Dubai Telegraph - 'Infecting minds': US book sent to teachers seeks to sow climate doubt

EUR -
AED 4.244814
AFN 72.802804
ALL 95.914677
AMD 436.246704
ANG 2.068623
AOA 1059.686486
ARS 1612.008363
AUD 1.638291
AWG 2.082972
AZN 1.962345
BAM 1.969574
BBD 2.328475
BDT 141.855734
BGN 1.97528
BHD 0.436297
BIF 3432.136637
BMD 1.155602
BND 1.483243
BOB 7.989252
BRL 6.063493
BSD 1.156105
BTN 107.709447
BWP 15.776079
BYN 3.574902
BYR 22649.790599
BZD 2.325171
CAD 1.587086
CDF 2628.993471
CHF 0.913988
CLF 0.026713
CLP 1054.763637
CNY 7.97417
CNH 7.960725
COP 4269.832208
CRC 540.913237
CUC 1.155602
CUP 30.623441
CVE 112.151229
CZK 24.481386
DJF 205.373253
DKK 7.47086
DOP 67.978235
DZD 152.576569
EGP 60.372554
ERN 17.334023
ETB 181.657116
FJD 2.588804
FKP 0.867479
GBP 0.862477
GEL 3.13749
GGP 0.867479
GHS 12.593607
GIP 0.867479
GMD 85.514573
GNF 10143.290905
GTQ 8.843733
GYD 241.874076
HKD 9.052001
HNL 30.704397
HRK 7.533481
HTG 151.647087
HUF 392.943851
IDR 19565.490032
ILS 3.613959
IMP 0.867479
INR 107.442864
IQD 1513.838045
IRR 1519760.503236
ISK 143.791825
JEP 0.867479
JMD 181.624669
JOD 0.819309
JPY 182.423841
KES 149.763421
KGS 101.054924
KHR 4633.962204
KMF 494.597345
KPW 1040.027513
KRW 1724.007673
KWD 0.353926
KYD 0.963484
KZT 555.984674
LAK 24816.543481
LBP 103484.119913
LKR 360.370478
LRD 211.937779
LSL 19.449397
LTL 3.412191
LVL 0.699012
LYD 7.372499
MAD 10.814987
MDL 20.260655
MGA 4813.080507
MKD 61.61802
MMK 2426.462186
MNT 4143.804949
MOP 9.328119
MRU 46.350722
MUR 53.741226
MVR 17.853738
MWK 2007.279745
MXN 20.551813
MYR 4.551849
MZN 73.838926
NAD 19.44871
NGN 1568.150995
NIO 42.433955
NOK 10.997704
NPR 172.329658
NZD 1.976252
OMR 0.444335
PAB 1.156145
PEN 3.992022
PGK 4.971446
PHP 69.284099
PKR 322.586743
PLN 4.27635
PYG 7512.308906
QAR 4.211707
RON 5.093891
RSD 117.455653
RUB 99.556773
RWF 1686.022678
SAR 4.338713
SBD 9.300955
SCR 17.161078
SDG 694.516441
SEK 10.775205
SGD 1.478315
SHP 0.867
SLE 28.485234
SLL 24232.399446
SOS 660.428353
SRD 43.337431
STD 23918.619165
STN 24.845434
SVC 10.116052
SYP 127.727213
SZL 19.448949
THB 37.709593
TJS 11.069987
TMT 4.044605
TND 3.364245
TOP 2.782411
TRY 51.186048
TTD 7.836174
TWD 36.808226
TZS 3001.680884
UAH 50.840265
UGX 4369.74838
USD 1.155602
UYU 46.828911
UZS 14092.560843
VES 525.435424
VND 30380.765043
VUV 137.988555
WST 3.157358
XAF 660.611205
XAG 0.01622
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.123071
XCG 2.083589
XDR 0.821585
XOF 660.428833
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.668443
ZAR 19.4876
ZMK 10401.796193
ZMW 22.631445
ZWL 372.103231
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.7500

    15.85

    -4.73%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    58.63

    +0.92%

  • GSK

    0.2900

    52.35

    +0.55%

  • RIO

    -2.1130

    85.607

    -2.47%

  • AZN

    0.1200

    188.54

    +0.06%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    22.835

    +0.02%

  • BCE

    -0.1750

    25.575

    -0.68%

  • BP

    1.6650

    46.275

    +3.6%

  • RELX

    -0.0600

    33.8

    -0.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.85

    -0.18%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    14.395

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    -2.5700

    69.27

    -3.71%

  • NGG

    -1.8500

    85.55

    -2.16%

  • JRI

    -0.1330

    12.19

    -1.09%

'Infecting minds': US book sent to teachers seeks to sow climate doubt
'Infecting minds': US book sent to teachers seeks to sow climate doubt / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP/File

'Infecting minds': US book sent to teachers seeks to sow climate doubt

From crops to corals, a book circulated by a controversial US think tank is riddled with misleading claims about established climate science, in what campaigners slam as a bid to "infect" young minds.

Text size:

The free-market Heartland Institute drew outrage from campaigners and educators, but applause from climate skeptics, when it sent the book to more than 8,000 American school teachers this year "to present facts" it said were ignored or distorted by pundits and the media.

"Climate at a Glance for Teachers and Students," factchecked by AFP, follows another mass book-mailing in 2017, and reflects a push to sow skepticism about scientific evidence for the human-driven crisis threatening the planet.

"It is outrageous that such propaganda was sent out... with the goal of infecting the minds of children," Susan Joy Hassol, director of the nonprofit group Climate Communication, told AFP.

The glossy, 80-page book appears like a legitimate reference, complete with datasets, graphs and footnotes citing mainstream sources including government and international agencies.

But scientists told AFP it is packed with misleading claims, including sections that imply higher carbon dioxide levels and warming are positive for crops and coral reefs, decrease in snow has been negligible, sea-level rise is not accelerating and heatwaves have become less severe.

"We stand by the data presented" in the book, its editor and the institute's climate chief H. Sterling Burnett told AFP.

AFP's full fact-check is published at http://u.afp.com/i8i7.

- 'Science fiction' -

The book's publication follows a surge in climate denialism in the United States since July 2022, when President Joe Biden secured support for a major climate spending bill.

Biden is pushing Americans to embrace electric cars and renewable energy, prompting scorn among skeptics who see it as a threat to their lifestyle and values even as research shows that many citizens recognize climate change is happening.

The think tank's opaque funding has long prompted suspicion among campaigners that it is working in the interest of the fossil fuel industry.

The Heartland Institute, founded in 1984, does not disclose its major backers but said that once, in 2012, it received funding for research from the charity arm of the fossil fuel behemoth Koch Industries.

It has kept secret information about the 8,000 recipients of the book. When AFP asked for names, Burnett said he had "nothing to do with the mailing" and passed the request over to Heartland's communications director, who did not respond.

"I would bet it's strategically distributed in certain congressional districts of states where they're trying to provide cover for certain politicians to continue to deny or deceive or delay on climate change," said Kate Cell, senior climate campaign manager at the Union of Concerned Scientists.

At least five schools in Wyoming received copies, according to the Cowboy State Daily newspaper. It quoted Heartland's president as saying that they had received "hate mail" from a teacher who dismissed the book as "science fiction."

The 2017 book received a similar frosty response, with one US media photograph showing an envelope returned to the institute with a hand-scrawled note: "Never send us mail AGAIN."

- 'Very sad' -

The scaling down of the mailing -- to a fraction of the hundreds of thousands of books it sent out in 2017 -- may be a "tacit admission" that Heartland's strategy is not effective, said Glenn Branch, deputy director of the National Center for Science Education.

Science teachers have become "better prepared to teach climate change effectively and tend to be accordingly leery of climate change denial material," Branch told AFP.

As of March, however, the latest book had received overwhelmingly positive ratings on Amazon.

"All grandparents buy one for your grandkids, all teachers got (sic) one for your students. The sky is not falling -- get the message out!" wrote one reader.

AFP cannot confirm if the reviewers are independent of the institute.

"It is very sad, to say the least," Jeffrey Grant, an Illinois-based science teacher, said of the latest book.

"I am hoping to use some of their graphs to show my students how not to put together data in support of your scientific explanation," he told AFP.

Y.Rahma--DT