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Warning: “Greater exposure” to Fox News will lead to “increased misinformation” on policy issues, especially climate science

THE POLLING CHART OF THE YEAR:

WPO

A World Public Opinion (WPO) poll finds that a remarkable 60% of those who watched Fox News almost daily believe that “Most scientists do not agree that climate change is occurring,” whereas only 30% who never watch it believe that.  Only 25% of those who watch CNN almost daily hold that erroneous belief — and only 14% who listen to NPR or PBS almost daily.

This is not terribly surprising given that, as we learned this week, as of last December, Fox News managing editor Bill Sammon has required reporters and producers that report on even the most unequivocal scientific facts about global warming to dispute those facts ” IMMEDIATELY.”

Erroneous views turn out to be commonplace among regular Fox News viewers, as ThinkProgress explains:

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Why did Cancun work where Copenhagen failed?

This is a re-post from Politico by CAP’s John D. Podesta and Andrew Light.

The United Nations climate summit’s Cancun Agreements were a critical step toward an effective compact to fight global warming after many years of disappointing climate meetings. But why did Cancun work where Copenhagen failed? Three factors helped the notoriously difficult negotiating process.

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Rockefeller: Preventing Action On Global Warming ‘Is Too Important For Us To Delay Any Further’

Climate peacock Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) is threatening to tie up the funding of the government with his coal-powered campaign to kill climate action before the end of the year. In a press release issued Thursday, Rockefeller said that he is willing to try to “suspend the rules on the Omnibus Appropriations bill” to force a 2/3 vote for his “Dirty Air Act” amendment, which would stall EPA rules on global warming polluters until 2014:

The time has come for us to make a decision on the energy future of our country. I have spent this year fighting to make sure that Congress, not the EPA, determines how best to reduce greenhouse gases in a way that protects West Virginia’s economy. While there are still ongoing discussions about how Congress should proceed, I want to make it clear that I intend to get a vote this year on my EPA-suspension legislation. I know there is bipartisan support for this legislation, and if necessary, I will seek to suspend the rules and bring this up for a vote. This is too important for us to delay any further.

Meanwhile, the disaster of global warming pollution grows. “The first nine months of the year have seen the highest number of weather-related events since Munich Re started keeping records,” Peter Hoeppe, an expert from Munich Re’s Geo Risks Research department warned — including a flooding disasters in West Virginia in March, May, and June, followed by disastrous drought. Antarctic sea ice is being melted by a radically warming ocean. Phytoplankton populations are collapsing. And the rate of ocean acidification the fastest in 65 million years.

And yet Sen. Rockefeller, whose family fortune was built upon oil and has received over $800,000 from the fossil industry in campaign contributions, says that preventing the United States from even beginning to slow the pollution is what cannot be delayed.

Update

After Reid abandoned the omnibus bill last night, Rockefeller’s options for forcing a vote on stalling climate action are now unclear.


Update

,Rockefeller has abandoned his effort this year:

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.V., said Friday he was dropping, for now, his bill to delay greenhouse gas regulation by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Rockefeller blamed Republicans for blocking the proposed omnibus appropriations bill, which he hoped to amend with the bill. He said Republicans also failed to support his attempt Friday to attach the bill to the proposed continuing resolution that will fund the government through mid-February.

Rockefeller vowed to revive his bill next month, when the 112th Congress is sworn in.

Berm notice: Oil Spill Commission staff finds Jindal’s sand piles were “Underwhelmingly Effective, Overwhelmingly Expensive”

berm E-4, July 8

Back in June, I warned that Gov. Bobby Jindal (R-LA) was demagoguing a sand barrier ‘solution’ that probably won’t help, will take many months, use up valuable resources, vanish in the first storm “” and many scientists think will make things worse.  As one Coastal geologist explained: “I have yet to speak to a scientist who thinks the project will be effective.”

By July, surprise, surprise, Jindal’s “barrier islands” were washing away [see photo above].  Now the staff of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling offers its least surprising finding in a white paper, “The Story of the Louisiana Berms Project“:

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Energy and Global Warming News for December 17th: Worlds biggest wind farm advances; CEC approves ninth California solar project in four months; What does the future hold for concentrating PV?

World’s Biggest Wind Farm One Step Closer to Reality

Somewhere out there in Oregon, green job seekers are cheering. The world’s largest wind farm has just cleared another hurdle, with yesterday’s announcement by U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu that a partial guarantee for a $1.3 billion (yes, billion) loan has been finalized. The 845-megawatt behemoth, called the Caithness Shepherds Flat project, will be sited in eastern Oregon and bring hundreds of new construction jobs to the area.

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