The latter is also the subject of the book we're reviewing this:
Climate Myths: The Campaign Against Climate Science by Dr. John J. Berger (publisher: Northbrae Books)
What this book is about?
Climate Myths describes the fossil fuel industries’ successful two-decade-long campaign to control the public debate over global climate change―with disastrous consequences. The book reveals how fossil fuel companies manufactured controversies about climate change, obscuring its true causes and effects. Dangerous climate change has now become a reality for which the nation is unprepared: Federal climate policy has been stalemated, legislation has been stillborn, and international climate negotiations have been stymied.
Climate Myths exposes how the fossil fuel
industry’s campaign was modeled on the cigarette companies’ campaign to convince
Americans that tobacco was not a health hazard, and how it operated to sow doubt
about climate change through a network of prominent proxy organizations. The
book provides insights into the campaign’s origins, motives, techniques, and
main actors as it tracks the industry’s ever-changing and contradictory climate
myths.
Beyond merely describing the way we
got to this tragic, perilous impasse, the book carefully dissects the fossil
fuel industry’s main allegations about climate change―one-by-one―in language
ordinary readers can understand.
The book includes a preface and foreword by two eminent climate scientists, Dr. Kevin Trenberth and Dr. John Harte, and an introduction by John H. Adams, winner of the 2010 Presidential Medal of Freedom.
The book includes a preface and foreword by two eminent climate scientists, Dr. Kevin Trenberth and Dr. John Harte, and an introduction by John H. Adams, winner of the 2010 Presidential Medal of Freedom.
About the author:
Dr. John J. Berger is the author and editor of 11
books on climate, energy, and natural resources. He is a graduate of Stanford
University and has a master’s in energy and natural resources from UC Berkeley
and a Ph.D. in ecology from UC Davis.
Our review:
However, I found a lot of hypocrisy within its pages. I believe that we have a very real climate issue on our hands. This book, in my opinion, is part of the problem in getting people on board. For instance, in one section it states that 2,500 of the world’s leading scientist were in agreement with the climate issues. Yet, when you do a basic search of climate scientists there are well over 18,000-42,000 (give or take). So there is only a fraction of the climate scientists that actually agree on what is the cause of global warming. This is a huge problem. If the scientists can’t even agree, how do we expect the world too? I’m not even going to touch the tax section.
There is also a section that goes on about how easy it is to make unfounded charges and raise misleading questions. It continues with how the skeptical try to make their case by going to the media and the students, on TV and on the radio and even to the online communities. Both of these examples can be said for both sides of the case. Both are able to make unfounded charges and raise misleading questions. Both sides are all over the media and on the tv and everywhere you look. My problem is that this book seems to be all about finger pointing and not the real issues, not the facts. It causes more questions instead of answering them.
I understand this was a book on the campaign against climate science, but the blame game is not going to help. For the people already on board with the climate issues, I believe that this is a very good book and I believe will be well read. However, in my opinion, I don’t believe it will appeal to the conflicted, which is the very group climate science needs in order to make a difference. We have to appeal to them with facts and science, not with blame and finger pointing.
You can purchase the book on Amazon.com (both e-book and hardcover formats are available).
Yours,