http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1185292,00.html
The Observer | International

Bush attacks environment 'scare stories'

Secret email gives advice on denying climate change

Antony Barnett in New York
Sunday April 4, 2004
The Observer

George W. Bush's campaign workers have hit on an age-old political 
tactic to deal with the tricky subject of global warming - deny, and 
deny aggressively.

The Observer has obtained a remarkable email sent to the press 
secretaries of all Republican congressmen advising them what to say 
when questioned on the environment in the run-up to November's 
election. The advice: tell them everything's rosy.

It tells them how global warming has not been proved, air quality is 
'getting better', the world's forests are 'spreading, not deadening', 
oil reserves are 'increasing, not decreasing', and the 'world's water 
is cleaner and reaching more people'.

The email - sent on 4 February - warns that Democrats will 'hit us 
hard' on the environment. 'In an effort to help your members fight 
back, as well as be aggressive on the issue, we have prepared the 
following set of talking points on where the environment really 
stands today,' it states.

The memo - headed 'From medi-scare to air-scare' - goes on: 'From the 
heated debate on global warming to the hot air on forests; from the 
muddled talk on our nation's waters to the convolution on air 
pollution, we are fighting a battle of fact against fiction on the 
environment - Republicans can't stress enough that extremists are 
screaming "Doomsday!" when the environment is actually seeing a new 
and better day.'

Among the memo's assertions are 'global warming is not a fact', 
'links between air quality and asthma in children remain cloudy', and 
the US Environment Protection Agency is exaggerating when it says 
that at least 40 per cent of streams, rivers and lakes are too 
polluted for drinking, fishing or swimming.

It gives a list of alleged facts taken from contentious sources. For 
instance, to back its claim that air quality is improving it cites a 
report from Pacific Research Institute - an organisation that has 
received $130,000 from Exxon Mobil since 1998.

The memo also lifts details from the controversial book The Skeptical 
Environmentalist by Bjorn Lomborg. On the Republicans' claims that 
deforestation is not a problem, it states: 'About a third of the 
world is still covered with forests, a level not changed much since 
World War II. The world's demand for paper can be permanently 
satisfied by the growth of trees in just five per cent of the world's 
forests.'

The memo's main source for the denial of global warming is Richard 
Lindzen, a climate-sceptic scientist who has consistently taken money 
from the fossil fuel industry. His opinion differs substantially from 
most climate scientists, who say that climate change is happening.

But probably the most influential voice behind the memo is Frank 
Luntz, a Republican Party strategist. In a leaked 2002 memo, Luntz 
said: 'The scientific debate is closing [against us] but not yet 
closed. There is still a window of opportunity to challenge the 
science.'

Luntz has been roundly criticised in Europe. Last month Tony Blair's 
chief scientific adviser, Sir David King, attacked him for being too 
close to Exxon.

Rob Gueterbock of Greenpeace condemned the messages given in the 
Republican email. He said: 'Bush's spin doctors have been taking 
their brief from dodgy scientists with an Alice in Wonderland view of 
the world's environment. They want us to think the air is getting 
cleaner and that global warming is a myth. This memo shows it is 
Exxon Mobil driving US policy, when it should be sound science.'

The memo has met some resistance from Republican moderates.

Republican Mike Castle, who heads a group of 69 moderate House 
members, senators and governors, says the strategy doesn't address 
the fact that pollution continues to be a health threat. 'If I tried 
to follow these talking points at a town hall meeting with my 
constituents, I'd be booed.'

Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords, who left the Republican Party in 2001 
to become an independent partly over its anti-green agenda, called 
the memo 'outlandish' and an attempt to deceive voters.

'They have a head-in-the-sand approach to it. They're just sloughing 
off the human health impacts - the premature deaths and asthma 
attacks caused by power plant pollution,' Jeffords said.

Republican House Conference director Greg Cist, who sent the email, 
said: 'It's up to our members if they want to use it or not. We're 
not stuffing it down their throats.'

He said the memo was spurred by concerns that environmental groups 
were using myths to try to make the Republicans look bad.

'We wanted to show how the environment has been improving,' Cist 
said. 'We wanted to provide the other side of the story.'


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