An internal BBC investigation has found that the flagship Panorama
programme made a number of false claims about the threat of climate
change.
The episode entitled “Wild Weather,” presented by Justin
Rowlatt, claimed that deaths are rising globally due to extreme weather
caused by climate change. It was also claimed that Madagascar will be
the first country to suffer a famine caused by climate change.
None of those claims are true.
According to The Mail Online:
The
programme, broadcast last November to coincide with the COP26 climate
conference, sparked two complaints investigated by the BBC’s Editorial
Complaints Unit (ECU).
Last year Rowlatt’s sister Cordelia was
among a number of Insulate Britain activists arrested for staging a
protest at junction 3 of the M25.
Miss Rowlatt, who once
appeared on TV advising her brother on how to be more environmentally
friendly, pleaded guilty by post at Crawley Magistrates’ Court.
She was fined £300 with £85 court costs and a £34 surcharge for committing a public nuisance on a highway.
The
introduction of Wild Weather said ‘the death toll is rising around the
world and the forecast is that worse is to come’. The ECU said this
risked giving the impression the rate of deaths from extreme
weather-related events was increasing.
In fact, as noted by a
recent report from the World Meteorological Organisation, while the
number of weather-related disasters – such as floods, storms and drought
– has risen in the past 50 years, the number of deaths caused by them
has fallen because of improved early warnings and disaster management.
BBC
News said ‘it accepted the wording in the programme was not as clear as
it should have been and a public acknowledgement was put on the BBC’s
Corrections and Clarifications website before the complaint reached the
ECU’.
The ECU said this was appropriate but ‘an oversight meant
the programme was still available on BBC iPlayer without a link or
reference to the published correction, and for that reason the complaint
was upheld’.
The ECU also considered the language used in the
programme about drought. It agreed the evidence showed southern
Madagascar had suffered lower-than-average seasonal rainfall in recent
years, and that climate change was one factor contributing to famine in
the country.
It also noted the reporter’s language mirrored that used by the UN’s World Food Programme.
But
the ECU added: ‘The statement that Madagascar was on the brink of the
world’s first climate-induced famine was presented without
qualification, whereas other evidence available prior to broadcast
suggested there were additional factors which made a significant
contribution to the shortage of food.
The complaint was therefore upheld.’
A
few years ago, a former BBC journalist forwarded to me a memo that had
been sent to the corporation’s producers, editors and reporters. I still
have it.
Simply put, the memo advised staff that there was no
longer any need to balance reports on climate change with the views of
sceptics, irrespective of how qualified the sceptics were.
The BBC told its staff that the “science was settled” on the issue....<<<Read More>>>...
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