Climate policy dragged into culture wars as a ‘delay’ tactic, finds study

Researchers call for recognition of latest online strategies used to derail 
climate action

By Matthew Taylor Thu 9 Jun 2022  
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jun/09/climate-policy-dragged-into-culture-wars-as-a-delay-tactic-finds-study


Climate policy is being dragged into the culture wars with misinformation and 
junk science being spread across the internet by a relatively small group of 
individuals and groups, according to a study.

The research, released on Thursday, shows that the climate emergency – and the 
measures needed to deal with it – are in some cases being conflated with 
divisive issues such as critical race theory, LGBTQ+ rights, abortion access 
and anti-vaccine campaigns.

The study, published by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue and the Climate 
Action Against Disinformation coalition, found that although outright denials 
of the facts of the climate crisis were less common, opponents were now likely 
to focus on “delay, distraction and misinformation” to hinder the rapid action 
required.

“Our analysis has shown that climate disinformation has become more complex, 
evolving from outright denial into identifiable ‘discourses of delay’ to 
exploit the gap between buy-in and action,” said Jennie King, head of climate 
disinformation at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue.

The report looked at social media posts over the past 18 months and 
particularly around the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow last year.

It found that the urgent need for wide-ranging mitigation and adaptation 
strategies were continually downplayed or condemned as unfeasible, overly 
expensive, disruptive or hypocritical.

And it identified a number of specific “discourses of delay”, including:



  *   Elitism and hypocrisy: these posts focused on the alleged wealth and 
double standards of those calling for action, and in some cases referenced 
wider conspiracies about globalism or the “New World Order”. The study 
identified 199,676 mentions of this narrative on Twitter (tweets and retweets) 
and 4,377 posts on Facebook around the time Cop26 took place


  *   Absolution: it found 6,262 Facebook posts and 72,356 tweets around Cop26 
which absolved one country of any obligation to act on climate by blaming 
another. In developed western countries this often focused on the perceived 
shortcomings of China and, to a lesser extent, India, claiming they were not 
doing enough so there was no point in anyone acting.


  *   Unreliable renewables: over a longer period – from 1 January to 19 
November 2021 – the study found 115,830 tweets or retweets were shared, 
alongside 15,443 posts on Facebook, that called into question the viability and 
effectiveness of renewable energy sources.




The report found that the most prominent anti-climate content along these lines 
came from a handful of influential pundits, many with verified accounts on 
social media.

Analysis of 16 accounts “super-spreading” climate misinformation on Twitter 
revealed 13 sub-groups that largely converged around anti-science and 
conspiracy communities in the US, UK and Canada.

It said many “influencers” in this group originally came from a scientific or 
academic background and some were previously involved in the green movement.

It added: “This allows them to present as ‘rationalist’ environmentalists and 
claim greater credibility for their analysis, while continually spreading the 
discourses of delay and other misinformation or disinformation. It also gives 
them significant appeal online and the potential to galvanise far broader 
audiences, since they are frequently invited by conservative media outlets as 
‘climate experts’.”

The report called for an internationally agreed definition of climate 
misinformation and disinformation, adding that tech companies should restrict 
paid advertising and sponsored content from fossil fuel companies and known 
front groups or individuals that repeatedly fell short of that standard.

King said: “Governments and social media platforms must learn the new 
strategies at play and understand that disinformation in the climate realm has 
increasing crossover with other harms, including electoral integrity, public 
health, hate speech and conspiracy theories.”

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