Difference between revisions of "Roger Bate"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 11: Line 11:
 
Bate also directed and presented the BBC2 ''Counterblast'' programme, "Organic Food: The Modern Myth" (BBC2, 31 Jan 2000), in his role as director of the [[European Science and Environment Forum]] (ESEF).                         
 
Bate also directed and presented the BBC2 ''Counterblast'' programme, "Organic Food: The Modern Myth" (BBC2, 31 Jan 2000), in his role as director of the [[European Science and Environment Forum]] (ESEF).                         
  
In its [http://web.archive.org/web/19971224164327/esef.org/mission.htm mission statement on its original website], the ESEF described itself as 'a non-partisan group of scientists' and claimed, "To maintain its independence and impartiality, the ESEF does not accept outside funding from whatever source, the only income it receives is from the sale of its publications"<ref>"[http://web.archive.org/web/19971224164327/esef.org/mission.htm Mission Statement]", archived version of ESEF website, accessed January 2009</ref>.  
+
In its mission statement on its original website, the ESEF described itself as "a non-partisan group of scientists"<ref>This version of the web page has expired from web archives as of January 2009.</ref> The only extant web archived version of the website has the modified wording, "The European Science and Environment Forum is an independent, non-profit-making alliance of scientists whose aim is to ensure that environmental debates are properly aired, and that decisions which are taken, and action that is proposed, are founded on sound scientific principles."
  
However, documents released by tobacco giant Philip Morris show that ESEF was established with money from the tobacco industry - solicited by Bate. As Big Tobacco's European front organization, ESEF's task was to smuggle tobacco advocacy into a larger bundle of 'sound science' issues, including 'restrictions on the use of biotechnology.'
+
Significantly, ESEF's archived website claims, "To maintain its independence and impartiality, the ESEF does not accept outside funding from whatever source, the only income it receives is from the sale of its publications"<ref>"[http://web.archive.org/web/19971224164327/esef.org/mission.htm Mission Statement]", archived version of ESEF website, accessed January 2009</ref>.  
  
Shortly after the Philip Morris revelations Bate suddenly resigned as Director of ESEF and its website was taken down.  It has subsequently been relaunched with a [http://www.scienceforum.net/ different domain name].
+
However, a paper published in ''The Lancet'' by Elisa K Ong and Stanton A Glantz entitled, "Tobacco industry efforts subverting International Agency for Research on Cancer’s second-hand smoke study", suggests that the ESEF was established as a front group by the tobacco giant Philip Morris and that funding was sought for this purpose by Roger Bate:
 +
 
 +
:From 1993 to 1994, PM [Philip Morris] and public relations firm APCO Associates worked to launch The Advancement of
 +
Sound Science Coalition (TASSC), a “grassroots” organisation advocating “sound science” in policy decision making. PM wanted a similar organisation in Europe at the end of 1994, with potentially sympathetic European scientists invited to a conference hosted by TASSC. However, Burson-Marsteller research indicated that potential European members wanted independence from any corporate sponsors; two people specifically mentioned PM as typical of questionable corporate sponsors. It appears that the outcome was the European Science and Environment Forum (ESEF), established in 1996,44 whose executive director sought funding from the tobacco companies.<ref>Elisa K Ong and Stanton A Glantz, "[www.tobaccoscam.ucsf.edu/pdf/5.1.2b-Ong&GlantzIARC.pdf Tobacco industry efforts subverting International Agency for Research on Cancer’s second-hand smoke study]", ''The Lancet'', Vol. 355, April 8, 2000, p. 1256.</ref>
 +
 
 +
As Big Tobacco's European front organization, ESEF's task was to smuggle tobacco advocacy into a larger bundle of "sound science" issues, including "restrictions on the use of biotechnology".
 +
 
 +
Shortly after the Philip Morris revelations Bate suddenly resigned as Director of ESEF and its website was taken down.  
  
 
Bate contributed a number of articles to the magazine [[Living Marxism]]. Both the International Policy Network and ESEF cooperate regularly with members of the Living Marxism network.
 
Bate contributed a number of articles to the magazine [[Living Marxism]]. Both the International Policy Network and ESEF cooperate regularly with members of the Living Marxism network.

Revision as of 22:13, 14 January 2009

Roger Bate is an economist who in 1993 founded the Environment Unit of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), a London-based free-market think tank. He later became the co-director with Julian Morris of the IEA's Environment and Technology Programme and is still a senior fellow of the IEA.

He is a fellow of the Julian Morris-directed International Policy Network whose Washington address is that of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, where Bate is an adjunct fellow.

Bate is also the former executive director of the European Science and Environment Forum (ESEF) which he co-founded in 1994.

He is the co-author, with Julian Morris, of Fearing Food: Risk, Health and Environment. The IEA website comments: 'In the latest ESEF book, Fearing Food, new agricultural and food technologies, including genetic engineering, are shown to be generally beneficial both to health and to the environment.' Contributors to the book include Michael Wilson, John Hillman and Dennis Avery.

Bate and Morris drew on Avery's bogus E-coli claims in a publicity stunt to launch the book. This involved telling people that 'according to the United States Centers for Disease Control, people who eat the products of...[organic agriculture] are eight times more likely to contract the strain of E-coli that killed 21 people in Lanarkshire in 1997' ('Unsavoury facts about organic food' August 16, 1999). In a related press release, published via the IEA, ('Londoners demand regulation of potentially deadly organic food'), Bate and Morris wrote, 'organic food may well present a danger to children, the elderly and the sick... such people should be discouraged from eating so-called "organic" or "natural" foods.'

Bate also directed and presented the BBC2 Counterblast programme, "Organic Food: The Modern Myth" (BBC2, 31 Jan 2000), in his role as director of the European Science and Environment Forum (ESEF).

In its mission statement on its original website, the ESEF described itself as "a non-partisan group of scientists"[1] The only extant web archived version of the website has the modified wording, "The European Science and Environment Forum is an independent, non-profit-making alliance of scientists whose aim is to ensure that environmental debates are properly aired, and that decisions which are taken, and action that is proposed, are founded on sound scientific principles."

Significantly, ESEF's archived website claims, "To maintain its independence and impartiality, the ESEF does not accept outside funding from whatever source, the only income it receives is from the sale of its publications"[2].

However, a paper published in The Lancet by Elisa K Ong and Stanton A Glantz entitled, "Tobacco industry efforts subverting International Agency for Research on Cancer’s second-hand smoke study", suggests that the ESEF was established as a front group by the tobacco giant Philip Morris and that funding was sought for this purpose by Roger Bate:

From 1993 to 1994, PM [Philip Morris] and public relations firm APCO Associates worked to launch The Advancement of

Sound Science Coalition (TASSC), a “grassroots” organisation advocating “sound science” in policy decision making. PM wanted a similar organisation in Europe at the end of 1994, with potentially sympathetic European scientists invited to a conference hosted by TASSC. However, Burson-Marsteller research indicated that potential European members wanted independence from any corporate sponsors; two people specifically mentioned PM as typical of questionable corporate sponsors. It appears that the outcome was the European Science and Environment Forum (ESEF), established in 1996,44 whose executive director sought funding from the tobacco companies.[3]

As Big Tobacco's European front organization, ESEF's task was to smuggle tobacco advocacy into a larger bundle of "sound science" issues, including "restrictions on the use of biotechnology".

Shortly after the Philip Morris revelations Bate suddenly resigned as Director of ESEF and its website was taken down.

Bate contributed a number of articles to the magazine Living Marxism. Both the International Policy Network and ESEF cooperate regularly with members of the Living Marxism network.

For more on Bate.

Notes

  1. This version of the web page has expired from web archives as of January 2009.
  2. "Mission Statement", archived version of ESEF website, accessed January 2009
  3. Elisa K Ong and Stanton A Glantz, "[www.tobaccoscam.ucsf.edu/pdf/5.1.2b-Ong&GlantzIARC.pdf Tobacco industry efforts subverting International Agency for Research on Cancer’s second-hand smoke study]", The Lancet, Vol. 355, April 8, 2000, p. 1256.