Greenpeace's Energydesk have just put out the below press release. Those implicated in the story include the Global Warming Policy Foundation, an organisation frequently quoted in the UK press, and whose director was given front page treatment in the Spectator this week.

Princeton University Chapel/Cocoloco, Wikimedia, CC3.0
A
Greenpeace undercover investigation has exposed how fossil fuel
companies can secretly pay academics at leading American universities
to write research that sows doubt about climate science and promotes
the companies’ commercial interests.
Posing
as representatives of oil and coal companies, reporters from
Greenpeace UK asked academics from Princeton and Penn State to write
papers promoting the benefits of CO2 and the use of coal in
developing countries.
The professors
agreed to write the reports and said they did not need to disclose
the source of the funding.
Citing
industry-funded documents - including testimony to state hearings and
newspaper articles - Professor Frank Clemente of Penn State said: “In
none of these cases is the sponsor identified. All my work is
published as an independent scholar.”
The
leading climate-sceptic academic, Professor William Happer, agreed to
write a report for a Middle Eastern oil company and to allow the firm
to keep the source of the funding secret.
Happer
is due to appear this afternoon as a star witness in US Senate
hearings called by Republican Presidential candidate Ted Cruz.
In
emails to reporters he also revealed Peabody energy paid thousands of
dollars for him to testify at a separate state hearing, with the
money going to a climate-sceptic think-tank.
The
investigation also found:
● US coal giant Peabody Energy paid tens of thousands of dollars to an academics who produced coal-friendly research and provided testimony at state and federal climate hearings, the amount of which was never revealed
● The Donors Trust, an organisation that has been described as the “dark money ATM” of the US conservative movement, confirmed in a taped conversation with an undercover reporter that it could anonymously channel money from a Middle Eastern oil and gas company to US climate sceptic organisations.
Princeton professor William Happer laid out details of an unofficial peer review process run by the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), a UK climate sceptic think tank, and said he could ask to put an oil funded report through a similar review process, after admitting that it would struggle to be published in an academic journal. A recent report by the GWPF that had been through the same unofficial review process, was promoted as “thoroughly peer-reviewed” by influential columnist Matt Ridley - a senior figure in the organisation.
The
full story and all the documents have been published on
http://energydesk.greenpeace.org/
The
findings echo the case of Willie Soon, a prominent academic exposed
in a New
York Times investigation as
having accepted donations from fossil fuel companies and anonymous
donors in return for producing climate-sceptic scientific papers.
Reporters
approached the academics claiming to be representatives of unnamed
fossil fuel companies looking to commission ‘independent’
research.
Professor
Frank Clemente, a sociologist from Penn State university, was asked
if he could produce a report “to counter damaging research linking
coal to premature deaths (in particular the WHO’s figure that 3.7
million people die per year from fossil fuel pollution)”. He said
that this was within his skill set; that he could be quoted using his
university job title; and that it would cost around $15,000 for an
8-10 page paper.
Asked
whether he would need to declare the source of the money, Professor
Clemente said:
“There is no requirement to declare source funding in the US.” He
then shared examples of a testimony and an op-ed, explaining: “Note
that in none of these cases is the sponsor identified. All my work is
published as an independent scholar.”
Clemente
also disclosed that for another report on “the Global Value of
Coal” he was paid $50,000 by Peabody Energy- the sponsorship was
mentioned in the small print of the paper, but the amount has not
been disclosed until now.
The
academics’ willingness to conceal the source of funding contrasts
strongly with the ethics of journals such as Science,
which states in its submission
requirements that
research “should be accompanied by clear disclosures from all
authors of their affiliations, funding sources, or financial holdings
that might raise questions about possible sources of bias”.
The
investigation has also revealed a system by which foreign oil and gas
companies can anonymously fund US climate-sceptic scientists and
organisations.
When
asked to ensure that the commissioning of the report could not be
traced back to the Middle East oil and gas company, Professor Happer
contacted his fellow CO2 Coalition board member, Bill O’Keefe, a
former Exxon
lobbyist.
He suggested channelling it through the Donors Trust, a controversial
organisation that has previously been called the “Dark
Money ATM” of
the US conservative movement.
When
investigators asked Peter Lipsett of the Donors Trust, if the Trust
would accept money from an oil and gas company based in the Middle
East, he replied that, although the Trust would like the cash to come
from a US bank account, “we can take it from a foreign body, just
we have to be extra cautious with that.”
Professor
Happer, who sits on the GWPF’s Academic
Advisory Council,
was also asked by undercover reporters if he could put the
industry-funded report through the same peer review process as
previous GWPF reports claimed to have been “thoroughly peer
reviewed”. Happer explained that this process had consisted
of members
of the Advisory Council and other selected scientists reviewing the
work, rather than presenting it to an academic journal.
He
added: “I would be glad to ask for a similar review for the first
drafts of anything I write for your client. Unless we decide to
submit the piece to a regular journal, with all the complications of
delay, possibly quixotic editors and reviewers that is the best we
can do, and I think it would be fine to call it a peer
review.”
GWPF’s
“peer review” process was used for a recent GWPF report on the
benefits of carbon dioxide. According to Dr Indur Goklany, the author
of the report, he was initially encouraged to write it by the
journalist Matt
Ridley, who is also a GWPF
academic advisor. That report was then promoted by Ridley, who
claimed in his Times column that the paper had been “thoroughly
peer reviewed”.
Commenting
on the investigation, Greenpeace
UK executive director John Sauven said:
“This
investigation exposes a network of academics-for-hire and a back
channel that lets fossil fuel companies secretly influence the
climate debate while keeping their fingerprints off. Our research
reveals that professors at prestigious universities can be sponsored
by foreign fossil fuel companies to write reports that sow doubt
about climate change, and that those professors will keep that
funding secret from the public. The question now is very simple. Down
the years, how many scientific reports that sowed public doubt on
climate change were actually funded by oil, coal and gas companies?
This investigation shows how they do it, now we need to know when and
where they did it. It’s time for the sceptics to come clean.”
He
added:
“Lord
Lawson’s Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) has serious
questions to answer. Does it condone a member of its academic council
agreeing to be secretly sponsored to write a report by a group
purporting to be from a Middle Eastern oil company? Have reports by
senior figures in Lawson’s foundation been secretly paid for by the
fossil fuel industry? Would they have agreed to Professor Happer’s
suggestion that the ‘oil-funded’ report be put through a 'similar
review' process to the GWPF's own ‘peer-review’ process? Does it
accept that the foundation’s so-called ‘peer review’ process is
flawed, given Professor Happer’s revelations about how it operated
on an earlier report? And does the foundation stand by its academic
advisor, Viscount Ridley, who described that earlier report as
‘thoroughly peer-reviewed’?”

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