January 2, 2012
In a recent article in National Journal, Americans for Prosperity (AFP)
President Tim Phillips said there is no question that AFP and others
like it have been instrumental in the rise of Republican candidates who
question or deny climate science: “We’ve made great headway. What it
means for candidates on the Republican side is, if you … buy into green
energy or you play footsie on this issue, you do so at your political
peril.”
AFP is a section 501(c)(4) organization, meaning it does not have to disclose its donors, but has been tied to significant funding from the Koch Family Foundations - founded by the billionaire Koch brothers of Koch Industries – as well as smaller donations from companies like ExxonMobil. Koch Industries and ExxonMobil are
among the largest funders of studies questioning climate change
science, often drawn upon by conservative politicians to legitimize
their view that regulation of greenhouse gases (GHGs) is not needed
because the science is still under debate.
These
organizations and their supporters say they are just funding their own
independent studies of climate change science. Yet these studies almost all go against observable scientific data to question global warming – so much so that one study funded in part by the Kochs that confirmed a rise in average world land temperature was
regarded as an anomaly. Which raises the question: if these studies are
largely designed not to shed light on climate change, but to create
doubt and confusion to delay greenhouse gas regulations, why is it
legal, and do those deliberately spreading misinformation face
liability? READ MORE
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