Pushing The ‘Climate Crisis’ In News, Films, Media

Before the Easter weekend, multiple media outlets reported that chocolate prices are soaring, and according to the coverage, the main culprit driving the inflating costs is ‘climate change’

Across multiple platforms, the reports followed a similar message, using similar language to describe the problem and its causes — and the reports all came out the same week.

“Easter egg prices soar as cocoa crops are hit by climate crisis and exploitation,” the Guardian reported on Good Friday.

The article blames the shortage of cocoa, which is used to make chocolate, on rising prices of fertilizers, deforestation, illegal mining practices, and “extreme weather events.”

The article doesn’t provide any details on these alleged events, but it does mention El Niño, which is a warming of the ocean surface in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.

It causes changes in weather patterns during the cycle. This cycle was recorded long before carbon dioxide emissions were a factor in the atmosphere.

A National Public Radio segment, which also ran on Good Friday, interviewed its business correspondent, who said: “Farmers there [in the Ivory Coast and Ghana] have been facing extreme weather, changing climate patterns, which have just decimated crop harvests.” NPR provided no data or sourcing for the environmental claims.

Writing in The Conversation, reporter Jack Marley’s headline suggests that ‘climate change’ ‘may’ be the culprit, and he then goes on to write that “food production globally is facing an increasingly hostile climate.”

While African cocoa farmers in 2023 may have had a bad year, crop data doesn’t show any downward trends in African yields. Between 2007 and 2022, cocoa yields actually went up.

This is true for many crops in many regions across the world, including rice, soybeans, wheat, and corn. This data is easy to find, but not a single article on rising chocolate prices in any of these media outlets mentioned this mitigating data.

Marley didn’t respond to questions if he was aware of this data or if he ever sought it out.

Shaping a uniform narrative

The Guardian, NPR, and The Conversation are among the hundreds of media outlets associated with or listed as partners with an organization called Covering Climate Now (CCN), which encourages reporters to insert “climate crisis” narratives into all their stories.

Covering Climate Now boasts partnerships with hundreds of major media outlets across the world.

According to CCN, its partners have a combined audience of two billion people – one-fourth of the globe’s population — in 57 countries.

The group provides advice to reporters on all beats to not only insert a “climate crisis” narrative into every beat but also how to cover the topic.

This includes telling journalists not to platform what it calls ‘denialists’, which includes anyone who ridicules climate activists or suggests that ‘climate change’ is not producing a global emergency.

The site is full of tips on what language to use, how to write headlines, and suggested stories for journalists to cover, all in line with an anti-‘fossil’ message.

It suggests avoiding “fake experts.” To determine the value of experts a reporter might interview, CCN points them to the activist website DeSmog, which demonizes anyone, even those on the left, who in any way disputes the “climate crisis” narrative.

The Covering Climate Now section on solutions to what it says is an indisputable crisis leaves no room for ‘fossil fuel’ use, even though experts say that rapidly eliminating them is not only unrealistic, it would necessitate the collapse of civilization.

“Hitting that 2050 target will require rapidly phasing out oil, gas, and coal burning; reversing deforestation; shifting from the current industrial model of agriculture to climate-friendly farming methods; and much more,” the CCN section states.

The organization encourages reporters to make statements attributing ‘extreme weather’ to ‘climate change’, even in the absence of any data to support the claims.

“Even in the absence of explicit attribution data, it’s accurate to say that climate change is making extreme weather more common and more severe,” CCN tells its partnered media organizations.

It then provides tips for language journalists can use to blame “extreme weather” on ‘climate change’ for any story.

Contrary to CCN’s advice, attributing extreme weather to ‘climate change’ in many instances goes against what the research shows.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations consortium of the world’s leading climate scientists, finds little in the way of trends regarding floods, droughts, hurricanes, and tornadoes, much less a signal that could attribute trends to human-caused ‘climate change’.

As Dr. Roger Pielke, Jr., professor of environmental studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, explains in a series of articles on various types of natural disasters, the IPCC’s research on this topic is full of uncertainties.

Covering Climate Now doesn’t mention any of this research and instead tells reporters, “Human-caused climate change isn’t solely to blame for extreme weather, but it supercharges normal weather patterns, like steroids.”

Covering Climate Now didn’t respond to questions from Just The News about these misleading statements, but media experts have raised concerns about the bias that CCN is encouraging.

“They say that it’s about improving climate coverage. What they really mean is having climate coverage that appeals to exactly what they want said,” Jon Pepper, a communications consultant and novelist, told Just The News.

Writing in “Issues In Science and Technology,” a quarterly science journal, in 2019, Matthew Nisbet, of American University’s School of Communication, discussed how Covering Climate Now places too much certainty on the connection between extreme weather and ‘climate change’ and veers from the world of traditional objective journalism into advocacy.

“The new Covering Climate Now initiative must strongly challenge longstanding biases in environmental reporting, rather than reinforcing them. The project is shaping up to become an echo chamber for climate change activism, just another symptom of today’s bitter political culture,” Nisbit wrote.

Covering Climate Now charges nothing for membership. It’s supported by anti-‘fossil fuel’ groups such as the Park Foundation, the Waverly Street Foundation, and Actions@EBMF.

The group previously received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, which had $5.2 billion in net assets in 2022, according to its tax filings, and funds many media organizations directly to advance the organization’s anti-‘fossil fuel’ message.

The Rockefeller Foundation was one of the anti-‘fossil fuel’ organizations that provided the Associated Press with a three-year grant totaling $8 million specifically to support the service’s coverage of ‘climate change’.

The Associated Press was also among the outlets last week blaming ‘climate change’ for the rise in chocolate prices. The Rockefeller Foundation also provided funding to The Guardian and NPR for their climate coverage.

The effort to weave the ‘climate crisis’ narrative into all media people consume goes beyond the news. It also includes entertainment.

Good Energy Stories provides “consulting services” on how to insert political messages regarding ‘climate change’ into television, film, and media.

It’s not clear how many projects the group has been involved in. Its founder, Anna Jane Joyner, told The New York Times that nondisclosure agreements prevent her from saying which books, movies, or TV shows it has influenced, but it provides a playbook on how to fit ‘climate change’ into non-news stories.

Like Covering Climate Now, the organization’s funders are anti-‘fossil fuel’ nonprofits, such as the Sierra Club and Bloomberg Philanthropies, the latter of which provided $1 billion to efforts to ban gas stoves and shut down all coal plants worldwide.

Good Energy Stories didn’t respond to requests for comment on this article.

Pepper, the communications consultant and novelist, wrote a series of books called “Fossil Feuds,” which center on the wealthy Crowe family and their New York-based energy empire as they struggle to adapt to modern times.

The latest in the series, “Missy’s Twitch,” is about the Crowe family heiress who develops overwhelming anxiety about what she believes is a looming ‘climate apocalypse’.

Pepper said he wrote the series as a counter to “Cli-fi,” a genre of science fiction that portrays dystopian futures in which humanity struggles to survive in a world completely destroyed by ‘climate change’, something the IPCC does not present as a possible outcome under any scenario, even one in which no policies are adopted to address carbon dioxide emissions.

“The catastrophe is really the solutions they’re imposing on us. That is the potential disaster far more than anything that comes from climate change,” Pepper said.

Pepper said some of the climate activists’ ideas that are saturating the media through groups like Good Energy Stories and Covering Climate Now are dangerous. They’re expensive and create energy scarcity, which is effectively policy-induced poverty.

“They’d like to have the cloak of virtue around them, but to me, I think some of this stretches morality in very unfortunate ways,” Pepper said.

O.H. Skinner, executive director of Alliance for Consumers, said in an interview that Covering Climate Now and Good Energy Stories are part of a playbook of the political left.

They have a vision of what lifestyle choices they want people to make, and the ‘climate crisis’ narrative, he said, gives them the means to push policies that enforce it.

“It’s not enough for them, for people to just buy a more fuel-efficient car. They need them to basically stop having cars, or certainly stop having gas-powered cars. That’s where they want the world to go. And so if you want to ban two-thirds of the cars on the road, you better have a consistent narrative in the media. Or else people are going to rightly be very unhappy with that reality, which we’re starting to see,” Skinner said.

Skinner said 20 years ago, the left’s strategy was to put energy star stickers on consumer goods.

“That didn’t work, apparently, because now they’re resorting to mandates and bans and wiping things off the market,” Skinner said.

Dr. Matt Wielicki, former assistant professor in the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Alabama and author of “Irrational Fear,” told Just The News that groups like Good Energy Stories and Covering Climate Now are trying to purge any notion of nuance and uncertainty in climate science because that undermines the overarching goal.

That goal was originally a transition in the energy system to wind and solar, he said, but as that goal encounters more and more problems, the discussion is now shifting to “degrowth” and strategies that are basically a redistribution of wealth.

“They definitely want to ignore any honesty about the scientific complications that exist in the climate system, because it clouds this nice, pretty narrative that everything is because of fossil fuels and CO2. They just want to radically change the system of capitalism,” Wielicki said.

Skinner said the policies the left is “fixated” on all drive up the costs of everything and channel people into the lifestyle choices that the climate activists want people to make.

“When you drive up the price of a person’s car, you drive up their electricity bill, you make it really expensive to do things. It’s anti-consumer,” he said.

Wielicki said media are becoming so saturated with the ‘climate crisis’ narrative that it’s beginning to have the opposite effect. It’s producing more skepticism, he said, and there’s a growing audience that is thirsty for a more reasonable message.

It’s something he saw as a professor when he challenged alarmist narratives in his classroom.

“They were thirsty for that knowledge. They were fed up and mentally exhausted with being bombarded by catastrophe after catastrophe. They are really thirsty for some good news,”

Skinner said the ‘climate crisis’ narrative is beginning to run into problems as the regulatory solutions become costly for consumers.

Wind and solar are driving up electricity prices, electric vehicle mandates are making cars more expensive, and efficiency standards are raising the costs of appliances.

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Comments (7)

  • Avatar

    VOWG

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    We live in a world of stupid. There are some things I agree with when it comes to keeping the water, air and earth (dirt) clean but more things are just bogus frauds to enrich less than honorable people. The insanity of reducing CO2 is just one such thing.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Kevin Doyle

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    It might be helpful to the audiences of BBC, CNN, and NPR if anyone on their network shows could actually explain ‘CO2 Greenhouse Gas Theory’?
    It is sort of embarrassing that no actual ‘scientists’ claim responsibility for this ‘Theory’, other than James Hansen, who wrote his PhD Thesis on the subject at Iowa. Never challenged.

    When one understands the actual ‘Theory’, it claims a tiny magic gas in the atmosphere reflects/absorbs and bounces back heat radiation from the surface to add to the surface temperature. It claims it increases the surface temperature, after one ‘reflection’ by 33 degrees Celsius.
    If this were true, then why wouldn’t this Theoretical Effect increase exponentially as radiation bounces continuously between Earth, clouds, and CO2 particles in the atmosphere? Logic would lead us to the conclusion the Earth should be a molten ball of fire, due to this ‘Greenhouse Effect’?

    Does anyone ask common sense questions anymore?

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Kevin Doyle

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      In the real World, two objects at the same temperature radiate photons equally. Thus, no net transfer of energy/heat.
      Like two water pipes opposing one another, there is no transfer of water, if pressures are equal. If one water pipe has greater pressure, then water will flow in the direction of ‘lower pressure’.
      Same for radiation. A surface of Earth at 20 deg C. warms cold gases at 1,000 meter altitude.
      The cold gases at 1,000 m altitude, at say 10-15 deg C. cannot possibly warm ‘already warmer’ Earth. They are colder, and have less energy.
      Heat Transfer 101.
      Only, if the sky were hotter than than surface, then such a ‘Theory’ might be plausible.

      Thus, this entire ‘CO2 Greenhouse Gas Theory’ violates basic Thermodynamic Laws and is fabricated, complete horse manure…

      Reply

      • Avatar

        Herb Rose

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        Hi Kevin,
        Heat is kinetic energy which includes both mass and energy.
        To use your water analogy heat is how much water is flowing while energy is the pressure of the water. If you connect a large pipe with a small pipe it is the pressure that controls the flow of water. The surface of the Earth, with a large number of molecules, is radiating a large amount of energy resulting in a temperature reading by the thermometer. The gas molecules in the atmosphere are fewer but they have greater velocity (pressure) so even though they are transmitting a smaller amount of energy to the thermometer (lower reading) they, with their greater pressure, will cause energy to flow to the surface of the Earth.
        Herb

        Reply

        • Avatar

          Kevin Doyle

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          Herb,
          Are you suggesting a liter of cold air contains more energy than a liter of warm seawater or granite?
          I’m a bit confused?
          Are you confusing Heat (Q) with Temperature (T)?
          I’d better get my refresher course on Thermodynamics and Heat Transfer, as I didn’t realize freezing cold air particles at 10,000 foot elevation could increase the temperature of the Caribbean Sea…

          Reply

          • Avatar

            Herb Rose

            |

            Hi Kevin,
            A thermometer measuring the temperature of water is measuring the flow of energy into the mercury in the bulb to the flow of energy out of the mercury in the body of the thermometer exposed to the air. The mercury expands or contracts in the two mediums until the outward flow equals the inward flow giving the temperature.
            In the thermometer in the atmosphere all the mercury is exposed to one medium and when equilibrium is reached the thermometer is measuring the amount of energy absorbed by the mercury.
            The thermometers are measuring two different things.
            When measuring the temperature of the water a constant number (mass) of molecules are transferring energy into the mercury while in the atmosphere the number of air molecules transferring energy to the mercury decreases with altitude. The temperature of the thermometer whose bulb is in the water is measuring the energy transferred by a constant number of molecules while the mercury in the thermometer in the atmosphere is measuring the energy being transferred by a constant volume of molecules.
            In order to compare the energy of the molecules in the atmosphere to the energy of the molecules in the water you must divide the temperature measured at an altitude by the density of molecules at that altitude then compare that to the measurement of the temperature of the water divided by 1,200 (the number of molecules transferring energy in the water to the number molecules in the air at sea level.
            If you put two logs in a fireplace instead of one the fire will raise the recorded temperature in a room even though the logs burn at the same temperature. It is a matter of amount of heat being radiated versus the wavelength of the heat at the source.
            Herb
            Herb

          • Avatar

            Herb Rose

            |

            Hi again Kevin.
            To use your water analogy. The volume of water a pipe can transmit is determined by the size of the pipe. The rate it can deliver that volume depends on the pressure. In the atmosphere The temperature in the atmosphere is how much energy it contains. The temperature of the water is how much the water is flowing due to pressure difference. In the atmosphere the thermometer is a volume measurement while in the water it is a pressure gauge.
            Herb

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