Redirected from Science and Environmental Policy Project
According to the Harvard University Center for the Environment, "The Science and Environmental Policy Project site is primarily an outlet for the views of S. Fred Singer, Distinguished Research Professor at George Mason University. It provides access to Singer's congressional testimony, articles, and reprints of related newspaper stories."
According to Grist magazine, "The Science and Environmental Policy Project is run by contrarian Fred Singer, formerly of the University of Virginia. Singer maintains a steady drumbeat of op-eds in the Washington Times and Wall Street Journal, among other publications, disputing the scientific consensus on issues such as ozone depletion and climate change. Singer's organization has a board of directors and advisers made up primarily of retired scientists no longer active in the field, many of whom are also on the board of the closely linked George C. Marshall Institute."
|
Present on the Board of Directors are:
The board of science advisors, in general, lack scientific connections to climate change.
SEPP has emerged as one of the chief opponents of concerns over global warming, dismissing it as little more than a fabrication. SEPP's position on global warming is summed up in these quotes from Dr. Singer's web site:
SEPP was the author of the Leipzig Declaration, which it says was based on the conclusions drawn from a November 1995 conference in Leipzig, Germany, which SEPP organized with the European Academy for Environmental Affairs.
SEPP accepted a one-year donation of office space from the Washington Institute for Values in Public Policy, a now-defunct think tank affiliated with Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. [3] (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/cult/unification/image.htm) SEPP has subsequently dissociated itself from the Washington Institute, strengthening its links with the conservative Virginia-based George Mason University. In 1998, SEPP received a $10,000 donation from ExxonMobil [4] (http://web.archive.org/web/20011031010631/www.exxonmobil.com/contributions/public_info).
[2] No longer online, copy from the Internet Archive.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|