Also by Graham Thompson

Let's do the Time warp again!

Posted by Graham Thompson - 28 June 2013 at 1:06pm
All rights reserved. Credit: petepassword
Thanks to petepassword for this Time Magazine spoof cover

So why did David Rose put a forgery of a Time Magazine cover in the Mail on Sunday? Well, the simple answer is that there weren't any real Time covers which supported his point, otherwise I'm sure he would have used one of them. His point was, to quote Michael Crichton, "in the 1970′s (sic) all the climate scientists believed an ice age was coming.”

The subtext being that climate scientists are slightly hysterical doom-mongers who were wrong then and so can be wrong now. I'm sure you can guess who really has the monopoly on wrongness in this debate.

Dear Mail on Sunday, Time is not on your side

Posted by Graham Thompson - 28 June 2013 at 7:00am

Once in a while, roughly every month or two, Daily Mail journalist David Rose likes to focus his laser-like mind on the twisting swindlers of the so-called scientific community, and write a big exposé of the Great Climate Hoax. He's an expert on hoaxes, and so would never be caught out by one himself. You would think.

On a clear day you can see the future

Posted by Graham Thompson - 24 June 2013 at 4:19pm
All rights reserved. Credit: n/a
Borisconi and his chief climate advisor

Borisconi's leadership campaign has struck again, and the Telegraph's somewhat battered reputation for science reporting is again the first casualty.

Oil companies: evil or stupid? Lawson weighs in

Posted by Graham Thompson - 19 June 2013 at 3:44pm
All rights reserved. Credit: ©TVO Photos/flickr/CC BY 2.0
Lord Lawson: expert witness in the defence of Big Oil

On Tuesday, the Energy Bill we’re all so exercised about (oh yes you are) went for its second reading in the Lords. Their lordships Teverson, Deben, Prescott, Oxburgh and others spoke well. Stern and Worthington are actually worth reading.  

What does REF stand for? Not renewable energy...

Posted by Graham Thompson - 17 May 2013 at 5:08pm
Poll results on reasons for the rise in energy bills
All rights reserved. Credit: Carbon Brief
Question: What do you think is the main reason for the increases in consumer gas and electricity prices over the last 12 months?

Polling conducted for Carbon Brief shows that the public primarily blame profiteering by energy companies for recent increases in energy bills. Only 7% of those polled blamed ‘green’ taxes, despite a concerted campaign by certain newspapers to persuade them this was the culprit.

Climate and Euroscepticism: leftwing, rightwing and wrongwing

Posted by Graham Thompson - 10 May 2013 at 5:35pm
All rights reserved. Credit: ©TVO Photos/flickr/CC BY 2.0
Lord Lawson, chairman of the sceptic tank GWPF

Lean, mean budgeting machine Lord Nigel Lawson is back in the news, still resolutely sceptical but, for a change, not about climate science. He’s returned to his old stamping ground, the European Union, and is now being resolutely sceptical about that. These two positions, climate scepticism and euroscepticism, are complementary.

Buzz killers: UK blocking bee-killing pesticide ban

Posted by Graham Thompson - 25 April 2013 at 12:47pm - Comments
Bumblebee on a flower
All rights reserved. Credit: Steve Erwood / Greenpeace
You don't have to be Einstein to work here...

In a shock to the scientific community, neonicotinoids, - or neurotoxic agricultural insecticides - have been shown in laboratory tests to cause brain damage in bees.

Actually, it wasn’t that much of a shock. There’s never been any doubt over the potential of these chemicals to harm bees - the recent controversy has been over dosage.

Not-quite-instant karma's gonna get you

Posted by Graham Thompson - 23 April 2013 at 12:21pm - Comments
George Osborne slightly overwhelmed
All rights reserved. Credit: unknown
Osborne feeling slightly overwhelmed

This week, the Office of National Statistics will tell us if Britain has slipped into a triple dip recession, and if the news is grim we may be treated to the sight of George Osborne – the most stridently anti-environment chancellor for a generation – blaming it all on climate change.

Bubbles in the ice

Posted by Graham Thompson - 19 April 2013 at 6:21pm - Comments
Arctic landscape with blue sky
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace / Roemmelt
What's it worth?

Ancient ice cores, drilled from the thickest glaciers in the Arctic, allow you to examine the atmosphere from thousands of years ago when the ice was last water, by analysing the gases contained in the bubbles trapped in the ice. It’s the carbon content scientists are particularly interested  in – they’re looking for carbon bubbles, and they’re willing to go to the ends of the earth, quite literally, to find them.

But there’s another type of carbon bubble which is even more important in the climate debate, and so far we’ve been doing our utmost to ignore it. This week that began get more difficult.

Born Wrongborg

Posted by Graham Thompson - 15 April 2013 at 4:59pm - Comments
by-nc-nd. Credit: Mat McDermott/creative commons
Cross my palm with silver...

Bjorn Lomborg, the man who used to be the world’s most well-known climate sceptic, has resurfaced in the Wall Street Journal and Channel 4 with a new way to be wrong on climate change.

Follow Greenpeace UK