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Saturday, 16 April 2016

Climate change: and 'lobbying' >>> Call for exemption for universities from new ban on influencing policy

When it comes to influencing government policy on climate change, there is 'lobbying':
How Big Oil's efforts to obstruct climate policy may have hit $114m in 2015
Trying to Put a Price on Big Oil's 'Climate Obstruction' Efforts - Bloomberg
The oil industry knew about climate change before we landed on the moon | Grist
Suncor urged to reveal how much it spends on government lobbying efforts - The Globe and Mail
The links between big polluters and politicians | The Saturday Paper
Australian oil and gas lobby spent millions advocating against climate action: report

And there is 'lobbying':



There is now less than a month to stop the Government from introducing a draconian new rule that will prevent university researchers from influencing policies on climate change, medicine, technology and many other important areas.

SIGN NOW - We only need 1,500 more signatures on our official petition to stop the new rule applying to university researchers.
On Saturday 6 February, the Cabinet Office announced that any Government grants awarded from 1 May 2016 would include a clause outlawing “payments that support activities intended to influence or attempt to influence Parliament, government or political parties, or attempting to influence the awarding or renewal of contracts and grants, or attempting to influence legislative or regulatory action”.
This infringement on academic freedom will be bad for policy-making, bad for the public interest and bad for democracy. It will for instance, forbid publicly-funded researchers from advising ministers and civil servants or even responding to Parliamentary inquiries. It will mean lobbyists funded by companies and other vested interests will find it easier to promote inaccurate and misleading information to policy-makers without being challenged by university researchers. It could be a disaster for UK climate change policies.

Please help share:
SIGN & Stop Government introducing draconian rule preventing uni researchers influencing policies on #climatechange
 FW: This email to your friends NOW!
Many organisations and individuals are now calling on the Government to exempt universities from the so-called ‘anti-lobbying’ clause, but most researchers are unaware of the proposed new rule. The Government is trying to push this through without any fuss being made, but when the petition gains 10,000 signatures the Government will be required to provide an official response. Please help to put pressure on the Government to do the right thing.
Many thanks, Bob Ward
Policy and Communications Director
Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
London School of Economics and Political Science

Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment
Call for exemption for universities from new ban on influencing policy after petition reaches 10,000 signatures | Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment

Here is the Institute's Director writing a couple of weeks ago:

An Attack on Academic Freedom that is Bad for the Public Interest


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Policy and Communications Director, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
Posted: Updated: 
University researchers on climate change have just over a month left to overturn new Government restrictions that would prevent them from influencing policy-making and countering the vested interests of 'sceptics' and fossil fuel companies.
The Cabinet Office quietly announced on its website on Saturday 6 February that, from May, all Government grants would be awarded on the condition that they would not be used "to influence or attempt to influence Parliament, government or political parties, or attempting to influence the awarding or renewal of contracts and grants, or attempting to influence legislative or regulatory action".
Although the so-called "anti-lobbying clause" is not explicitly aimed at university researchers, it is an attack on academic freedom because it will apply to all grants awarded by the higher education funding councils and research councils.
This draconian move could have dramatic consequences across a wide range of public policy areas. It could, for instance, halt publicly-funded medical researchers from trying to persuade the Government to give regulatory approval for new treatments for diseases.
The new rule could also have particularly harmful effects on policy-making about climate change.
It could, for example, stop publicly-funded university experts from submitting evidence to Government or Parliamentary inquiries on issues such as flooding or the UK's targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
And it would make it more difficult for academic researchers to publicly or privatelychallenge decisions by Ministers who deny the risks of climate change.
What is ironic is that the new rule is being introduced because the Cabinet Office hascaved in to a campaign by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), a 'free market' lobby group which is ideologically opposed to Government regulation and does not disclose its sources of funding.
The IEA also has a long track record of promoting unscientific climate change denial. Its website hosts a number of pamphlets with titles such as 'Climate Alarmism Reconsidered' and 'Global Warming False Alarms'.
In 2014, the IEA gave its 'Free Enterprise Award' to Viscount Ridley, the hereditary peer and former Chairman of Northern Rock Bank who is now one of the UK's most strident climate change 'sceptics'.
The head of the IEA said that Viscount Ridley's award was recognition for his "many important interventions to promote free-market policy ideas in areas as wide-ranging as energy, the environment and income distribution".
Earlier this month, Viscount Ridley tried to defend the application of the new restrictions to publicly-funded university researchers when Jo Johnson, the Minister of State for Universities and Science, was quizzed about the issue by the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee.
Mr Johnson indicated that university researchers are not the intended target and that he is seeking an exemption for them. But Viscount Ridley said: "I am impressed that this is not about stopping people lobbying but about stopping people using money that was given for one purpose for lobbying instead. There is nothing to stop an individual from an organization using his own money to buy his own train fare in his own time to come and lobby a politician."
One of the beneficiaries of the gagging of climate change experts in universities will be the Global Warming Policy Foundation, which has an all-male "Academic Advisory Council" including Viscount Ridley as a member.
The Foundation, set up by Lord Lawson in 2009 to lobby against climate change policies, will find it easier to sway Ministers if university experts are not allowed to challenge its inaccurate and misleading portrayal of the science and economics.
In 2014, the Foundation was forced to create a subsidiary lobbying arm, the Global Warming Policy Forum, to undertake its campaigns after the Charity Commission found a breach of its rules.
The Foundation's main tactic has been to attempt to discredit the work of climate change researchers in order to undermine the case for policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
For instance, one of the Foundation's trustees, Lord Donoughue, has submitteddozens of Parliamentary Questions over the past few years to dispute the scientific evidence, and even arranged a meeting with a minister at the Department of Energy and Climate Change so that a 'sceptic' could accuse the Met Office of being wrong about global warming.
The Global Warming Policy Foundation will not be directly affected by the new limits on university researchers. It is funded by secret donors and does not receive Government grants.
University researchers on climate change play a vital role in counteracting the harmful propaganda of lobby groups like the Global Warming Policy Foundation which champion ideology over science.
It is for this reason that I have started an official petition, calling for the Government to exempt researchers in universities and research institutes from the new 'anti-lobbying' clause.
If the petition reaches 10,000 signatures, it will force an official response from the Government, and may persuade Ministers to abandon their plans for a new rule that would be bad for policy-making, bad for the public interest and bad for democracy.
Bob Ward is policy and communications director at the ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

An Attack on Academic Freedom that is Bad for the Public Interest | Bob Ward
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