Difference between revisions of "Mark Lynas"

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==Background==
 
==Background==
 
Mark Lynas and [[Oliver Tickell]] are two journalists who helped drafting a climate change scenario study of the [[Stockholm Network]].<ref>Stockholm Network [http://www.stockholm-network.org Homepage], accessed March 13, 2009</ref> Other authors include big oil management people ([[BP]] and [[Shell]]) apart from a few academics. The study claims a distance from climate sceptical research promoted by "U.S. think tanks" according to media reports on the scenario study, although the Stockholm Network itself has previously promoted climate scepticism itself.<ref>Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO),[http://www.corporateeurope.org/ThinkTankSurvey2006.html Brussels think tanks persist in funding secrecy: ExxonMobil covertly funds EU climate skeptics], December 2006, accessed March 13, 2009</ref> The scenario study argues in favor of a radical departure from the political course taken so far (Kyoto) allegedly because the instruments are less effective than an alternative promoted in a "step change" scenario advocating taxation at the origin of the carbon chain. No information on distributional consequences are given, unfortunately. It is unclear who would carry the burden if this allegedly economic growth supporting alternative would be pursued, and the whole strategy may be primarily meant to help undermining the Kyoto diplomacy. Mark Lynas in any case has also written in favor of nuclear energy.<ref>Mark Lynas, [http://www.newstatesman.com/environment/2008/09/nuclear-power-lynas-reactors Why greens must learn to love nuclear power], accessed March 13, 2009</ref>
 
Mark Lynas and [[Oliver Tickell]] are two journalists who helped drafting a climate change scenario study of the [[Stockholm Network]].<ref>Stockholm Network [http://www.stockholm-network.org Homepage], accessed March 13, 2009</ref> Other authors include big oil management people ([[BP]] and [[Shell]]) apart from a few academics. The study claims a distance from climate sceptical research promoted by "U.S. think tanks" according to media reports on the scenario study, although the Stockholm Network itself has previously promoted climate scepticism itself.<ref>Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO),[http://www.corporateeurope.org/ThinkTankSurvey2006.html Brussels think tanks persist in funding secrecy: ExxonMobil covertly funds EU climate skeptics], December 2006, accessed March 13, 2009</ref> The scenario study argues in favor of a radical departure from the political course taken so far (Kyoto) allegedly because the instruments are less effective than an alternative promoted in a "step change" scenario advocating taxation at the origin of the carbon chain. No information on distributional consequences are given, unfortunately. It is unclear who would carry the burden if this allegedly economic growth supporting alternative would be pursued, and the whole strategy may be primarily meant to help undermining the Kyoto diplomacy. Mark Lynas in any case has also written in favor of nuclear energy.<ref>Mark Lynas, [http://www.newstatesman.com/environment/2008/09/nuclear-power-lynas-reactors Why greens must learn to love nuclear power], accessed March 13, 2009</ref>
  
==Biographical Information==
 
 
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===Current activities===
 
 
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==People==
 
 
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==Publications, Contact, Resources and Notes==
 
==Publications, Contact, Resources and Notes==
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===Publications===
 
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[[Category:Climate Change|Lynas, Mark]][[Category:Journalists|Lynas, Mark]]
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[[Category:Climate Change|Lynas, Mark]][[Category:Journalists|Lynas, Mark]] [[Category:Climate Change Sceptics]] [[Category:Climate Science]] [[Category:Climate Policy Groups]] [[Category:Climate]]

Revision as of 09:30, 7 July 2010

Global warming.jpg This article is part of the Climate project of Spinwatch.

Background

Mark Lynas and Oliver Tickell are two journalists who helped drafting a climate change scenario study of the Stockholm Network.[1] Other authors include big oil management people (BP and Shell) apart from a few academics. The study claims a distance from climate sceptical research promoted by "U.S. think tanks" according to media reports on the scenario study, although the Stockholm Network itself has previously promoted climate scepticism itself.[2] The scenario study argues in favor of a radical departure from the political course taken so far (Kyoto) allegedly because the instruments are less effective than an alternative promoted in a "step change" scenario advocating taxation at the origin of the carbon chain. No information on distributional consequences are given, unfortunately. It is unclear who would carry the burden if this allegedly economic growth supporting alternative would be pursued, and the whole strategy may be primarily meant to help undermining the Kyoto diplomacy. Mark Lynas in any case has also written in favor of nuclear energy.[3]


Publications, Contact, Resources and Notes

http://www.marklynas.org/ http://www.stockholm-network.org/Conferences-and-Programmes/Energy-and-Environment/carbonscenarios

Publications

Resources

Notes

  1. Stockholm Network Homepage, accessed March 13, 2009
  2. Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO),Brussels think tanks persist in funding secrecy: ExxonMobil covertly funds EU climate skeptics, December 2006, accessed March 13, 2009
  3. Mark Lynas, Why greens must learn to love nuclear power, accessed March 13, 2009