gore's film, Dimmock appears to have demanded that climate-change deniers be given equal time in the classroom.

But the judge ruled that balance does not mean giving equal weight to fringe views.

Taking "an extreme example," the judge said that students learning about the moon need not spend a great deal of time on the theory that it is made of green cheese.

"The balanced approach," he said, "does not involve equality."

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See more stories tagged with: media, al gore, inconvenient truth, britain, errors

Tom Barrett is a contributing editor at the Tyee.

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State of the environment
Posted by: rocketman on Oct 22, 2007 4:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Errors or not, it heightens awareness of how we are destroying our environment at the very least. As far as a reason for Gore to run for President... not a chance

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can climate change be both natrual and man made
Posted by: unity1 on Oct 23, 2007 1:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is my belief that climate change is a naturally occurring cycle within a much bigger cycle that human beings are not aware of - however having said that I know that human beings unconscious way of living in the world has degraded environments at an alarming rate - and the rate of species extinction is alarming as we gobble up and or pollute our natural environment with a plethora of toxic chemicals - ignoring the voice of those wiser who predicted the consequences we are now reaping

the naturalness of climate change is that it is a precursor to a much bigger cycle within a cycle - the oil and mining industries are hell bent like any monster - to holding on it its kingdom of profit and exploitation so they use the knowledge of this naturally re occurring cycle to justify their actions

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Al Gore's Errors
Posted by: Urgelt on Oct 24, 2007 4:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Al Gore's conclusions in his film and book faithfully reproduce the IPCC's conclusions. Where he gets onto shakier ground is when he talks about what we ought to do about it.

Mr. Gore hasn't quite got it out of his head yet that biofuels don't gain us anything worth the effort to produce them. It's still burning fuels - and they still emit CO2. We won't ever get to pre-Industrial Revoluation levels of CO2 emissions if we don't stop burning carbon-based fuels, and that is, literally, the challenge before us. Doing less will leave us with gradually increasing temperatures.

Mr. Gore's emphasis on carbon credit trading is also misplaced. These securities are Enronesque cheats, and are already under investigation in Europe for widespread fraudulent practices.

Carbon credits amount to an expensive "apology" by CO2 emitters. They can "cover their asses" with them. The only reason CO2 emitters would bother with credits is that they are trading at a small fraction of the cost to create energy through alternative sources. And that, too, is a dead giveaway.

Here is what happens. Suppose you build a wind farm in Alaska, and are making energy from it. Pretty soon you'll be approached by a carbon credits trading firm offering you some money to sell your carbon credits. The money you are offered is not the cost of installing the wind farm, it's only a tiny fraction of that cost. But it's a windfall, so you say, what the heck, and sign.

The entire energy production of your wind farm is compared to the emissions of a coal plant for the same amount of energy, and your CO2 avoidance is quantified. The carbon trading credits company next approaches a CO2 emitter and offers to "cover their CO2 emissions" with the paper the wind farmer sold.

The CO2 emitter gets a CYA piece of paper and can claim he's green. The wind farmer gets a windfall. The trader gets a commission. And absolutely no CO2 emissions were reduced.

It's even worse when credits are packaged for forests. The timber companies love this scam. They own vast tracts of land on which they routinely plant and harvest trees. They are going to plant trees anyway, that's their business. But they can get a windfall by selling as CO2 credits the amount of CO2 their trees will pull out of the atmosphere, and those credits will go to some CO2 emitter to cover his ass. No CO2 emissions are reduced, no CO2 absorption is increased, and yet another emitter can say he's "green."

In Europe, a trading company bought credits from a hydroelectric dam project in Eastern Europe. The dam was already built and paid for; the money didn't buy a thing, but it provided a windfall to the dam owners. The credits were in turn sold to CYA another emitter.

Other credits have been sold which promise to hold forested lands in tropical countries, such as Brazil, untouched. These forests are not new CO2 sinks and should not be used to justify CO2 emissions. But the promise is more reckless than that. Brazil, which has environmental protection laws, has a tough time enforcing them. Illegal loggers routinely carve great swaths of the rain forest up and sell it on the lumber market; NASA tracks this trend via satellite. Unless somebody puts armed guards on those lands, that promise isn't worth the paper it's printed on.

Carbon credits are a con, and Al Gore was taken in.

So yes, he made some errors in his film and book. I'm grateful to him for publicizing global warming and firing up the debate about it. But his solutions need some work.

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hydrogen
Posted by: dbaker on Oct 28, 2007 12:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
human excrement + Nuclear waste = Hydrogen

A solution to both the problem and the debate

Dennis Baker

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