Almost 15 years ago Jacob Nordangård began researching the politics
behind climate change. Sceptical scientists were being discredited with
accusations that they were paid by oil companies to discredit
anthropogenic global warming. Nordangård set out to establish if this
was indeed the case. But he discovered something else instead.
In
2008 in his quest to establish if scientists who questioned the climate
change narrative were funded by oil companies, Nordangård found these
allegations, with a few notable exceptions, were unfounded. But what he
did uncover, surprised him.
“I, instead, much to my surprise,
found that oil companies were actually pumping money into projects which
embraced Al Gore’s doomsday message! And had done so since early
1960s!” he said.
This led to questions such as where did the
idea of a climate change threat come from, where did it start? He
couldn’t find an answer.
“No one at the Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research
(to which I was affiliated at the time) knew,” he said. “There were
many who did research on climate-related issues without having the
faintest idea about the origin of their mission. But if the [United
Nations] had declared that it is a crucial issue for humanity it must be
true, seemed to be their reasoning; “everyone thinks so.” There were
always references to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC). The debate was over.”
Unanswered questions led Nordangård to do further research. In a book published by the Royal Institute of International Affairs (commonly known as Chatham House) he found information relating to the development of climate change as it is sold to us today.
“A
few key events were listed, which I used as a starting point: the
International Geophysical Year 1957-58; a climate conference organised
by the Conservation Foundation in 1963; the UN Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm in 1972; and the Conferences in Villach, Austria in the first half of the 1980s,” he said.
He
was able to discover which actors were involved, what documents they
used, who financed them and what policy suggestions they came up with to
solve the alleged climate change problem.
He originally planned to write a 5-page essay on his research. However, the 5 pages turned into almost 50.
“The
result was surprising and somewhat shocking. A clear pattern emerged. I
knew it would be controversial to communicate these findings. They
contradicted the views preached by the believers. Especially concerning
the fact that a number of U.S. oil billionaires had gotten involved at
an early stage. This was especially the case with most prominent oil
family of them all. The founders of Standard Oil/Exxon. The
Rockefellers,” he said...<<<Read More>>>...
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