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Analysis of Greenpeace’s
business model & philosophy
wants a piece of your green
An independent report by Dr. Michael Connolly, Dr. Ronan Connolly,
Dr. Willie Soon, Dr. Patrick Moore and Dr. Imelda Connolly (December 2018)
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Contents
Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................. 3
About the authors ................................................................................................................................... 4
1. Financial analysis ................................................................................................................................. 5
1.1. Greenpeace’s corporate structure ............................................................................................... 6
1.2. Greenpeace’s business model ..................................................................................................... 6
2. Arbitrariness of Greenpeace’s “enemies”: Case study of their vilification of ExxonMobil............... 12
2.1. Greenpeace’s “ExxonSecrets” project ....................................................................................... 12
2.2. The hypocrisy of Greenpeace’s “ExxonSecrets” claims ............................................................. 13
3. Inconsistency of Greenpeace’s “goals”: Their claimed goal of reducing CO2 emissions .................. 16
3.1. Greenpeace’s objections to the “stepping-stone” transition from coal to natural gas ............ 17
3.2. Greenpeace’s objections to nuclear power ............................................................................... 18
3.3. Greenpeace’s objections to hydroelectricity ............................................................................. 19
3.4. Greenpeace’s objections to biofuels/biomass ........................................................................... 19
3.5. What is left? ............................................................................................................................... 22
4. On the use of 95%, 96%, 97% and 98% figures ................................................................................. 24
4.1. Examples of Greenpeace’s use of 95%, 96%, 97% and 98% ...................................................... 24
4.2. Case study of the arbitrariness of their 97% figures – scientific opinion on climate change .... 24
5. Case study of their latest big campaign: the “plastics crisis” ........................................................... 29
5.1. The actual “ocean plastic pollution” issue ................................................................................. 29
5.1.1. The infamous “oceanic garbage patches” are not nearly as dramatic as people think...... 30
5.1.2. How much plastic is really there, and how big are these plastic pieces? ........................... 31
5.1.3. Where is this plastic coming from? Mostly Asian and African countries ........................... 33
5.2. Greenpeace’s version of the “crisis” .......................................................................................... 35
5.2.1. Trying to turn it into an excuse to abandon “single use plastics” ...................................... 35
5.2.2. Tie-in with BBC’s Blue Planet 2 documentary series .......................................................... 37
5.3. What is wrong with Greenpeace’s narrative on plastics? ......................................................... 39
5.3.1. They are deliberately misleading the public by fabricating a fictional “crisis” ................... 39
5.3.2. Unnecessary guilt doesn’t help the actual issue ................................................................. 40
5.3.3. Losing sight of the reasons why we are using plastic ......................................................... 41
5.4. Comparing Greenpeace’s approach to those of honest environmentalists .............................. 42
5.4.1. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation and their proposed “circular economy” ........................ 43
5.4.2. The Plastic Bank’s attempts to reduce “ocean leakage” from developing nations ............ 47
5.4.3. The Ocean CleanUp Project ................................................................................................ 47
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6. Conclusions ....................................................................................................................................... 49
Appendix 1. Business Insider’s analysis of Greenpeace’s strategy ....................................................... 52
Appendix 2. Examples of Greenpeace’s use of 95%, 96%, 97% and 98% figures ................................. 56
Appendix 3. Influence of Chris Rose’s “How to Win Campaigns” (2005) ............................................. 59
A3.1. Greenpeace’s “Motivation sequence campaign” model ......................................................... 59
A3.2. Campaigning is the anti-thesis of education ........................................................................... 62
A3.3. Carefully choosing your villain ................................................................................................. 63
A3.4. Importance of (over?)-simplifying the narrative ..................................................................... 67
Appendix 4. Influence of Saul Alinsky’s “Rules for Radicals” (1971) .................................................... 72
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Executive Summary
“Tyranny is the deliberate removal of nuance” – attributed to Albert Maysles (1926-2015)
Greenpeace have successfully created a public perception that they are fighting to protect humanity,
nature and the environment from the evils of corrupt industries and vested interests. This
perception is so popular and wide-spread that whenever Greenpeace speaks out on an issue it is
automatically assumed to be true, and anybody who questions Greenpeace’s claims is assumed to
be corrupt. However, as we will discuss in this report, the reality is almost exactly the opposite...
Greenpeace is a very successful business. Their business model can be summarized as follows:
1. Invent an “environmental problem” which sounds somewhat plausible. Provide anecdotal
evidence to support your claims, with emotionally powerful imagery.
2. Invent a “simple solution” for the problem which sounds somewhat plausible and
emotionally appealing, but is physically unlikely to ever be implemented.
3. Pick an “enemy” and blame them for obstructing the implementation of the “solution”.
Imply that anybody who disagrees with you is probably working for this enemy.
4. Dismiss any alternative “solutions” to your problem as “completely inadequate”.
At each of the four stages, they campaign to raise awareness of the efforts that they are allegedly
making to “fight” this problem. Concerned citizens then either sign up as “members” (with annual
fees) or make individual donations (e.g., $25 or more) to help them in “the fight”. This model has
been very successful for them, with an annual turnover of about $400 million ($0.4 billion). Although
technically a “not for profit” organization, this has not stopped them from increasing their asset
value over the years, and they currently have an asset value of $270 million ($0.27 billion) – with
65% of that in cash, making them a cash-rich business. Several other groups have also adopted this
approach, e.g., Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth, WWF and the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Although their business relies heavily on marketing, advertising, and free market principles, they
promote socialist and anti-capitalist ideals in their messaging. As a result, their campaigning efforts
appear to resonate strongly with left-leaning parties and liberal media. By draping themselves in
“moral clothing” (see Appendix 4), Greenpeace have been very effective at convincing these
progressive organizations that anything Greenpeace says is “good” and “true”, and whatever they
criticise is “bad” and “corrupt”. However, as we discuss in this report, Greenpeace are not actually
helping to protect the environment, or exposing real problems. Instead, they are:
1. Creating unnecessary feelings of guilt, panic and frustration among the general public.
Greenpeace then make money off this moral outrage, guilt and helplessness (Section 1).
2. Vilifying the innocent as “enemies”. Once you have been tarred by Greenpeace’s brush, any
attempts to defend yourself are usually treated with suspicion or even derision (Section 2).
3. Deliberately fighting honest attempts by other groups to tackle the “environmental
problems” that Greenpeace claim need to be tackled (Sections 3 and 5).
4. Distorting the science to generate simplistic “environmental crises” that have almost nothing
to do with the genuine environmental issues which should be addressed. (Sections 4-5)
5. Actively shutting down any attempts to have any informed discussions about what to
actually do about the “problems” they have highlighted (Appendices 2-4).
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About the authors
• Dr. Michael Connolly (Ireland)
• Dr. Ronan Connolly (Ireland)
• Dr. Willie Soon (USA)
• Dr. Patrick Moore (Canada)
• Dr. Imelda Connolly (Ireland)
All five of us are passionate about science, the environment and sustainability.
Patrick has been a leader in the international environmental field for more than 30 years. He was a
founding member of Greenpeace and served for nine years as President of Greenpeace Canada and
seven years as a Director of Greenpeace International.
In 1989, Michael and Imelda set up (and ran for seven years) the Republic of Ireland’s first public
aquarium (“the National Aquarium”) to promote awareness and interest in both the beauty and
fragility of the ocean’s ecosystems. Michael and Ronan have both been actively involved in the
research and development of ethical, sustainable and commercially viable methods for a)
fishfarming, b) reducing water pollution and c) energy conservation for more than a decade (Michael
since 1996, Ronan since 2004).
Willie has dedicated his career to scientific research and has published more than 80 peer-reviewed
scientific papers in the fields of astronomy, astrophysics, climate science and environmentalism.
Willie, Ronan and Michael have been working together since 2015. At the time of writing, they have
published three peer-reviewed scientific papers together on the subject of climate change, and they
have several further papers in preparation.
None of us received any funding or financial compensation for this report, and we carried out all of
the research in our own spare time and at our own expense.
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1. Financial analysis
Greenpeace is an independent global campaigning business with a gross income in 2015 of $386
million ($0.386 billion). It relies on the high level of brand recognition for the “Greenpeace” name,
and its excellent marketing abilities to generate business.
As Greenpeace say in their 1998 annual report, “the most significant things about Greenpeace are
our ATTRIBUTES – our ships, our planes, our communication capability and our campaigns:
Antarctica, the Amazon, solar power’ stopping oil exploration, opposing nuclear developments or
release of GM crops and, of course our name”.
Since the 1990s (even with the recession) its income has nearly trebled with an average annual
growth of 5%. To achieve this growth, it increases its expenditure on campaigns and media outreach.
Although Greenpeace is a not for profit business this does not prevent it from increasing its asset
value, which it has done successfully over the last twenty years. In 2015, it had an asset value of
$0.277 billion, with nearly two thirds (64%) in cash, making Greenpeace a cash rich business.
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1.1. Greenpeace’s corporate structure
Greenpeace is a Dutch Stichting, called STICHTING GREENPEACE COUNCIL with its registered office
in Amsterdam. The Stichting is governed by a Board of at least five and at most seven members who
are appointed for a term of three years. All Board Members can be reappointed. The Board appoints
executives and controls the Greenpeace brand name which it licences to the national regional
organizations (NROs).
Greenpeace markets itself as a bottom-up, people-led business. In the preface to their 1996 annual
report they say, “Greenpeace can only succeed in these areas by becoming a part of the national
culture. It is the people in these areas who will play a major part in defining our role”. However, this
is not the case. As Luxon & Wong, 2017 concluded in their peer reviewed article, which carried out
an analysis of Greenpeace’s corporate structure,
“Thus, Greenpeace’s dominant internal structure has been one that strongly centralises
agenda-setting powers, emphasising global campaign priorities, while simultaneously
requiring NROs to implement those global priorities with the imperatives of their local
contexts in mind, both for revenue and mobilisation purposes.” – Luxon & Wong (2017)
Global Society, Vol. 31, p479-502.
In 1997, Greenpeace closed down the Irish branch of the business, against the wishes of the local
organisation, because they were not generating enough income (Irish Times, Jan 13, 1997). Also in
1997 for the same reason, as reported in Business Insider, Greenpeace International “took
aggressive action, dismissing Greenpeace USA’s executive director and parachuting in a replacement
in from Amsterdam with a mandate to clean house. The acting director laid off 335 staff members
out of a total of 400 (mostly door-to-door canvassers) and slashed the annual budget by more than
25%.” (Business Insider, 2014)
1.2. Greenpeace’s business model
Greenpeace expands its business by running campaigns and maintains brand recognition by
investing an average of 9% of its income on media & communications
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Greenpeace runs its campaigns along the lines recommended by their former strategy advisor, Dr.
Chris Rose, in his book “HOW TO WIN CAMPAIGNS”. This book provides a lot of insight into
Greenpeace’s philosophies and views on campaigning, and in Appendix 3, we include a detailed
synopsis. However, for brevity here, Dr. Rose’s recommendations can be summarised as follows:
1. Choose a campaigning issue that you label as catastrophic and urgent.
2. Choose a villain (enemy agent) who can’t put up much of a defence.
3. You (the good guy) propose a plausible solution to the campaigning issue, and accuse the
villain (for selfish reasons) of preventing the solution from being implemented.
4. Issue a call to action and provide a way for people to become engaged (protest marches,
face painting, financial contributions, etc.), so that they can become committed to the
campaign.
5. Choose media outlets where you control the narrative. Don’t debate with the bad guys.
As we discuss in Appendix 3.2, Rose believes that Greenpeace’s goal of campaigning is directly
opposed to the goal of education. He argues that education increases knowledge and understanding,
leading to a more nuanced and reflective discussion on the topic. However, he argues that
campaigning groups should fight against education by deliberately oversimplifying the issue and
reducing awareness of the available options. In that way, he argues people are more likely to
become concerned and angry at what they believe is an urgent problem, leading to action.
Another problem from Greenpeace’s perspective of encouraging a nuanced discussion is that people
may come up with a workable solution for the problem, thus prematurely ending the need for
Greenpeace’s campaign. A typical Greenpeace can take 4-5 years to set up and implement, which
would mean a lot of wasted time and investment, if the campaign becomes redundant too quickly.
For this reason, Greenpeace intentionally propose “solutions” to their problems which they know
are unlikely to be ever implemented. They also try to discredit any groups that are proposing more
realistic solutions that look like they could be implemented, e.g., see Sections 3 or 5.4 for two
examples of this.
In order to grow their business, Greenpeace continually tries out new campaigns; discontinues non-
performing campaigns; or renames and invigorates declining campaigns. For example, in 1997, they
abandoned their “Biodiversity” campaigns, and instead introduced a campaign against GM food.
However, as this campaign began to become less successful in the mid-2000s, they began to wind it
down and discontinued it in 2009.
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The “Peace” in Greenpeace is partly derived from the fact that they were originally set up to oppose
nuclear development and promote disarmament. In 1995, this was their biggest campaign ($13.5m).
However, since that peak in 1995, they have been gradually deprioritizing this campaign. By 2006,
they changed its name to “Peace and Disarmament” and continued to reduce its budget before
finally discontinuing the campaign in 2009.
The continual dynamic restructuring of campaigns is a key component of their business model.
When some campaigns look particularly promising, they increase expenditure on them, but when
others start to lose momentum, they reduce expenditure or even completely discontinue the
campaign.
Below is a breakdown of their annual campaign expenditure for each year from 1994 to 2015:
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If we sum the total expenditure over the entire period (and extrapolate up to 2017 – see Excel file
for details), the breakdown is as follows:
We can see that the three largest campaigns have been:
1. Climate & Energy. $521 million ($0.52 billion) since 1994
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2. Forests. $240 million ($0.24 billion) since 1994
3. Oceans. $205 million ($0.21 billion) since 1994
The breakdown of each of these campaigns is shown below:
Although “Climate & Energy” has been their biggest campaign over the last decade, and as of 2015
still was their largest, it can be seen that expenditure actually peaked in 2013. However, in 2015,
they announced that they were going to start prioritising a new sub-campaign of the “Oceans”
campaign – campaigning against “Single Use Plastics”, which they claimed were responsible for a
new crisis: “ocean plastic pollution”. This relatively new campaign seems to have been remarkably
popular for them, and other like-minded groups have joined in with them to help create a
widespread public concern that the Western world’s usage of “single use plastics” is causing a
catastrophic “ocean pollution crisis”.
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In Section 5, we will show how this “ocean pollution crisis” has been invented by Greenpeace
through the deliberate distortion of the work of well-meaning environmentalists looking at a similar-
sounding, but very different, issue which Greenpeace are intentionally misrepresenting.
Before then, however, in Sections 2-4, we will focus on the campaign that Greenpeace have invested
the most into, i.e., “Climate and energy”.
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2. Arbitrariness of Greenpeace’s “enemies”: Case study of their
vilification of ExxonMobil
2.1. Greenpeace’s “ExxonSecrets” project
In April 2001, Greenpeace decided to target ExxonMobil as the main “enemy” for their campaigns on
climate change. They spent several years trying to compile any “evidence” they could find to prove
their theory that ExxonMobil were secretly funding “climate denial misinformation”. By 2004, they
still had not found any actual direct evidence to support their conspiracy theory, but they had
already initiated several major campaigns vilifying ExxonMobil anyway. Here is a summary they
wrote in March 2004 of their efforts to vilify ExxonMobil: http://www.greenpeace.org/wp-
content/uploads/legacy/Global/usa/report/2007/8/greenpeace-and-the-people-vs.html
By 2004, Greenpeace had already succeeded through innuendo in creating the public perception
that ExxonMobil was an evil anti-science organization that was largely responsible for the existence
of “climate denial”. However, two of Greenpeace USA’s chief researchers, Kert Davies and Cindy
Baxter, decided to generate more rigorous-sounding “evidence” in support of their claim. They
decided to trawl through ExxonMobil’s financial returns and identify any donations or support which
ExxonMobil had offered to any conservative or libertarian organizations which had ever presented a
position on human-caused climate change that disagreed with Greenpeace’s views.
Davies and Baxter published the results on a new Greenpeace-run website called ExxonSecrets.org.
Meanwhile, Greenpeace issued a major press release proclaiming the results as “proof” that,
“ExxonMobil, also known as Esso or Mobil, is the world's biggest oil company. It has plenty
of money and is not afraid of using it to fund pseudo-science and front groups to shoot
down anyone speaking out about global warming. Since 1998 ExxonMobil has spent more
than US$ 12 million on climate sceptics.” – “What Exxon doesn’t want you to know”,
Greenpeace International, 22 June, 2004
Greenpeace’s claim that ExxonMobil was “the world’s biggest oil company” is debatable, in that
according to a 2013 Forbes article entitled, “The world’s biggest oil companies”, ExxonMobil was
only the 5th largest oil producer in 2003 (and 4th by 2013). The largest oil producer in 2003 was Saudi
Aramco (9.9 million BOE/day which was more than twice ExxonMobil’s 4.6 million BOE/day),
followed by Gazprom (9.5 million BOE/day). However, at the time ExxonMobil was the largest
privately-owned (as opposed to state-owned) oil company in terms of 2004 market value: $380
billion compared with BP’s $221 billion and Royal Dutch Shell’s $210 billion.
Still, Greenpeace’s decision to single out ExxonMobil for vilification seems rather arbitrary. Indeed,
in a 2010 thesis for the University of Michigan, Dana Schweitzer decided to compare the positions of
BP, ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch Shell on “green energy” and “climate change” over the period
2000-2008, and found almost no difference between the three companies:
“The analysis suggests that despite minor differences in what each company says and does
[on climate change/green energy investment], which may be a result of different historical
origins and the necessity to create different brands in a competitive industry, each company
appears remarkably similar” – Dana Schweitzer, “Oil companies and sustainability: more
than just an image?” (2010)
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Instead, the real reason why Greenpeace seem to have singled out ExxonMobil is that their business
strategy involves identifying just one “enemy” to “demonize” (see Appendices 1 and 3.3). As far as
Greenpeace is concerned it does not particularly matter whether their “enemy” is guilty or not.
Indeed, as we discuss in Appendix 1, they will frequently choose an “enemy” that is only indirectly
related to the “problems” that they are using for their campaigns.
Nonetheless, Davies and Baxter’s vilification of ExxonMobil received worldwide attention and was
taken uncritically at face value by the media. Moreover, every few years, they update their analysis
and it gets renewed attention as if it were a new discovery, e.g.,
“Exxon still funding Climate Change Deniers” – Greenpeace International, 18 May, 2007
“Greenpeace releases 20-year history of climate denial industry” – James Hoggan,
DesmogBlog, March 26, 2010
In 2014, Kert Davies officially left Greenpeace to co-found the “Climate Investigations Center”, but
this group actively co-ordinates with Greenpeace, and he still is actively promoting the claim that
ExxonMobil are a major funder of “climate denial groups”, e.g.,
“Years after ‘ExxonSecrets,’ activist applauds new spotlight on old nemesis. Q&A with Kert
Davies, who first began revealing Exxon’s ties to climate denial groups in 2004.” –
InsideClimate News, Jan 27, 2016.
This campaign by Greenpeace has been remarkably successful in embedding the idea that climate
sceptics are all being secretly “funded by the fossil fuel industry”. This widespread myth has become
so popular that it is treated as if it were a well-verified “fact”. A quick search of the internet will find
plenty of articles and websites claiming that the fossil fuel industry are “well-known” to be actively
funding “climate denial”. However, when you try to follow these links to their original source, they
almost always lead back to Greenpeace’s “ExxonSecrets” project.
2.2. The hypocrisy of Greenpeace’s “ExxonSecrets” claims
One of the most surprising points about Greenpeace’s claims about ExxonMobil is just how small the
amounts of money are that they claim to have uncovered. Greenpeace’s claim through their
ExxonSecrets project is that ExxonMobil spent a total of $31 million over the 17 year period from
1998 to 2014 on “funding climate denial”. That works out at an average of $1.8 million/year.
That is certainly a substantial amount of money for a small-to-medium business, but ExxonMobil is a
very large business with average annual revenue over the 2001-2016 period of $337 billion (Source:
Statista.com). If “funding climate denial” was genuinely as essential to ExxonMobil’s financial
viability as Greenpeace imply, then why would they only be spending 0.0005% of their annual
revenue on it?
It should be stressed that even this $1.8 million/year figure involves very tenuous stretches and
tortuous links. Greenpeace claim that if ExxonMobil donated any money to a group that has ever
expressed any climate scepticism, then the donation is “funding climate denial” – even if the
donation itself had nothing to do with climate change.
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Also, if Greenpeace are correct that $1.8 million/year is sufficient to substantially influence public
opinion on climate change, then should they not be concerned that there is far more money being
spent on the opposite side? For instance in a recent paper, Prof. Matt Nisbet of Northeastern
University in Boston, showed that over just a four year period (2011-2015) 19 progressive/left-
leaning U.S. philanthropic foundations provided more than $0.5 billion ($556,678,469) to groups
promoting ‘climate action’ (Nisbet, 2018). That works out at an average of $139 million/year, i.e.,
more than 76 times the amount that Greenpeace claims ExxonMobil is supposedly spending on
“funding climate denial”.
As an aside, Nisbet notes that – while journalists and scholars have been highly critical of U.S.
conservative donors who have promoted a conservative position on climate change, the substantial
donations from progressive/left-leaning groups have been largely given a free pass:
“When left-of-center and progressive foundations are covered in the U.S. press, coverage
tends to be predominantly positive and uncritical, deepening a lack of public scrutiny
relative to their philanthropic activities, successes, and failures.” - Nisbet, 2018
However, in this section, we will focus specifically on the hypocrisy of Greenpeace’s vilification of
ExxonMobil. As we saw in Section 1, Greenpeace have themselves been spending a large amount of
money on promoting their narrative on “climate change”, i.e., more than $0.5 billion since 1994.
With that in mind, it is useful to directly compare the annual expenditure which Greenpeace claims
Exxon has been spending on “funding climate denial” to the annual expenditure which Greenpeace
have themselves been spending on their climate campaigns:
Greenpeace’s average annual expenditure on “Climate change” over the last 10 years has been
approximately $34 million/year. This means that Greenpeace’s annual “Climate campaign”
expenditure is greater than the $31 million which Greenpeace claim that Exxon has spent on
“funding climate denial” over the entire 1998-2014 period!
Moreover, it is worth considering the relative importance of the two expenditures for their
respective businesses. People seem to have found Greenpeace’s claims about ExxonMobil to be
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quite compelling because it initially seems to make sense. ExxonMobil’s product is one of the main
fossil fuels (oil), and if Greenpeace’s claims were true that we can (and should) immediately reduce
fossil fuel usage to “stop climate change”, then it would make sense that ExxonMobil would be
opposed to Greenpeace’s proposals. However,
1. As we will discuss in Section 3, Greenpeace have actively been fighting against all of the
different plausible methods to “reduce our carbon footprint”.
2. Why Exxon? Greenpeace offer the following, rather unsatisfactory answer on the
ExxonSecrets website: “Why Exxon? While the rest of the world is now accepting climate
change and moving on the issue, especially in the business sector, ExxonMobil continues to
fund the think tanks and organizations who are running a decades-long campaign denying
the consensus of urgency from climate scientists and attacking policies to abate global
warming.”. However, this doesn’t seem particularly convincing. Surely if Greenpeace’s
claims were true, then the financial viability of the other oil companies, the natural gas
companies and coal companies would be just as badly affected as Exxon?
3. If “funding climate denial” was as genuinely critical to ExxonMobil’s financial viability as
Greenpeace imply, then why are they (allegedly) “spending” only $1.8 million/year, i.e., only
0.0005% of their annual revenue?
The reality seems to be that the financial viability of ExxonMobil doesn’t actually seem to be heavily
influenced by “climate denial”. On the other hand, Greenpeace’s financial viability is heavily
dependent on their campaign expenditure, and their “Climate and energy” campaigns have been the
ones they have spent the most on – accounting for an average of 32% of their annual campaign
expenditure since 1994 (42% since 2004) and 10% of their annual income.
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3. Inconsistency of Greenpeace’s “goals”: Their claimed goal of
reducing CO2 emissions
As discussed above, Greenpeace’s largest and most profitable campaigns have been their “climate
and energy” campaigns. Here, they argue that carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from our fossil fuel
usage (oil, natural gas and coal) are the biggest environmental threat of today. They have repeatedly
insisted that we should immediately desist from using fossil fuels for our energy needs and instead
switch to 100% renewable energy sources. People and organisations who they decide interfere with
their narrative are routinely identified as “enemies”, and used as material for new campaigns.
However, are they genuinely interested in reducing carbon dioxide emissions, or are they more
interested in fund-raising? If reducing carbon dioxide emissions were as genuinely critical to them as
they imply, then we would expect them to be in favour of any projects which even partially reduce -
or failing that, keep static – international emissions. Yet, they have also actively campaigned against
almost all of the “alternatives” to fossil fuels which have been proposed!
Let us consider the available sources for generating “baseload electricity” (i.e., on-demand
electricity) on a large scale:
• Coal
• Oil
• Natural gas
• Nuclear
• Hydroelectricity
• Biofuels/biomass
• Geothermal
There are also some other sources which can be used to generate “intermittent electricity”:
• Wind turbines
• Solar panels (“photovoltaics”)
• Tidal power (“marine power”)
At present, the battery technology required to store electricity generated from “intermittent”
sources is still far too expensive to be implemented on a large scale, and also involves the usage of
expensive and rare resources. While companies like Tesla are actively trying to develop cheaper
battery technology (for their electric cars), they still have a very long way to go. As a result,
“intermittent electricity” is only of value when it can be used as soon as it is produced (i.e., when the
wind is blowing on the turbines, or the sun is shining on the solar panels). In other words, it cannot
be used for generating the continuous “baseload electricity” required by, e.g., schools and
businesses, hospitals (life support machines, lighting, emergency supplies, etc.), and most household
use (refrigerators, freezers, computers, lighting, general electrical appliances, etc.)
Below is the International Energy Agency’s break-down of the trends of the world’s electricity
production sources from 1971-2014. Note that the “Other renewables” category includes biomass
(including wood, dung, waste, as well as farmed “biofuels”), wind, solar, geothermal and marine
power (mostly “tidal power”). Biomass is currently the largest component in this category.
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3.1. Greenpeace’s objections to the “stepping-stone” transition from coal to
natural gas
Obviously, Greenpeace’s objection to coal and oil is consistent with their apparent goal of reducing
CO2 emissions. However, if they were genuinely campaigning to reduce (or even slow down) CO2
emissions, then one of the easiest first steps would be to encourage a transition from coal-powered
and oil-powered electricity towards natural gas-powered electricity.
Figure 1. Comparison of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions per kWh electricity for different fossil fuels. Data taken from
International Energy Agency, 2012. “CO2 Emissions from Fuel Combustion – Highlights”.
http://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/name,32870,en.html
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As can be seen from the figure above, while coal produces nearly 1kg of CO2 for every kWh of
electricity, natural gas only produces 0.4kg. This means that every coal burning power plant that
switches to, or is replaced by, a natural gas power plant more than halves CO2 emissions.
In the past, natural gas supplies were not as plentiful or as cheap as either coal or oil. However, with
advances in hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) technology, natural gas has become much more
affordable and plentiful. So, if Greenpeace genuinely were concerned about urgently reducing CO2
emissions, you would expect them to be welcoming and encouraging the switch from coal and oil to
natural gas – even just as a “stepping stone”. Indeed, much of the relative slow-down in CO2
emissions for the United States over the last decade can be attributed to the “fracking revolution”
(another major factor was the 2008 economic depression). For instance, see the book, “The Carbon
Crunch: How we’re getting climate change wrong – and how to fix it” (2013) by Prof. Dieter Helm – a
professor at the University of Oxford, and also a member of the Economics Advisory Group to the
British Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change.
Yet, despite this, Greenpeace have been one of the most vocal campaigners against “fracking” and
the transition from coal/oil to natural gas, e.g.,
• Greenpeace USA: “Fracking is the fossil fuel industry’s latest false solution to our energy
challenge. It’s more expensive, more polluting, and more dangerous than clean, renewable
energy. So why are we pursuing fracking in the first place?” - Issues & threats - fracking,
Greenpeace USA website.
• Greenpeace UK: see their webpage archive of their articles on their many anti-fracking
campaigns. Examples of headlines include, “Victory! Scotland is banning fracking” (3rd
October 2017); “People power puts mayoral candidates on the spot over fracking” (4th May
2017); “Breaking news: We’re blocking Cuadrilla’s fracking site” (3rd May 2017)
3.2. Greenpeace’s objections to nuclear power
Greenpeace was originally founded to protest the use of nuclear power and nuclear weapons. So, in
a sense it is not surprising that they still object to nuclear-based electricity generation. However,
nuclear electricity generates almost no CO2 emissions (or other greenhouse gases), and as the IEA
graphs above showed, it is currently one of the five biggest electricity sources world-wide.
Therefore, if Greenpeace genuinely believe that reducing CO2 emissions is as urgent and essential as
they claim, you would expect them to be encouraging the replacement of coal, oil and natural gas
power plants with nuclear power plants.
Yet, they are still campaigning against nuclear power, e.g.,
“Nuclear power is dirty, dangerous and expensive. Say no to new nukes.
Nuclear energy has no place in a safe, clean, sustainable future. Nuclear energy is both
expensive and dangerous, and just because nuclear pollution is invisible doesn’t mean it’s
clean. Renewable energy is better for the environment, the economy, and doesn’t come
with the risk of a nuclear meltdown.” – Greenpeace USA website
“End the nuclear age. Greenpeace has always fought - and will continue to fight - vigorously
against nuclear power because it is an unacceptable risk to the environment and to
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humanity. The only solution is to halt the expansion of all nuclear power, and for the
shutdown of existing plants.” – Greenpeace International website
“Some see nuclear power as an important ‘tool in the box’ to limit carbon emissions and
stop climate change. It’s more like a spanner in the works. Nuclear power is inadequate,
unnecessary as well as dangerous. It’s also a hugely expensive distraction from work to limit
the impacts of climate change.” – Greenpeace UK website
3.3. Greenpeace’s objections to hydroelectricity
As seen from the IEA graphs above, nuclear power and hydroelectricity are currently the only two of
the five main electricity sources which do not produce CO2 emissions. Even though nuclear power
doesn’t produce CO2, some argue that nuclear power is not strictly “renewable” - in that nuclear ore
is consumed in its production, albeit at a fairly modest rate, and the process produces some “nuclear
waste”. For this reason, hydroelectricity is currently the largest renewable energy source by far.
Indeed, many graphs used by renewables promoters to claim that renewables energy sources are a
large fraction will routinely include “hydro” (as well as biomass such as “wood”) in their “renewable
energy” category.
However, Greenpeace have also been actively campaigning against hydroelectric plants, e.g.,
• In 2016, Greenpeace Brazil issued a report, “Damning the Amazon – The risky business of
hydropower in the Amazon” calling for a halt to various hydroelectric plants proposed for
the Tapajós River basin in Brazil.
• In 2014, Greenpeace India protested against a decision to raise the height of the Sardar
Sarovar Dam in India (associated with a major hydroelectricity plant in India)
• In 2004, Greenpeace worked with other environmental groups to oppose a major proposed
hydroelectricity scheme in China, the Nujiang Dam project, e.g., see here and here.
3.4. Greenpeace’s objections to biofuels/biomass
The use of biofuels and biomass as an alternative to fossil fuels initially received a lot of
encouragement from NGOs and climate campaigning groups because it is supposedly a “carbon
neutral” form of energy.
Biofuels (e.g., bioethanol, palm oil, etc.) and biomass (timber, biological waste, non-recyclable
waste, etc.) release CO2 when they are burnt, just like conventional fossil fuels. Indeed, fossil fuels
are essentially just highly compressed forms of biofuels that have been buried in the ground for
millions of years. However, while they are being grown they absorb CO2 from the atmosphere
(through photosynthesis). On the other hand, the CO2 that was absorbed by fossil fuels all occurred
millions of years ago.
Therefore, it has been argued that the use of biofuels is “carbon neutral”. That is, because the CO2
emissions from biofuels are roughly balanced by their CO2 absorption, the net emissions are
approximately zero. For this reason, one of the main “renewable energy” policies which has been
implemented by countries concerned about CO2 emissions has been to promote the use of biofuels
and/or biomass. For example, the United States has introduced legislation mandating the addition of
biofuels to fuels for motor vehicles, as well as providing various subsidies to encourage local farmers
to produce the material for biofuels. See this Wikipedia page for an overview.
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Recently, there has been a growing recognition that the decision to encourage the use of biofuels to
try to reduce CO2 emissions has had serious negative environmental consequences, in that it has led
to industrial-scale deforestation in tropical countries such as Indonesia (in particular, the tropical
rainforests of Borneo) and Brazil. However, for many policymakers who are genuinely trying to
prioritise reducing CO2 emissions, they remain one of the most realistic mechanisms for “carbon
reduction”, and the deforestation is an unfortunate side effect of what they consider the more
important environmental concern.
For instance, when the environmental reporter Abrahm Lustgarten asked US Democrat Nancy Pelosi
whether she had any regrets about supporting the 2007 “Energy Independence and Security Act” (an
act with bipartisan support under Republican US President George Bush Jr.) when she was Speaker
of the House, her office replied that, even with the deforestation, it was a still a positive step
towards the (apparently more important) goal of reducing fossil fuel usage:
“When Nancy Pelosi took the stage, she looked back on the 2007 fuel-economy bill and
biofuels mandate she shepherded into law. The initiative should be credited, she said, with
‘charting a clean path to clean energy, reducing emissions, increasing the use of
renewables.’ She made no mention of Indonesia. When I asked her about the deforestation
in an earlier email, her office wrote back defending the bill, citing the Union of Concerned
Scientists and arguing that even with the Indonesian forest effect accounted for, biodiesels
were cleaner than fossil fuels. ‘Bottom line,’ the office responded, ‘the biofuels in your tank
are better for the planet than 100 percent fossil fuels.’” – Abrahm Lustgarten, “Palm oil was
supposed to help save the planet. Instead it unleashed a catastrophe”, New York Times, Nov.
20, 2018
However, in recent years, Greenpeace has become a major critic of biofuels because of the
deforestation, e.g.,
• “World’s largest palm oil trader linked to rainforest destruction twice the size of Paris”.
Greenpeace International, June 25, 2018.
• “Still cooking the climate – how the palm oil industry continues to drive deforestation”.
Greenpeace Southeast Asia, November 27, 2017
• “Biodiesel tested: How Europe’s biofuels policy threatens the climate” – Greenpeace
European Unit, July 19, 2011
• “Drax: The UK’s dirtiest power station gets hundreds of millions of pounds in green
subsidies” – Unearthed (Greenpeace UK), June 20, 2015
• “Food, Fuel, Forests and Climate the Biofuels Conundrum” – Greenpeace USA, October 18,
2012
In fact, at the time of writing, Greenpeace are carrying out two new campaigns implying that the
deforestation in Indonesia from “the palm oil industry” is threatening the habitats of orangutans in
the Borneo rainforests. One campaign is blaming the cookie company, Oreo, for using palm oil in
their cookies (“In pictures: orangutans threatened by deforestation linked to the makers of Oreo”,
Greenpeace UK, November 14, 2018). The other campaign in conjunction with the UK supermarket
chain, “Iceland”, is promoting the chain for their efforts to remove palm oil from their own-brand
foods (“Iceland’s Christmas TV advert rejected for being too political”, The Guardian, November 9,
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2018). This latter campaign involving a cute and heart-warming animated TV ad narrated by actor
Emma Thompson, has been particularly popular. Within four days of the joint Iceland/Greenpeace
press release, the ad had been viewed more than 15 million times on Twitter (after being shared by
Stephen Fry, James Corden and comedian Bill Bailey and many others), 4 million times on Iceland’s
YouTube channel, and the ad had been shared over 615,000 times on Iceland’s Facebook page.
We should stress that we are concerned about the widespread deforestation which biofuels policy
has led to – and the fact that the switch to biofuels also seems to have indirectly led to an increase in
world hunger (e.g., “Fueling the food crisis: the cost to developing countries of US corn ethanol
expansion”, ActionAid International USA Report, October 2012). So, if Greenpeace had used the
deforestation problem of biofuels to highlight the danger of focusing exclusively on reducing CO2
emissions at the expense of other environmental concerns, then this could have been an important
contribution to the public discussion on environmental protection and climate change. But, rather
than doing that, Greenpeace are choosing to pointedly ignore the reason for the increase in
deforestation in Borneo. Instead, they are falsely implying that “the palm oil industry” are the sole
reason for the deforestation - perhaps availing of the fact that “the palm oil industry” sounds similar
to “the oil industry” which they have already vilified through their “climate change and energy”
campaigns (see Section 2).
The irony of Greenpeace (and other similar NGOs) campaigning against biofuels whilst
simultaneously campaigning for an urgent reduction in CO2 emissions was highlighted in Pilgrim &
Harvey (2010) – a scientific article co-authored by Prof. Mark Harvey, from the Centre for Research
in Economic Sociology and Innovation, University of Essex, UK. A pdf copy of the full article is
currently available from his ResearchGate page here. But, the following extract from the abstract of
the paper is a good summary:
“In this paper, we argue that a consortium of NGOs has played a significant role in shaping
the market for, and restricting the use of, biofuels as an alternative to conventional fuels for
road transport in Europe. This paper considers why a number of NGOs (Greenpeace, Oxfam,
WWF, RSPB, Friends of the Earth) have chosen to enter the biofuels debate, and how they
have variously developed policy, agreed a political campaign, and exercised political
influence, in a key area of the world's response to major global climate change: how to
reduce the carbon footprint of transport.
We found that in many cases the development of NGO policy has been driven more by
narrow political opportunities for influence than by broader and more coherent policy
responses to global climate change or economic development, or indeed rigorous
assessment of the scientific evidence. The research provides evidence of how NGO policies
and lobbying significantly affected biofuel policy changes, review processes, target
reductions, and sustainability regulation in the UK and in Europe.” – Pilgrim & Harvey (2010);
‘Battles over Biofuels in Europe: NGOs and the Politics of Markets’. Sociological Research
Online, Vol. 15 (3), doi: 5153/sro.2192
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3.5. What is left?
Despite Greenpeace’s objections to all of the above proposed mechanisms for actually reducing CO2
emissions, they still insist that there are plenty of other options available and that we can easily
transition to “100% renewables” within a few decades. Not only do they repeatedly insist this is
possible, but they claim that it will improve the economy, increase employment, reduce pollution
and meet the energy needs of the world’s increasing population, e.g.,
• ‘100% Renewable Energy for All. Right now, the U.S. has an unprecedented opportunity to
transform its energy system. It’s time to say goodbye to the fossil fuel dependent energy
systems of the 19th and 20th centuries and embrace a 100 percent renewable energy
future.’ – Greenpeace USA website
• ‘Activists urge EU to go for 100% renewable energy. [...]Greenpeace EU energy policy adviser
Ansgar Kienesaid: “Europe has an abundance of renewable energy waiting to be harnessed.
Ordinary people, cooperatives and small businesses are all ready to take part in the energy
revolution, making electricity from wind, water and sunlight. It’s time for the EU to wrest the
energy system away from a few large corporate players invested in dirty fuels like coal, and
give control to the people.”’ – Greenpeace European Unit, press release, October 9, 2017.
• “100% RENEWABLE, 100% DOABLE. Australia, renewables are booming! Tell the Australian
Government to stop standing in the way. Energy from the sun, wind and water is clean,
reliable and becoming cheaper every day. In fact, renewables are challenging fossil fuel
companies right around the world. That’s good news for our planet, our health and our
wallets. To avoid the worst impacts of climate change we urgently need to transition to
renewable energy, but the Australian Government is trying to guarantee the future of filthy
fossil fuels in Australia.” – Greenpeace Australia 2017 petition
• “You did it! Samsung chooses renewable energy! [...]After months of people-powered
actions around the world, Samsung Electronics finally accepted our challenge to
#DoWhatYouCant and taken the first steps towards 100% renewable energy! This is great
news for our planet and the hundreds of thousands of people around the world taking
action for a renewably powered future.” – Greenpeace International, 14 June 2018.
However, having ruled out all of the main approaches to reducing CO2 emissions which have been
proposed, i.e., switching from coal & oil to natural gas, increasing nuclear power, increasing
hydroelectricity, increasing the usage of biofuels/biomass, or any combination of the above, what is
left for electricity production?
The only ones left are geothermal and the three intermittent sources (solar, wind & tidal).
Geothermal is a useful electricity generation method in specific regions, e.g., tectonically-active
countries like Iceland. And it also can be used for generating “baseload electricity”. But, it is only
suitable for those specific geographical regions with a strong geothermal gradient. And, most of the
best sites for geothermal electricity production have already been identified. In other words, it is not
a technology which can be expanded to meet more than a small fraction of the world’s electricity
demands.
This means that the only remaining “renewable electricity” sources that Greenpeace have left for
their proposed “100% renewable energy” campaigns are solar, wind and tidal. All three of these
electricity sources are “intermittent” electricity sources. So, without dramatic advances in battery
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technology, they cannot possibly be used for providing continuous, on-demand, “baseload”
electricity.
Greenpeace know this. They also know that they have explicitly ruled out any of the other
mechanisms for reducing CO2 emissions. Yet, they persist in claiming that “100% renewable energy”
is somehow achievable within a few decades. We can see that they are aware of the irrationality of
their supposed “plan” by the fact that they repeatedly imply that their plan includes many different
technologies, but they only ever explicitly mention solar, wind, tidal (“water”) or geothermal. That is,
they will say, “like wind, solar and geothermal”, implying that there are many others - but, they
won’t actually give any others!
For example, here are the relevant quotes from the 4 articles mentioned above:
• ‘Momentum is building towards clean, renewable energy sources like wind, solar and
geothermal.’ – Greenpeace USA website
• ‘Ordinary people, cooperatives and small businesses are all ready to take part in the energy
revolution, making electricity from wind, water and sunlight.’ – Greenpeace European Unit,
press release, October 9, 2017.
• “Energy from the sun, wind and water is clean, reliable and becoming cheaper every day.” –
Greenpeace Australia 2017 petition
• “[...] Onsite installation of solar and geothermal energy in Korea, near its Hwaseong,
Pyongtaek, and Suwon semiconductor plants.” – Greenpeace International, 14 June 2018.
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4. On the use of 95%, 96%, 97% and 98% figures
Greenpeace realize that - from a marketing perspective - figures in the range 95%-98% can be very
psychologically compelling. They are percentages that imply “basically 100%”, but concede, “not
entirely 100%”. They also are specific enough that they sound like they have been carefully
calculated. That is, when you say, “more than 90%” this sounds like it is just a guess, whereas if you
say “96%” it sounds like a genuine statistic.
By picking one of these “nearly – but not quite – 100%” figures to promote a given campaign,
Greenpeace can create the impression that their position is the most complete. And, if anybody
disputes their figure by pointing out a counter-example, they have the self-defence that they didn’t
say 100%. For these reasons, Greenpeace routinely invoke these precise-sounding figures in their
campaigns – even if the actual figure is only a guess.
4.1. Examples of Greenpeace’s use of 95%, 96%, 97% and 98%
Because their “climate & energy” campaigns have been Greenpeace’s largest campaigns since at
least 1994 (see Section 1), the “95%”-“98%” figures they have invoked for these campaigns are
probably the most widely known. However, it is a recurring motif across many of their campaigns,
such as the following examples (Note we have highlighted the relevant figures in bold italic):
• “Estimates suggest that as much as 95 percent of the clothes thrown out with domestic
waste and [sic] could be used again—re-worn, reused or recycled—depending on the state
of the textile wastes.” – Greenpeace Germany, “Timeout for fast fashion”, p5, 24 November
2016
• “Greenpeace: 96% of litter found in Mediterranean Sea is plastic” – Greenpeace
International press release, 8 June, 2017
• “A century ago, as many as 100,000 wild tigers inhabited Asia. Now, we’ve lost 97% of those
big cats, leaving around 3,000 in the wild today.” – Greenpeace Australia Pacific, “Roar if you
love tigers!”, 28 July 2014
• “Some 98% of Greenpeace’s money comes from individual donors…” – John Sauven,
executive director of Greenpeace UK, as reported in a July, 14 2014 Guardian article
In Appendix 2, we provide a more detailed list of more than 20 different examples of Greenpeace
using these “slightly less than 100%” figures as often as they can.
4.2. Case study of the arbitrariness of their 97% figures – scientific opinion
on climate change
In Section 3, we showed how the various proposals Greenpeace continuously make about how the
world can easily transition to 95%, 97%, etc. renewables are physically implausible (even if they may
seem emotionally appealing). Another part of their climate and energy campaigns which relies
heavily on these figures is their claim that their position on climate change is endorsed by an
overwhelming “scientific consensus” of 95% or more of scientists.
• “[ExxonMobil] has made concerted efforts to undermine the accepted scientific consensus
on climate change, and is still misleading the public and policy makers over the economic
implications of tackling global warming” – Greenpeace Belgium, “The tiger in the tanks”, 24
February 2003.
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• “There is a broad and overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change is occurring, is
caused in large part by human activities, and if left unchecked will likely have disastrous
consequences. Furthermore, there is solid scientific evidence that we should act now on
climate change, and this is reflected in the statements by these definitive scientific
authorities.” – Greenpeace East Asia, January 6, 2006
• “Think 97% of scientists agree on climate change? Wrong. It’s even higher.” – Greenpeace
New Zealand Facebook post, 14 July 2015.
• “Don’t just take it from us. Ninety-seven percent of scientists agree that the Earth’s
temperature is rising and human activity plays a central role — and NASA has compiled the
studies to prove it.” – Greenpeace USA website, “Climate change: The science” page.
In recent years, a number of studies have found that 90-95% of scientists agree that the climate
changes and/or that global temperatures are warmer now than in the 19th century. This result seems
to be quite well replicated. So, initially, it might appear that Greenpeace were right all along, and
their position does represent “a broad and overwhelming scientific consensus”. However, a careful
inspection of the results of these surveys reveals that it is false. It is true that 90-95% of scientists
agree that “climate changes”, but that doesn’t tell us anything about how much of the recent
climate change is natural and how much is human-caused. For instance, below we describe the
results of three of these surveys:
• Stenhouse, Maibach and Cobb, 2014. Bulletin of American Meteorological Society. Vol. 95,
pp1029-1040, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-13-00091.1
• Doran and Zimmerman, 2009. Eos. Vol. 90, pp22-23,
https://doi.org/10.1029/2009EO030002
• Farnsworth and Lichter, 2012. International Journal of Public Opinion Research. Vol. 24,
pp93-103, https://doi.org/10.1093/ijpor/edr033
As can be seen from the figure, all three of these surveys confirm that at least 90-95% of scientists
agree that “climate changes” and/or that there has been some “global warming”.
But, when the respondents are asked on whether this climate change/global warming is mostly
human-caused or mostly natural, there are a wide range of opinions
26
In a 2015 peer-reviewed article (Legates et al., 2015) in Science & Education, one of us (Willie)
contributed to a detailed reanalysis of another study, Cook et al. (2013), which Greenpeace has
taken to quoting as proof of a “97% scientific consensus” that recent global warming is “mostly
human-caused”, e.g.,
• “If there wasn’t already enough proof in the years of replicated scientific evidence, a May
2013 peer reviewed study examined more than 11,000 climate change papers, and of the
4,000 papers that discussed whether climate change was caused by humans, 97 percent
agreed.” – Greenpeace USA, p7, “Dealing in doubt: The climate denial machine vs climate
science”, November 2015.
In the Cook et al. (2013) study, the authors examined nearly 12,000 abstracts of papers containing
the keywords “global climate change” or “global warming”. They sorted the abstracts into 7
categories depending on what position the abstract implied on the human contribution. Cook et al.
(2013) implied that 97.1% of the abstracts agreed “that human activity is very likely causing most of
the current [global warming]”.
However, in Legates et al. (2015), we re-analysed the Cook et al. (2013) results and showed that
Cook et al. had only found 0.5% of the abstracts to have explicitly made that claim. They had found
that two thirds of the abstracts had provided no position on whether global warming is mostly
human-caused or mostly natural, and only 8% of the abstracts had explicitly stated any opinion on
this issue:
27
Of the 8% of abstracts which made an explicit claim on the human contribution, the vast majority
(91%) apparently did not offer any opinion on whether recent global warming is mostly human-
caused or mostly natural. Instead, they just stated that at least some of the global warming is
human-caused.
According to the Cook et al. (2013) results, only 88 of the 11,944 abstracts explicitly stated whether
global warming was mostly human-caused or mostly natural. 64 claimed it was mostly human-
caused and 24 claimed it was mostly natural.
Moreover, when we reanalysed the abstracts themselves we found that even these figures were
unreliable. We found that only 41 of the 64 abstracts which Cook et al. had rated as “mostly human”
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had explicitly made that claim. We also identified several abstracts which Cook et al. had mistakenly
not included in the “mostly natural” categories.
All in all, it turns out that the Cook et al. (2013) study which Greenpeace has been promoting as
alleged proof that 97% of climate science papers agree with them is wrong. Only 64 of the 11,944
papers (i.e., 0.5%) explicitly made Greenpeace’s claim that recent global warming is mostly human-
caused.
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5. Case study of their latest big campaign: the “plastics crisis”
The existence of floating and sunken human-generated debris in the oceans has been talked about
for centuries or even millennia, and it has often featured as a key component of our stories, e.g.,
with stories of castaways sending “messages in bottles”, and underwater explorers hunting for
“sunken treasure”. However, in the last few years, there has been a new and widespread, rapidly
growing, public concern that our everyday use of plastics is leading to a major environmental threat
to our oceans and the creatures that live in or near the oceans.
This “plastics crisis” has become a major news story. For instance, in June 2018, National Geographic
dedicated a special issue to it, entitled “Planet or Plastic?”, while a recent BBC documentary series,
“Blue Planet II” which dedicated its final episode to “the plastics crisis” was the most-watched TV
programme in the UK in 2017. It was estimated that at least 20% of households in the UK watched
the series.
As we will discuss in this section, there are two very distinct “ocean plastic pollution” narratives –
one is a genuine environmental concern that is based on on-going scientific research, the other one
is the narrative promoted by Greenpeace. The Greenpeace narrative is largely fabricated, and is
based on cherry-picked distortions of the scientific literature. The “solutions” that Greenpeace are
promoting for their “crisis” have very little relevance for the genuine “ocean plastic pollution”
concern. Moreover, in several cases, Greenpeace have actually been fighting against the efforts of
those trying to address the genuine concern. Yet, Greenpeace’s narrative is the one which the public
are concerned about.
As a result, Greenpeace’s latest campaign on “the plastics crisis” is having the following effects:
• It is making people feel guilty and worried about a “crisis” which isn’t actually real.
• It is prompting people, governments and businesses to implement radical reforms without
thinking through the consequences.
• It is hampering efforts to evaluate and deal with the genuine “ocean plastic pollution”
concern.
• It is generating increased annual turnover for Greenpeace.
For these reasons, it is worth looking in detail at the two competing narratives on “ocean plastic
pollution”.
5.1. The actual “ocean plastic pollution” issue
Over the last decade or so, several research groups have begun to realize that tiny fragments of
plastic (“microplastics”) are present in non-zero concentrations in most of the ocean basins. Since
plastics are a human invention, we can directly attribute the existence of these microplastics in the
oceans to human activity. For this reason, several scientists have been actively trying to answer the
following questions:
1. Exactly how high are the concentrations of these “microplastics” (as well as larger
“macroplastic” fragments)? Are the concentrations evenly distributed, and are they
increasing over time?
2. Are they having any biological effects (positive or negative) on ocean life, and what are
those effects?
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3. Where exactly are these microplastics coming from?
4. If they are a problem or even a potential problem, how could we prevent their
concentrations from increasing, and ultimately reduce their concentrations?
In this section, we will provide a brief review of the current scientific opinion on several of these
issues, but broadly we can summarise the current answers to those questions as follows,
1. For most of the oceans, the concentrations of “microplastics” are basically negligible. But, in
some regions (particularly the “North Pacific Gyre”), you can find a few hundred tiny
fragments per square mile. Despite Greenpeace’s claims, large “macroplastics” from land,
e.g., plastic bottles, plastic bags, etc., are exceedingly rare.
2. So far, nobody has found any evidence that these microplastics are having negative impacts
on ocean wildlife. But, “absence of evidence is not the same as evidence of absence”. So,
research into answering this is still ongoing.
3. Much of the plastic seems to come from marine debris such as lost or abandoned fishing
nets, tackle, etc. However, the rest seems to come from mismanaged land waste. Current
estimates suggest that about 85% is coming from developing nations in Asia (China,
Indonesia, etc.), but about 7-8% seems to be coming from developing nations in Africa, and
most of the rest seems to be coming from regions in South America and Central America.
4. The concentrations of ocean plastics are far too small – even in the so-called “oceanic
garbage patches” – to make it feasible to collect it with current methods, although the
Ocean Cleanup Project are investigating possible technological solutions which they believe
could make it possible in the future. However, the most straightforward solution to stop or
slow down the increase in ocean plastic pollution would be to improve the waste
management systems of the coastal developing nations. Despite Greenpeace’s insistence
that the developed nations are somehow to blame, the combined contribution of all the
countries in Europe and North America is estimated to be less than 1-2%. So, if the
developing nations along the coasts of Asia (and to a lesser extent, Africa and South
America) were to reduce their mismanaged waste to the levels of European and North
American countries, then this would probably resolve most of the issue.
5.1.1. The infamous “oceanic garbage patches” are not nearly as dramatic as people think
When researchers first began seriously considering the possibility that plastic debris could be
accumulating in the oceans, it was quickly realised that the ocean currents tend to push floating
debris towards certain parts of the oceans (“gyres”) over time. These gyres cover quite a large part
of each ocean basin, e.g., 5-10% of the ocean, but within them the concentration of plastic debris
seems to be at least 10 times the concentrations in the rest of the ocean. Because of this aggregating
effect, some (sensationalist) people began to refer to these large oceanic regions with dramatic-
sounding names, such as the “Great North Pacific Garbage Patch”.
Greenpeace, some media channels, and other environmental activist groups (and to be fair, some
scientists too) have used these alarming-sounding names to ridiculously exaggerate the
phenomenon, and create the completely false impression that there are these horrendous floating
“islands” of our plastic waste somewhere “out there”.
Admittedly, there are some scientists – particularly those who have worked with Greenpeace - that
are happy to leave this false impression uncorrected, as it creates more attention for their field.
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However, most of the scientists actively studying the issue are frustrated about the grossly-
exaggerated claims that are being made about it. For instance, one of the researchers studying the
“North Pacific Garbage Patch” is Prof. Angelicque (Angel) White, who is based in the College of Earth,
Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University. She is researching the phenomenon,
because she is concerned about it and thinks that it is something we should be investigating.
However, she has repeatedly tried to let the public know that this “crisis” is nowhere near as
dramatic as the media (and Greenpeace) have made it out to be. E.g.,
“There is no doubt that the amount of plastic in the world's oceans is troubling, but this kind
of exaggeration undermines the credibility of scientists. [...] We have data that allow us to
make reasonable estimates; we don't need the hyperbole. Given the observed concentration
of plastic in the North Pacific, it is simply inaccurate to state that plastic outweighs plankton,
or that we have observed an exponential increase in plastic. [...] The amount of plastic out
there isn't trivial. But using the highest concentrations ever reported by scientists produces a
patch that is a small fraction of the state of Texas, not twice the size. [...] If we were to filter
the surface area of the ocean equivalent [of the amount of plastic found to the amount of
water in which it was found] to a football field in waters having the highest concentration (of
plastic) ever recorded, the amount of plastic recovered would not even extend to the 1-inch
line." – Oceanic “garbage patch” not nearly as big as portrayed in media, Prof. Angelicque
White, January 4, 2011.
Or,
“The use of the phrase ‘garbage patch’ is misleading. I’d go as far as to say that it is a myth
and a misconception. [...] It is not visible from space; there are no islands of trash; it is more
akin to a diffuse soup of plastic floating in our oceans. [...] Yes, there is plastic in the ocean.
Peer-reviewed papers suggest that the highest concentration of microplastic is around three
pieces of plastic the size of a pencil eraser in a cubic meter. [...] The continued use of
verbage such as ‘plastic islands’, ’twice the size of Texas’, is pure hyperbole that I personally
believe undermines the credibility of those that should be focused on helping reduce the
source stream of marine debris to our oceans.” – Prof. Angelicque (“Angel”) White,
interviewed by The Telegraph, October 5, 2016
Similarly, NOAA stress on their website that these “garbage patches” are nowhere near as dramatic
as they sound:
“The name "Pacific Garbage Patch" has led many to believe that this area is a large and
continuous patch of easily visible marine debris items such as bottles and other litter—akin
to a literal island of trash that should be visible with satellite or aerial photographs. This is
not the case. While higher concentrations of litter items can be found in this area, much of
the debris is actually small pieces of floating plastic that are not immediately evident to the
naked eye.” – What is the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?, NOAA National Ocean Service
5.1.2. How much plastic is really there, and how big are these plastic pieces?
At this stage, a number of different studies have been carried out in each of the oceans, where
research vessels voyaging along a particular route will drop a trawling net for a period of time (say
10-15 minutes, half-an-hour, or longer) and continue on the journey (but at a slower rate). Then,
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once the time is up, the net is lifted and the contents of the net are categorised. This is typically
repeated at fixed intervals along the voyage. All of these surveys have confirmed that the
concentration of plastic fragments is at least 10 times higher in the “gyres” than in the rest of the
ocean. Separately, computer models of ocean circulation patterns that have been fed with
experimental observations predict that the gyres should occur roughly where we are finding them.
The figure below is taken from a paper by Prof. Andrés Cózar from the Universidad de Cádiz in Spain
and colleagues, Cózar et al. (2014). The areas shown in gray and dark gray are the locations of the
five gyres predicted by one of the computer models, i.e., Maximenko, Hafner & Niiler (2012). The
dots show the locations of the various trawls in the study. In the Cózar et al. (2014) study, some of
the dots are taken from other studies, but they have all being converted into the same units (grams
of plastic per km2). We can see that the red, yellow and green dots are almost all in or near the dark
gray parts, i.e., the gyres. These are the so-called “ocean garbage patches”. The blue dots are regions
where no (or very few) plastic fragments were found. We can see that this corresponds to the rest of
the ocean.
Figure taken from Cózar et al., 2014, PNAS 111 (28) 10239-10244; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1314705111
So, the existence of these gyres is a real phenomenon, and we can see why scientists are actively
studying them. We can also see why environmentalists might be concerned about the fact that these
relatively high density regions exist. But, it is important to put into context exactly how much plastic
we’re talking about.
Below is a photograph showing every single one of the plastic fragments taken from one of the “red
circle” trawls on the Cózar et al. (2014) study.
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Figure taken from Cózar et al., 2014, PNAS 111 (28) 10239-10244; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1314705111
This trawl was one of the highest density trawls – right in the heart of one of the so-called “Oceanic
Garbage Patches”. They found 110 pieces. Each trawl in this study lasted 10-15 minutes, and covered
between 0.4 and 0.9 miles. The largest fragment they found on that particular trawl was less than
1.5cm in diameter. If the plastic was all collected into a small pile, it wouldn’t even fill a thimble. The
claims being promoted by Greenpeace and others that these “Garbage Patches” consist of high
densities of actual plastic bottles, plastic bags, etc. are completely false!
The next point to note is that the concentration of plastic in most of these gyres doesn’t seem to be
significantly increasing over time. This is an ongoing scientific puzzle, but it suggests that for most
ocean basins, the issue is not a particularly urgent “crisis”. However, the largest of the “Garbage
Patches” is the one in the North Pacific, and the concentrations there do seem to be significantly
increasing over time. This brings us to the question of where exactly the plastic is coming from.
Greenpeace and others are implying that the developed world is to blame (particularly Europe and
North America), but several studies have now confirmed that the problem lies almost entirely with
certain developing nations – chiefly in Asia
5.1.3. Where is this plastic coming from? Mostly Asian and African countries
A lot of the plastic in the oceans (particularly the larger “macroplastics”) seems to be fishing-related
marine debris from fishing vessels, trawlers, etc. That is, lost or abandoned fishing nets, ropes, etc.
Estimates vary from 20-80% of the plastics. However, chemical analysis of the microplastics suggests
that most of the rest of the plastic comes from mismanaged land waste that somehow got washed
into the oceans.
Initially some researchers suggested that high GDP countries in Europe and North America might
have been a big contributor to the ocean microplastics, since these countries use a lot of plastic.
However, there now have been several peer-reviewed papers that have attempted to quantify the
likely origins of the mismanaged land waste. The results are unanimous in showing that Europe and
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North America are not to blame! It is true that these countries use a lot of plastic, but their waste
management systems and infrastructure have become good enough that almost none of the waste
plastic ever reaches the oceans. Instead, the problem seems to lie with certain developing coastal
nations whose waste management is not good enough to prevent plastic from entering the oceans.
One of the first major attempts to quantify the sources was Jambeck et al. (2015) – a study which
was widely covered by the media, e.g., Wall Street Journal, Feb 12, 2015. The Jambeck et al. article is
paywalled, but various copies of the paper can be found online, e.g., here. Below are their estimates
of the 10 biggest contributors to the ocean plastics:
Rank
Country
Region
% of world’s mismanaged waste
1
China
Asia
27.7%
2
Indonesia
Asia
10.1%
3
Philippines
Asia
5.9%
4
Vietnam
Asia
5.8%
5
Sri Lanka
Asia
5.0%
6
Thailand
Asia
3.2%
7
Egypt
Africa
3.0%
8
Malaysia
Asia
2.9%
9
Nigeria
Africa
2.7%
10
Bangladesh
Asia
2.5%
In comparison, they estimate that the United States only contribute to 0.9% of the mismanaged
waste, and the E.U. about 1%.
More recently, the research team of the Ocean Cleanup Project (which we mentioned earlier) have
carried out a more detailed breakdown which was published in the journal Nature Communications:
Lebreton et al. (2017). This study confirms that the United States and Europe are not to blame. In
fact, they suggest that the North American and European contribution is even less than Jambeck et
al. (2015) had estimated.
The Lebreton et al. (2017) estimates are shown below:
Lebreton et al. (2017)’s estimates of the mass of river plastic flowing into oceans in tonnes per year. Taken from
Lebreton et al., River plastic emissions to the world’s oceans, Nature Communications, Vol. 8, 15611 (2017).
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms15611. Image is used under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.
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They estimate that the mismanaged plastic waste that is entering the oceans is as follows:
• Asia = 86% (of which China contributes more than half)
• Africa = 7.8%
• South America = 4.8% (mostly being discharged from the Amazon River)
• Central and North America = 0.95% (as can be seen from the map above, most of this comes
from Central America, and the U.S. contribution is relatively small)
• Europe = 0.28%
• Australia/Pacific region = 0.02%
As discussed earlier, once the plastic enters the oceans, the ocean currents tend to aggregate into
the various “gyres”. Therefore, most of the Asian waste ends up in the North Pacific gyre, while the
mismanaged waste from the eastern South American and south-western African countries tends to
aggregate into the South Atlantic gyre. These are the two biggest “oceanic garbage patches” of the
five.
5.2. Greenpeace’s version of the “crisis”
5.2.1. Trying to turn it into an excuse to abandon “single use plastics”
In the previous section, we established that there is a genuine concern over the presence of non-
trivial concentrations of microplastics in some regions of the oceans. So far, there has not been any
evidence to show that these microplastics are having a net negative impact on ocean life. However,
because it is a relatively new phenomenon, it is worth investigating carefully. Moreover, because
leakage of mismanaged plastic waste from some developing nations (chiefly in Asia) is leading to an
increase in these concentrations (particularly in the North Pacific gyre), we should be working to
help those countries to improve the waste management systems.
Now, let us consider how Greenpeace has taken this genuine concern and distorted it into a major
global panic that the western usage of ‘single use plastics’ is allegedly causing a catastrophic ‘ocean
plastic crisis’.
Although Greenpeace are themselves a very successful business (as we saw in Section 1) that relies
heavily on marketing, advertising and free market principles, they promote socialist and anti-
capitalist ideals in their marketing. In particular, they argue that the world’s population is too large,
and that both “overconsumption” and “economic growth” are non-sustainable. They endorse anti-
capitalists such as Naomi Klein, e.g., here and here. In turn, Naomi Klein has been a vocal supporter
of Greenpeace (and related groups, e.g., Friends of the Earth and Sierra Club), e.g., here, or here.
With that in mind, when Greenpeace heard of the initial dramatic sounding terms such as “Giant
North Pacific Garbage Patch”, they thought this would be an excellent excuse to blame the western
world for their “overconsumption”. They decided to start campaigning for “Zero Waste” and
insisting that we needed to completely stop using “single use plastics” to protect the oceans.
For instance, in their 2007 report they claim,
“While the above measures are important at preventing or reducing the problem of marine
debris, the ultimate solution to waste prevention is to implement a responsible waste
strategy, namely the concept of “Zero Waste”. Such a strategy encompasses waste
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reduction, reuse and recycling as well as producer responsibility and ecodesign. Ultimately,
this would mean reduction of the use of plastics and synthetics such that they are only used
where absolutely necessary and where they have been designed for ease of recycling within
existing recovery infrastructure. It is possible that biodegradable plastics could be used
where plastic was deemed necessary but could not be seen as an environmentally sound
alternative unless they are known to break down rapidly to non-hazardous substances in
natural environments.” – Plastic Debris in the World’s Oceans, Greenpeace, 2007.
However, they soon began to acknowledge amongst themselves that these “pacific garbage patch”
terms were misleading. For instance, in a 2011 report by the Greenpeace Science Unit (which is
based on the campus of the University of Exeter in the UK), they admitted that the emotionally-
charged terms bear almost no resemblance to reality:
“The term "Pacific trash vortex" suggests an entire region covered by a large, obvious and
easily visible patch of floating litter, one that could be detected from satellites or through
aerial photography - in extreme terms, a "literal blanket of trash" (NOAA 2010). In reality -
despite numerous relatively large items of debris, visible to observers on vessels or even
from low-flying aircraft - these conspicuous items only rarely form larger agglomerations in
the open ocean.” – “The Pacific Trash Vortex: one symptom of the global marine plastic
debris problem”, Greenpeace Science Unit, 2011.
Despite this, they felt it was still too juicy a concept not to use it to generate a new “crisis” from. So,
they kept on preparing it as one of their new campaigns. By 2015, they seem to have felt they were
finally ready to start promoting their narrative in a big way. Indeed, they highlighted it in the
foreword of their 2015 Annual Report as one of the big issues they were going to start pushing,
“A striking example of how threatening we humans have become for our own life-supporting
systems is plastic pollution in the ocean. We produce over 300 million tons of plastic every
year. That is equivalent to the combined weight of all the adult humans on Earth. Between
25 and 35 million tons of this plastic ends up in the ocean – annually. And once it is there it
stays there. In 2015, the ocean contained 1 ton of plastic for every 3 tons of fish. If this rate
of pollution continues, by 2050 the amount of plastic in the ocean is expected to match the
amount of fish by weight. The ocean and the creatures living in it are literally choking on
plastics.” – Greenpeace International 2015 Annual Report. [The bold emphasis was in the
original].
They then began actively promoting their narrative that this “crisis” was due to the western world’s
widespread usage of “single-use plastics”. They are clearly aware that this is not the case, since they
frequently cite studies such as the Jambeck et al. (2015) paper we discussed in Section 5.1.3 in their
reports, such as their 2015 report, “Time to ban single-use plastics and protect oceans”.
And on their websites, the “solutions” they propose all focus on us “reduc(ing) our plastic footprint”
and campaigning to reduce our usage of specific “single-use plastic” items such as plastic straws and
plastic utensils, e.g., “7 things you can do to create a plastic free future”.
In 2016, Greenpeace teamed up with several other NGOs promoting this “zero waste” narrative to
form a collective organization called Break Free From Plastic (BFFP). See this Greenpeace press
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release. Some of the other groups are Zero Waste Europe, Surfrider Foundation, Oceana, Story of
Stuff, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA) and Seas at Risk. Many of these groups have
further ties with Greenpeace. For instance, in 2014, Annie Leonard, the founder of the Story of Stuff
group was made the Executive Director of the USA branch of Greenpeace.
5.2.2. Tie-in with BBC’s Blue Planet 2 documentary series
In late 2017, the BBC launched a very emotionally powerful documentary series narrated by the
well-loved wildlife presenter, Sir David Attenburgh, called Blue Planet II (a sequel to an earlier
popular BBC documentary series from the 1990s). The final episode of the series was dedicated
almost exclusively to promoting Greenpeace’s narrative about their alleged “plastic crisis”. For
instance, below is an extract from the opening scene:
“For years, we thought that the oceans were so vast, and the inhabitants so infinitely
numerous that nothing we could do could have an effect upon them. But, now we know that
was wrong. The oceans are under threat now – as never before in human history.
[...] But is time running out? Many people believe that our oceans have reached a crisis
point. So, just how fragile is our Blue Planet? [opening theme music begins]” – Sir David
Attenborough, BBC Blue Planet II, episode 7 (of 7), Season 1.
The series was remarkably popular in the UK, and actually became the most watched TV series in the
UK in 2017 (beating Strictly Come Dancing, etc.). It is estimated that 20% of the British population
watched it. It so far hasn’t been as widely seen internationally, but according to the New Yorker, it
has had about 3 million viewers in the US, and according to the Independent, it was viewed by about
80 million in China during a streaming event.
The film-makers seem to have been totally on-board with Greenpeace’s approach of using
emotionally-charged, but deliberately misleading, footage (see Appendices) to make people
concerned, alarmed and ultimately angry. For instance, in one scene, they describe a famous
incident in 1992 when a freight trailer filled with yellow ducks and other plastic toys accidentally
broke and fell into the ocean. After mentioning the incident, they show footage of a pile of yellow
ducks floating in the ocean, creating the false impression that a) the “yellow ducks” are still floating
there, and b) they had actually found and filmed the original ducks.
The scriptwriters were careful not to explicitly state that these were the original ducks, and argue
that this was just “for effect” (The Independent, Dec 3, 2017). But, once you realise (as the Blue
Planet II scientific advisors did) that the average size of the plastic debris that is been talked about is
less than 1cm in diameter (see Section 5.1), then it is clear that even showing this carefully staged
footage “for effect” was deliberately misleading.
However, despite being clearly misleading to anybody familiar with the actual issues which we
discussed above (Section 5.1), the series seems to have been remarkably influential in making the
British public panicked and angry about Greenpeace’s distorted “plastics crisis”. For example, here is
an extract from the current Wikipedia page about the series:
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“The programme has been credited with raising awareness of plastic pollution both
domestically and internationally, an influence dubbed the 'Blue Planet effect'.
Following the programme's airing in the UK, the BBC announced its intention to completely
ban single-use plastics within its organisation by 2020. In April 2018, in response to growing
public support directly linked to Blue Planet II, the British government announced it is
considering a national ban on single-use plastic products. It was also reported that
Queen Elizabeth II’s decision to ban plastic bottles and straws across the Royal estates was
in part a response to the documentary.” – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Planet_II
Although the documentary series was marketed as a joint collaboration between the BBC and Open
University, and Greenpeace were not officially involved with the series, when we look at the CVs and
bios of all three of the scientific advisors that were not from the Open University group, we can see
that they each have strong ties with Greenpeace. The three (non-Open University) “Academic
Consultants” listed in the credits to the series were:
1. Callum Roberts
2. Alex Rogers
3. Steve Simpson
All three of these scientists seem to be closely related to Greenpeace:
1. Prof. Callum Roberts, University of York has written guest articles for Greenpeace, e.g., “Guest
blogger Callum Roberts: Future oceans”, 26 July 2012. He has acted as a reviewer for Greenpeace
reports, e.g., https://www.greenpeace.org/international/press-release/6878/sustainable-fish-from-
major-consumer-brands-linked-to-arctic-destruction/. As can be seen below, the review on the front
cover of the 1st paperback edition of his 2007 book, “The unnatural history of the sea” is from a
Greenpeace spokesperson:
39
Prof. Roberts also has promoted Greenpeace (among other similar NGOs) when asked what people
should do if they are concerned about the oceans, e.g.,
“[Interviewer]: What can someone do to help the ocean, even if they don't live on the coast
or interact with it directly on a regular basis?
Callum Roberts: There are many ways to help. Top of my list would be to learn more about
the oceans and what we are doing to them and spread the word. Check out some of the
great organisations dedicated to protecting life in the sea, like SeaWeb, Rare, WWF, Oceana,
Greenpeace, Sea Shepherd, The Black Fish, Client Earth, Blue Ocean Institute and the Ocean
Conservancy, among many others. Each has their own distinctive way of doing things, so
with a little digging you can find a close match to your own interests and philosophy. Most
depend on the generosity of philanthropists for support so if you can give even a little it
will help. Alternatively, get involved by volunteering.” – ”Five Questions for Callum Roberts,
Author and Professor”, July 2012, interview with Smithsonian Institute [Emphasis added in
bold]
2. Prof. Alex Rogers is a Professor of Conservation Biology at the University of Oxford. But, as he
explains on his faculty website, he has “...also worked for other NGOs including the WWF,
Greenpeace and the Deep-Sea Conservation Coalition” and on his research website, “My work has
applied aspects and I have undertaken projects for [...] and for non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) including Greenpeace, the Pew Foundation, The World Wildlife Fund for Nature and The
Deep-Sea Conservation Coalition.”. He has also contributed to Greenpeace press releases, e.g.,
“Greenpeace launches campaign to create ‘largest protected area on Earth’ – as Antarctic nations
fall short on marine protection” – Greenpeace UK, 27th October 2017
3. Prof. Steve Simpson in the Biosciences Department in the University of Exeter does not appear to
have worked directly for Greenpeace. However, he has been very vocal in promoting the claims in
the documentary about the “microplastics crisis”, e.g., here and here. Several of his colleagues in the
Bioscience Department (Dr. Ceri Lewis; Prof. Tamara Galloway; and Dr. Matthew Cole) have this as
one of their main research projects: see here. The University of Exeter has also recently announced
plans “to become ‘plastic free’ by 2020”.
We do not know exactly how much direct contact Prof. Simpson has with Greenpeace. However, we
note that the Greenpeace Scientific Unit is also based on the University of Exeter campus. Also, it is
clear that Greenpeace has considerable influence in the Biosciences Department where Prof.
Simpson is based. For instance, Dr. David Santillo, one of Greenpeace’s senior scientists who has
been a co-author on all of their publications on the “plastics crisis” and “microplastics crisis” since at
least 2011, is also an Honorary Research Fellow in the Biosciences Department.
5.3. What is wrong with Greenpeace’s narrative on plastics?
5.3.1. They are deliberately misleading the public by fabricating a fictional “crisis”
As we discussed in Section 5.1, some scientists are genuinely concerned about the fact that
concentrations of “microplastics” in some parts of the oceans are relatively high. However, the
concentrations that they are talking about are relatively modest, e.g., a few hundred fragments per
40
square mile in the worst regions. Also, the average sizes of these plastic fragments are very small,
e.g., less than 1/16 inches in diameter.
Despite this, Greenpeace has been actively misleading the public to create the perception that there
are massive floating “islands” filled with plastic bottles, plastic bags and other plastic debris. For
instance, we saw how they influenced the BBC documentary makers of the Blue Planet II to promote
this false narrative.
As another example, in April 2018, Greenpeace worked with Ogilvy & Mather advertising agency to
create a new ad to promote their narrative on “the plastics crisis”. See here for a summary. For the
ad, they replaced one of the displays in Dingle Oceanworld Aquarium in Ireland with a display
containing large plastic bottles, beer can holders, plastic bags etc. They then filmed a group of school
children visiting “the exhibit” and watched their upset reactions. The text for the ad then consists of
the following captions:
• UK supermarkets generate 800,000 tonnes of plastic each year.
• A truck load of plastic ends up in our oceans every minute.
• Let’s make sure the ocean of the future is filled with fish not plastic.
• Demand your supermarket uses less plastic.
• Sign our Petition now. Greenpeace.
• Greenpeace.org.uk/oceanofthefuture
– “Welcome to the Ocean of the Future”, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjU5i98nx74
The ad can be viewed on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjU5i98nx74
The goals of this Greenpeace ad were not about raising public concern over the genuine
environmental issues discussed in Section 5.1, or support for the genuine attempts to deal with
these issues. Instead, Greenpeace chose to deliberately promote misinformation by creating the
perception that:
a) The “plastic fragments” that scientists are concerned about are full plastic items such as
plastic bottles, beer can holders and plastic bags. (In reality, most of the “plastic fragments”
are a few millimetres in diameter)
b) UK plastic use is a significant part of the problem (it’s not!)
c) Supermarket plastic use is a significant part of the problem (it’s not!)
d) Greenpeace are actively fighting to fix “the problem” (they’re not!)
When you visit the Greenpeace website you find several invites to donate $25 or more to “help”
them to fight “the problem”. However, “the problem” which they are scaring people about is non-
existent, and “the solutions” they are proposing would have zero effect on the genuine
environmental concerns which we discussed in Section 5.1.
5.3.2. Unnecessary guilt doesn’t help the actual issue
Despite the widespread public perception promoted by Greenpeace that the western world is to
blame, as we discussed in Section 5.1.3, the actual sources of the mismanaged waste are
predominantly developing nations. As Prof. Ramani Narayan (a co-author of Jambeck et al., 2015)
describes in the recent National Geographic “Planet of Plastic” special issue,
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“Let’s say you recycle 100 percent in all of North America and Europe, [...] you still would not
make a dent on the plastics released into the oceans. If you want to do something about
this, you have to go there, to these countries, and deal with the mismanaged waste.” – Prof.
Ramani Narayan, interviewed in National Geographic, June 2018.
And, the most straightforward way to deal with the mismanaged waste in those countries is to
improve their waste collection systems. As Ted Siegler (another co-author of Jambeck et al., 2015)
explains later in the same issue,
“Everyone wants a sexy answer [...]. The reality is, we need to just collect the trash. Most
countries that I work in, you can’t even get it off the street. We need garbage trucks and
help institutionalizing the fact that this waste needs to be collected on a regular basis and
landfilled, recycled, or burned so that it doesn’t end up going all over the place.” – Ted
Siegler interviewed in National Geographic, June 2018
Through their campaigning, Greenpeace and the various other “Zero Waste” groups they have
aligned with have created a widespread panic that North American and European countries are
causing alarming-sounding “ocean pollution” through their “single-use plastic”. They have developed
campaigns targeting specific items, e.g., the use of plastic straws, and these campaigns have gained
a lot of attention. For instance, Starbucks recently announced that they will stop “using disposable
plastic straws by 2020” and replacing their straw and lid combination for their cold drinks with new
“strawless lids”. (NY Times, July 9, 2018).
These campaigns are problematic because the “solutions” often cause more harm than good. For
instance, as Reason’s assistant editor, Christian Britschgi, points out in his Reason blog post on July
12, Starbucks’ new “strawless lids” actually use slightly more plastic than the original “straw plus lid”
combination.
Moreover, specific campaigns to reduce or abolish, e.g., plastic straws, disposable plastic coffee
cups, plastic bags, in the western world will have zero impact on the “ocean plastic pollution”. This is
a specific problem for developing nations that are not properly managing their waste, and some
plastic is being “leaked” into the oceans. North American and European countries are already
managing their waste well enough to prevent any substantial “plastic leakage”.
5.3.3. Losing sight of the reasons why we are using plastic
By scaring people into thinking that plastics are inherently “bad”, Greenpeace are making the public
lose sight of the reasons why we are using plastic in the first place. There are many reasons why
plastic products have become more popular than alternatives such as paper-based products, e.g.,
• They are usually more affordable and cost-effective
• They are often sturdier and can be custom designed with tailor-made properties
• They often are more environmentally friendly to produce, e.g., require less energy and water
A good review of the advantages of plastics is given in a recent white paper by the Independent
Institute led by Katie Colton and colleagues. In the paper, they point out that the negative
environmental impacts involved in producing a paper cup are much greater than for an equivalent
plastic polystyrene foam (i.e., “Styrofoam”) cup. See below:
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Comparison of the life-cycle environmental impacts of a plastic (polystyrene foam) cup and an equivalent paper cup.
Adapted from Colton et al. (2018). Independent Review. http://www.independent.org/publications/article.asp?id=9378
Additionally, as a rule of thumb, if a product (such as a disposable coffee cup) is in wide usage, there
are probably reasons why – it is generally meeting consumers’ demands in some manner. So, before
vilifying the product and saying it needs to be completely abandoned and replaced with something
else (such as a non-plastic reusable mug), it is important to figure out what values the original
product had, and checking whether your proposed replacement product meets those demands.
Before vilifying the common disposable coffee cup as being intrinsically bad (as Greenpeace are
implying), it is worth reading this interesting article on the BonAppetit website about why people
invented the disposable coffee cup in the first place: https://www.bonappetit.com/entertaining-
style/trends-news/article/disposable-coffee-cup-history
5.4. Comparing Greenpeace’s approach to those of honest
environmentalists
The hypocrisy of Greenpeace’s “ocean plastic crisis” campaigning is particularly evident when we
compare their activities to those of honest environmentalist groups that are genuinely trying to
reduce plastic pollution in the oceans.
We should stress that we do not entirely agree with everything that these groups are doing, and we
find that – like Greenpeace - they often oversell and simplify the issue to make it sound more
dramatic and alarming than it is.
Nonetheless, unlike Greenpeace, they seem to take care to remain factual and stick to the real
issues. They are not taking Greenpeace’s “anti-education” approach (see Appendix 3) to
campaigning. Instead, they seem to be making an honest effort to inform the public of an issue they
are genuinely concerned about. They are also offering plausible solutions which they genuinely
believe could help resolve the issue.
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More importantly, unlike Greenpeace, these other groups seem to be making significant progress in
achieving their stated goals. In this section, we will compare Greenpeace’s approach to some of
these other groups.
5.4.1. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation and their proposed “circular economy”
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation was set up by Dame Ellen MacArthur, a retired English sailor who in
2005 (at the age of 28) broke the world record for the fastest solo circumnavigation of the globe.
From her sailing career, she became interested in sustainability, and so when she retired from
professional sailing in 2010, she set up the Foundation to try and promote better sustainability
practices in the economy. In particular, the Foundation has been very successful in starting
conversations about the concept of switching to what they call a “circular economy” for plastics.
They are concerned about the fact that most of the plastic we produce is “single use”, i.e., very little
of it gets reused or recycled. They also are concerned about the fact that a lot of it seems to be
ending up into the oceans via “leakage” from mismanaged waste. So, from this, you might initially
assume that they are natural allies of Greenpeace, and that they share common goals. But, as they
say, the devil is in the detail, and when you compare and contrast Greenpeace’s campaigning and
canvassing to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s campaigning and canvassing, you can see that their
approaches are in many ways diametrically opposed!
A good summary of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s views on reducing plastic waste is provided in
their 2016 report, “The new plastics economy: Rethinking the future of plastics”. We do not
personally agree with all of their analysis, e.g., the large focus they place on greenhouse gas
emissions. We also find some of their claims to be somewhat hyperbolic and sensationalist.
However, it is striking how different their approach is to Greenpeace’s. Unlike Greenpeace, they
genuinely seem to be interested in trying to reduce the world’s overall plastic waste, without causing
undue economic hardship or abandoning the immense benefits of plastics for society:
• The Ellen MacArthur Foundation are trying to promote an open-minded discussion on how
to overcome the considerable challenges involved in changing the way we use plastics.
Greenpeace are trying to shut down discussion and insisting that “zero waste” is the only
answer, and that it would be easy to implement, with no negative consequences.
• The Ellen MacArthur Foundation are willing to talk about the pros and cons of plastics, and
have a nuanced discussion about how we can manage to maintain the benefits of current
plastic usage – but just improving our recycling and reusing rates. Greenpeace deliberately
overlook the real reasons why we’re using so much plastic, and insist that plastics are
inherently “bad” for the environment. Greenpeace actually oppose efforts to increase
recycling and reusing of plastic! Instead, they instead that we should be abandoning plastic
and refusing to settle for anything other than “zero waste”.
• The Ellen MacArthur Foundation are trying to encourage informed debate and discussion.
So, they take care to stress that the plastic leakage into the oceans is almost entirely coming
from developing nations (not Europe or North America). They tell concerned citizens from
the developed nations that they could still help with the leakage problem by canvassing the
plastic producing companies (that mostly have their headquarters in Europe/North
America). But, they stress that the latest scientific studies show that the general public in
these developed nations are not to blame for the ocean leakage. Greenpeace are
44
deliberately ignoring this - we can say “deliberately”, because Greenpeace repeatedly
reference the papers like Jambeck et al., 2015, but neglect to mention their key findings!
Instead, Greenpeace insist (against the scientific evidence) that the users of “single use
plastic” in developed nations are to blame. They also deliberately foster the (completely
inaccurate) notion that the “Oceanic Garbage Patches” are floating islands of plastic bags,
bottles, and other large plastic items.
• The Ellen MacArthur Foundation is trying to genuinely improve our global plastic usage. They
have put forward practical (though challenging) suggestions and ideas, and are actively
working with major international companies (e.g., Coca Cola, Evian, etc.) to discuss realistic
and practical solutions – that are financially viable. Greenpeace refuse to endorse any
genuine attempts other than their hypothetical “zero waste” outcome. They pick major
international companies like Coca Cola as “enemies” and insist that they should implement
financially disastrous “solutions”. Moreover, when companies like Coca Cola work with
groups like the Ellen MacArthur Foundation to try and develop realistic reforms, Greenpeace
dismiss their efforts as “inadequate”.
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s goal is to help society to dramatically reduce plastic waste in
several different ways, chiefly by substantially increasing the fraction of plastic that is reused or
recycled. At the moment, only about 14% of the world’s plastic packaging is recycled. This is far
below the recycling rates for e.g., paper (58%), or iron and steel (70-90%). Instead most of the plastic
packaging is either incinerated (14%), landfilled (40%) or else “lost” through mismanaged waste
(32%). They illustrate the problem with the following schematic:
Infographic illustrating the current life-cycles of plastics taken from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation website.
45
Their goal is to try and drastically improve the situation through what they call a “circular economy”,
which they illustrate with the following schematic:
Infographic illustrating their proposed “circular economy” life cycles for plastics taken from the Ellen MacArthur
Foundation website.
They also believe that we should separately try to reduce the “leakage” from those countries that
have been specifically identified as having major mismanaged waste problems, i.e., those developing
nations in Asia, Africa, and South America which were discussed in Section 5.1.3.
Since their goal is to drastically reduce both the total waste plastic and the leakage of waste plastic
into the oceans, you might expect Greenpeace to support their efforts. But, Greenpeace have
actually been remarkably dismissive of the “circular economy” concept. They argue that the concept
of “economic growth” should be abandoned, and the world should only settle for “zero waste”, e.g.,
“"A ‘circular economy’ is the latest meme being used across the EU and worldwide, but
behind this nice phrase lies the industry’s fantasy that circularity can fix a material-intensive
system; selling the promises of 100% recyclability which is unlikely to come true,” said Chiara
Campione, Greenpeace Italy Senior Corporate Strategist.” – New report breaks the myth of
fast fashion’s so-called ‘circular economy’ – Greenpeace, Greenpeace International,
September 18, 2017
“Sharing and circular economies were attempts in this direction. They started in response to
the economic crisis as people were pushed to utilize excess capacity, time and goods and
companies started to suffer from the impacts of climate change and resource scarcity.
Unfortunately, as with many other ideas, they’ve been hijacked by the private sector and its
main driver; growth. The idea of a circular economy [the article then links to the Ellen
46
MacArthur Foundation's website] carries a rebound effect; meaning we could end
up increasing overall production, which would offset any benefits.” – What a green and
peaceful future could look like, Greenpeace International, July 19, 2018.
Meanwhile, it is worth noting that – unlike Greenpeace – the Ellen MacArthur Foundation have been
working with some of the largest producers of plastic products to try and reduce their waste, e.g.,
Coca-Cola, Evian and global packaging company Amcor. A particularly relevant example is Coca-Cola,
since this is one of the “enemies” which Greenpeace chose to vilify for their “ocean plastics crisis”.
Coca-Cola obviously produce a lot of plastic bottles and up until recently the recycling rates of their
bottles were very low. Greenpeace have developed a series of vilification campaigns against them to
make the public outraged at Coca-Cola. These campaigns have used a lot of slick marketing (see here
for a summary), and gained quite a bit of attention – and crucially for Greenpeace, generated a lot of
support for Greenpeace – e.g., see here and here.
However, while Greenpeace were focusing their efforts on vilifying Coca-Cola, the Ellen MacArthur
Foundation had gone directly to Coca-Cola and worked with them to see how they could try to
improve the recycling of their plastic, and start reusing plastic. After these discussions, Coca-Cola
announced several new efforts to help with the circular economy: https://www.coca-
colacompany.com/stories/world-without-waste
Greenpeace, of course, took the credit for this move by Coca-Cola (even though Coca-Cola had
specifically acknowledged that they had made their decision after consultation with the Ellen
MacArthur Foundation). However, rather than praising Coca-Cola for making a big step, Greenpeace
ridiculed the efforts as inadequate, and have continued to vilify them, e.g., see here.
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5.4.2. The Plastic Bank’s attempts to reduce “ocean leakage” from developing nations
As we discussed in Section 5.1.3, almost all of the “leakage” of plastic waste into the ocean is coming
from a handful of developing nations that don’t have adequate waste management resources. For
that reason, a number of entrepreneurs concerned about the build-up of plastic in the oceans have
tried to improve the waste management resources in those countries.
For example, David Katz and Shaun Frankson decided to set up a venture which they call, “The
Plastic Bank”. In collaboration with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, they have teamed up with
several of the larger plastic producing companies, such as Henkel, who have agreed to recycle plastic
waste collected by the Plastic Bank for their products. Katz and Frankson then pay locals in these
developing nations to collect plastic waste for them. This plastic waste is then sold to Henkel and
others, who recycle it, thereby reducing “ocean leakage” and boosting the “circular economy”.
David Katz recently gave a 10 minute TED talk (Feb 2018) summarising what they’re doing:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mT4Qbp89nIQ. If different groups like the Plastic Bank were
collectively able to substantially reduce the mismanaged plastic waste from these developing
nations, then the problem of “ocean leakage” would be largely resolved. However, Greenpeace keep
insisting –against all the evidence - that the problem has something to do with the use in Europe and
North America of plastic straws, disposable coffee cups, etc.
5.4.3. The Ocean CleanUp Project
If groups like the Ellen MacArthur Foundation and the Plastic Bank are successful in drastically
reducing the amount of mismanaged plastic waste “leakage” into the oceans, then this should
mostly stop the concentrations of microplastics from continuing to increase. However, it wouldn’t
do anything about the microplastics which are already there.
As we discussed in Section 5.1, there is still no evidence that these microplastics are having a net
negative environmental effect. But, if we were to try to remove them, it could be a very costly and
inefficient process – precisely because the actual concentrations of microplastics are so low, i.e.,
only a few hundred “fragments” per square mile in the peak areas. However, a young Dutch inventor
(currently 23 years old) and engineer called Boyan Slat has been working on using technology to try
and meet that challenge in a cost-effective way. In 2013, he discontinued his university studies to
found The Ocean Cleanup, and this group (which we mentioned in Section 5.1) has now become a
major non-profit organization with a staff of more than 70. They believe that they are close to having
technology that could halve the concentration of microplastics in the North Pacific gyre within a
decade (or less).
48
Here is a May 2017 presentation (30 minutes) which he gave describing their progress so far:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=du5d5PUrH0I. Below is a screenshot showing what they think
their technology could achieve (blue curve) as opposed to the red “business-as-usual” curve.
If his team is correct, then they would have developed a technological solution to essentially remove
the “oceanic garbage patches” without us changing our everyday use of plastic in any way.
Yet, Greenpeace are opposed to his project as they claim it could interfere with marine life, e.g.,
‘“To filter the plastic out of the water could affect very small marine life which is very important for
the food chain,” said Elvira Jimenez, a coordinator for Greenpeace’s ocean campaign.’ – Dutchman
wants to deploy barriers to gather, recycle Pacific plastic, Reuters, May 16, 2017.
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6. Conclusions
Between the five of us, we have dedicated most of our careers to advancing scientific knowledge;
raising awareness about environmental problems; trying to develop solutions to environmental
problems; and generally communicating with and educating the public on science and the
environment.
So, given that Greenpeace claim to be champions for science-driven environmentalism, you might
initially think that they would be allies. However, while it is easy to claim to be something, we argue
that Greenpeace’s actions are the very anti-thesis of science-driven environmentalism:
1. They are intentionally fooling the public about the “vested interests” associated with each of
their campaigns. A key component of Greenpeace’s campaign strategies is to pick “an enemy” for
their campaign and imply that this enemy is obstructing the campaign for “vested interests” (see
Appendix 3). We agree that it is important for the public to be aware of vested interests on issues.
However, like the old proverb about the thief crying “Stop, thief!” the loudest, whenever
Greenpeace are calling out a supposed “vested interest” on an issue, we have found that it is to
distract attention from their own vested interest.
In Section 2, we showed one example of this when Greenpeace claimed to have proven that “Big
Oil” was actively “funding climate denial” to the tune of $1.8 million per year. Yet, according to their
financial returns, Greenpeace have been spending an average of $34 million/year on their own
“climate change” campaigns over the last decade. If Greenpeace are correct in their claims that $1.8
million/year is sufficient to significantly influence public opinion on climate change, then what
should we make of the fact that Greenpeace have spent $521 million since 1994 on promoting their
own narrative on climate change (Section 1.2)?
2. In order to create the impression that “the science is settled” on their campaign issues, they
oversimplify the often quite-nuanced views of the scientific community, and simultaneously try to
shut down any further scientific enquiry into the topic. For instance, we saw in Section 4 that
Greenpeace routinely claim that their positions on a given topic are endorsed by 95-98% of
scientists, regardless of what the true range of scientific opinion may be on that topic. Scientists
whose research disagrees with Greenpeace’s claims are ignored, misrepresented or even vilified.
One of us (Dr. Willie Soon) has personal experience of this after Greenpeace singled him out in
February 2015 as an “enemy” because his results implied a larger role for natural factors in recent
climate change than Greenpeace have claimed.
In Section 5, we showed that Greenpeace deliberately misrepresented the work of environmental
researchers investigating the existence of trace quantities of “microplastics” in the oceans to falsely
imply that the developed world is creating vast “islands” of plastic trash in the oceans through the
use of “single use plastic” items.
3. They are intentionally shutting down genuine discussion on implementing solutions on the
environmental “crises” they claim to have identified. In Section 3, we showed how Greenpeace
have been actively opposing all genuine attempts to try to reduce international carbon dioxide
emissions, while simultaneously claiming that carbon dioxide emissions are the world’s biggest
environmental threat of today.
50
In Section 5.4, we showed how Greenpeace have been actively trying to discredit or marginalise the
efforts of groups that are trying to reduce the amount of plastic that escapes into the oceans,
improve the recycling of plastics or reduce the concentration of “microplastics” in the oceans. Yet,
like climate change, Greenpeace are claiming that the “ocean plastic pollution crisis” is one of the
most urgent environmental problems.
4. They are distracting public attention away from genuine environmental concerns. In Section 3.4,
we showed how as a result of widespread public concern over international carbon dioxide
emissions (partially as a result of Greenpeace’s own advocacy), policymakers are rushing into
implementing many policies to urgently reduce our fossil fuel usage, often without carefully
considering the environmental consequences of those policies. One such consequence is the
dramatic increase in deforestation in tropical rainforests in e.g., Borneo, from the use of biofuels
instead of fossil fuels. Greenpeace are using this deforestation as the justification for further
campaigns. Yet, instead of highlighting the main cause for the deforestation (i.e., climate policies to
increase the use of biofuels), and prompting a more nuanced discussion on the pros and cons of
climate policies, they are implying that the companies manufacturing Oreo cookies, and other
similar products are to blame.
In Section 5, we showed how Greenpeace have distorted the genuine concern that several
environmental researchers have about the current “leakage” of plastic into the oceans through the
lack of proper waste management resources in specific developing coastal nations (mostly in
southeast Asia) to falsely imply that a more urgent priority is for developed nations to reduce their
usage of “single use plastics”.
---
We believe there are many genuine environmental concerns that the world should be addressing,
and for this reason we have a lot of sympathy for supporters of Greenpeace and other similar
organisations. Indeed, one of us (Dr. Patrick Moore) was one of the founding members of
Greenpeace. However, we are alarmed about how Greenpeace’s activities are effectively hindering
these concerns from being addressed. As scientists, we are also very concerned about how
Greenpeace are actively discouraging scientific enquiry on each of their campaign issues.
We hope that our report will encourage you, the reader, to look more critically at the claims being
made by Greenpeace (and other similar groups), rather than simply accepting them at face value
because their claims make you “feel bad”.
We also hope that it will encourage environmental organisations (including Greenpeace) that have
been following Greenpeace’s approach to honestly reflect on their activities and consider taking a
more science-driven approach to environmentalism in the future.
51
Appendices
Background material on Greenpeace’s
philosophies and strategies
52
Appendix 1. Business Insider’s analysis of Greenpeace’s strategy
In a 2014 article for Business Insider, “The inside story of how Greenpeace built a corporate spanking
machine to turn the Fortune 500 into climate heroes”, Aaron Gell gave a quite frank and insightful
overview of Greenpeace’s approach and philosophy. This article is well worth reading in its entirety
to better understand Greenpeace’s techniques. However, for brevity, we will include some
particularly relevant quotes.
The article opens by describing how a group of Greenpeace activists broke into Procter & Gamble’s
headquarters to let in another activist wearing a tiger costume, and install huge banners denouncing
their antidandruff shampoo, Head & Shoulders for allegedly “putting tiger survival on the line” and
“wip[ing] out dandruff & rainforests”. They hired a helicopter with a videographer and a
photographer to record the whole thing.
However, while this carefully staged protest implied that Head & Shoulders was somehow causing
problems for tigers, prominent Greenpeace members admitted to Gell that the link between Head &
Shoulders’ activities had anything to do with tigers was highly tenuous, and was really “a kind of
decoy”. They had just picked the “threatened tigers” as an issue because they find the public are
more concerned about their campaigns when they think a photogenic animal is involved:
‘"It's easy to say, 'If you're destroying forests, you're destroying tiger habitats,'"
says Phil Radford, the outgoing executive director of Greenpeace USA (his
replacement, Annie Leonard, was announced in April). "It's harder to say, 'Do
you know that forests store carbon and if we save the peat bogs we will trap all
this carbon and methane in the soil?' We say both, but we start with the place
that people are, the thing they care about the most first."
Says his colleague Nicky Davies, the organization's campaigns director: "We're
not going to win by telling people what they should care about. And winning is
the objective."
Greenpeace's strategy, which it calls "market-based campaigning," has proved
devastatingly effective. It goes like this: Pick an area of concern. Identify on-the-
ground producers whose actions are contributing to the problem. Follow the
supply chain to a multinational corporation that peddles a widely known
consumer product. Send an email or two, kindly pointing out the company's
"exposure" and suggesting an alternative. Ask again, firmly but pleasantly. Issue
a sober, meticulously researched public report. If the desired response is not
forthcoming. roll out a clear, multipronged media campaign, ideally starring a
beloved animal species and featuring a hashtag. Climb a building or two.
What seems to happen, inevitably, is the multinational company, eager to remove
the stigma from its signature brand, promises to ensure that its products are
sustainable and begins cancelling contracts with any third-party suppliers who
fail to guarantee compliance. In order to retain the multinational's lucrative
business, the largest suppliers fall into line. Before long, as the cascade effect
grows, they begin eyeing their wayward rivals, companies that are still operating
in flagrant violation of the new rules and undercutting them with other
53
customers. Eventually, broad new industry protocols are adopted to level the
playing field.
Rinse, repeat.’ – Aaron Gill, Business Insider, June 4th 2014
Greenpeace’s mafia-style shakedown approach of threatening to vilify their identified “enemies”
unless they give into all their demands (however unreasonable) has been very successful:
‘Greenpeace's confrontational and swashbuckling approach has helped make it
one the world's most powerful environmental NGOs, with branches in 41
countries, 2.9 million donors and more than $350 million in annual contributions.
’ – Aaron Gill, Business Insider, June 4th 2014
However, as Gill points out, they will frequently choose an “enemy” that is only indirectly related to
the “problems” that they are using for their campaigns. Because these “enemies” often have very
little to do with the alleged “problem”, they are often caught completely off-guard, and are
relatively easy to pressured. Greenpeace also take a carrot-and-stick approach, by telling their
“enemies” that if they give into their surrender terms, Greenpeace will publicly praise them:
‘Greenpeace has gradually adopted a new policy that aims to give corporate
leaders enough praise — and glowing brand publicity — to persuade others like
them to hop on the bandwagon. Internally, this tactic has become known as
"spank and thank."’ – Aaron Gill, Business Insider, June 4th 2014
Moreover, if these “enemies” admit defeat, Greenpeace can then use their surrender terms to get
them to pressurize a bigger “enemy” for Greenpeace:
‘Of course, the success of this technique depends on a company's susceptibility to
public pressure. When it came to Asia Pulp & Paper, a large multinational
unknown to most consumers, Greenpeace simply looked downstream to find a
purchaser of the company's paper that might be more concerned about its brand
image. It chose Mattel — specifically, one of the company's most iconic toys,
Barbie — which was being packaged with cardboard traced to virgin forests. (The
campaign, called “Barbie, It’s Over,” portrayed Ken, Barbie's longtime beau,
kicking her to the curb because, as he put it, "I don't date girls who are into
deforestation.")
Mattel soon reached out to APP, and while it was a relatively small customer, the
paper company got the message. "It was not about tonnage for us," Aida
Greenbury says. "But it really affected peoples' perception of APP. That
campaign was very effective."
APP soon opened negotiations with Greenpeace, though not without some
hesitation. "It wasn't love at first sight, that's for sure," Greenbury says. "It was
very tough, especially for an Asian company, to receive such blunt and harsh
criticism. When we first met them, the trust level was not even zero — it was
probably minus 50. It was hard to give internal information to a radical NGO.
'Are they going to use it against us?' But they didn't. They used it to help us, and
we built up trust. It was an interesting journey."
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Last year, APP launched an impressive zero-deforestation plan, which has had
profound ripple effects. "The impact of our conservation policy is not only on our
concessions," Greenbury points out. "It's on all suppliers entering our supply
chain. We think it's our obligation to help our suppliers be able to comply with
our policy. So it's quite huge."
Recently, APP took the issue a step further, announcing a plan not merely to end
clear-cutting but to restore 1 million hectares of rain forest.’ – Aaron Gill,
Business Insider, June 4th 2014
As an aside, it is worth pointing out how fickle, and temporary, Greenpeace’s “surrender terms” can
be. Gill’s article was written in 2014, and for several years, APP actively tried to work with
Greenpeace to achieve a deforestation-free supply chain. However, in May 2018, Greenpeace
decided to yet again choose them as an “enemy”, and are now back to campaigning against them –
see here. Also, see here for APP’s response.
National Greenpeace branches are under constant pressure from the international administration to
constantly fundraise, as Gill illustrates by summarising what happened to Greenpeace USA when
their membership and donations began to plummet in the 1990s:
‘The setup worked well, but a wrinkle had emerged: Greenpeace USA was going
broke.
The effort to build a grassroots movement based on retail canvassing and
coalition building had taken a toll on the American group's public profile. As a
result, its fundraising tanked.
Although the localized approach led to some important wins — for instance,
curtailing the dumping of toxins in Louisiana's "Cancer Alley" — they came at
the expense of the global organization's key priorities. For instance, Greenpeace
USA was missing in action during the negotiations over the Kyoto Protocols,
essentially declining to participate. And it opted out of the GMO campaign, which
was gathering steam around the world. Membership and donations plummeted
by more than 60%. As a result, levies paid to the central office slowed to a trickle.
Eventually, acting on a clause in the bylaws, international body took aggressive
action, dismissing Greenpeace USA's executive director and parachuting in a
replacement in from Amsterdam with a mandate to clean house.
The acting director laid off 335 staff members out of a total of 400 (mostly door-
to-door canvassers) and slashed the annual budget by more than 25%. The board
of directors was sent packing.’ – Aaron Gill, Business Insider, June 4th 2014
Gill points out that some companies – especially in the tech sector – trust Greenpeace’s claims, and
when Greenpeace accuse them of anything, they will bend over backwards to try and appease them:
‘Tech companies especially have shown an awareness of the dangers posed by
carbon emissions, perhaps because they are staffed and often run by young
engineers and scientists. "One thing about working with the IT sector," says Gary
55
Cook, Greenpeace's senior IT analyst, "is we have never had a debate about
climate change. They all think it's real."
That helps explain why Greenpeace's campaign to persuade major tech
companies — most notably Google, Facebook, and Apple — to power their data
centers with renewable energy has been so successful. After being slammed in
Greenpeace's 2012 report "How Clean Is Your Cloud?" Apple has since earned
praise for committing to using 100% renewable energy to power its iCloud server
farms. It even installed solar arrays at its facility in Maiden, North Carolina,
rather than tap into the coal-generated power provided by the local utility, Duke
Energy.
"The fact that Apple went and did that told Duke that if it sits on its hands,
motivated companies can go around them," Cook says. "Other commercial
customers started to say, 'Hmm, maybe we should look at this, too.' Duke doesn't
make any money if companies generate their own power." Before long, pressure
from Apple, as well as Google and Facebook, persuaded Duke to create a program
offering green power to major corporate customers rather than lose their
business altogether. "Duke never would have done that on its own," Phil Radford
says.’ – Aaron Gill, Business Insider, June 4th 2014
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Appendix 2. Examples of Greenpeace’s use of 95%, 96%, 97% and
98% figures
As discussed in section 3, Greenpeace continually invoke “slightly less than 100%” figures in many of
their campaigns to create the impression that their campaigns are comprehensive and/or urgent. In
this appendix, we have listed a sample of some of the more recent examples. In all of the examples
below (which are just a sample), we have highlighted the relevant figures in bold italic:
• “Estimates suggest that as much as 95 percent of the clothes thrown out with domestic
waste and [sic] could be used again—re-worn, reused or recycled—depending on the state
of the textile wastes.” – Greenpeace Germany, “Timeout for fast fashion”, p5, 24 November
2016
The above 95% figure was picked up as key by reporters describing the report, e.g.,
• “The [Greenpeace] report notes that up to 95% of the millions of tons of clothing thrown out
each year could be used again, according to recent estimates.” – Marc Bain, ‘Recycling or
donating your unwanted clothes “is not a solution” for the planet, Greenpeace says’,
Quartz.com, November 30, 2016.
They frequently use the figures in their various proposals for renewable energy policies (which we
discussed in detail in Section 3), e.g.,
• “The advanced scenario reduces EU-wide carbon dioxide emissions by 95% by 2050…” –
Executive summary of “EU Energy [r]evolution – towards a fully renewable energy
supply in the EU27”, Greenpeace European Unit in collaboration with the European
Renewable Energy Council (EREC), July 8, 2010.
• “By 2050, around 97% of electricity will be produced from renewable sources” – also in
the same report.
• “Our plan to stop the oil: 95% renewables by 2050” - Greenpeace Philippines, 7 June,
2010.
But, they try to use these figures whenever they can, e.g.,
• “Find ways to help stabilize and reduce human population. Some human rights activists fear
that population efforts might violate human rights, but crowding already erodes human
rights. Humans and our livestock now comprise 96% of all mammal biomass on Earth. There
are limits.” – Rex Weyler, “What can we do?”, Greenpeace International, 10 June 2018
• “Greenpeace: 96% of litter found in Mediterranean Sea is plastic” – Greenpeace
International press release, 8 June, 2017
• “The [PVC] industry is making no commitments on total recycling amounts, but only presents
expectations […] 96% of the PVC waste would still go to incineration or landfill.” – p4 of “The
deliberate smokescreen, alias, The voluntary commitment of the PVC industry”, 27 July
2000, Greenpeace’s submission to the European Commission’s July 2006 public hearing on
the PVC industry
• “Greenpeace is continuing its campaign against Thai Union Group, claiming the company has
not done enough to alleviate concerns over human rights abuses in the company’s tuna
supply chain despite recent media scrutiny of its business operations.
57
[…]
Over 96% of Thai Union’s tuna is sourced from areas other than Thailand, yet the company
has only committed to a human rights audit for the 4% of tuna caught in Thai waters, along
with its shrimp operations, Greenpeace noted.” – Undercurrent News, “Greenpeace: New
incidents of forced labor on Thai-operated vessels” Nov. 4, 2015
• “A century ago, as many as 100,000 wild tigers inhabited Asia. Now, we’ve lost 97% of those
big cats, leaving around 3,000 in the wild today.” – Greenpeace Australia Pacific, “Roar if you
love tigers!”, 28 July 2014
• “Recent investigations (Sierra Legal Defence Fund, 1996) have shown that 97% of all the
logging in the temperate rainforest is done by clearcutting. By the government’s own
statistics, the rate of timber cut in the province has exceeded Long-Term Harvest Levels for
19 of the last 20 years (Greenpeace Canada, 1998a, p. 5)” – Jeanne Moffat, Greenpeace
International, “Victory for the forests: Greenpeace’s market campaign for the Great Bear
Rainforest”, COADY 2001 Learning & Innovations Institute conference.
• “What is true is that Coke produced 110 billion plastic bottles in 2016, which made up a
significant fraction of the 12 billion tons of plastic that went into our oceans last year. If Coke
introduced a Deposit Return Scheme (DRS) 97% of those bottles would be reused or
recycled.” – Greenpeace in collaboration with Friends of the Earth Manchester, “Manchester
Greenpeace Christmas Coke Campaign Stall”, a campaign event on 25 November, 2017
Greenpeace also try to use the figures in their social media campaigns on Facebook and Twitter, e.g.,
• “97% of bottles returned with a Norwegian deposit return scheme. Who thinks we could do
system like this? Sign the petition for a UK DRS: http://act.gp/2EjQNvm #EndOceanPlastics”
– Greenpeace UK Facebook post, 8 February, 2018.
• ‘“95% of the value of plastic packaging material, worth US$80-120 bn annually, is lost to the
economy.” No matter how you look at it; from an environmental standpoint or an economic
one, plastics days are numbered. Sign the petition: greenpeace.nz/plastic-free’ –
Greenpeace New Zealand Facebook post, 25 June, 2018.
• “Not good—More than 95% of the world's population breathe dangerous air, major study
finds https://act.gp/2qFjj5f #airpollution” – Greenpeace tweet, 17 April 2018
• “97% of scientists agree that #climatechange is caused by humans, new study says.
http://grnpc.org/IgNAb” – Greenpeace tweet, 13 April 2016
• “97% of endangered species are threatened by 3 common pesticides
http://act.gp/1WphXWw” – Greenpeace tweet, 12 April 2016
• “For the second year in a row, Costa Rica’s grid used over 98% #renewable energy
http://act.gp/2iMMSgc” – Greenpeace tweet, 3 January 2017
While canvassing for the 2010 UK General Election, the UK Green Party leader (and the Green Party’s
first UK Member of Parliament), Caroline Lucas, described on her website how Greenpeace had
given her flyers designed to look like “polling cards” but instead presenting the finding from a survey
Greenpeace had apparently carried out,
“I was delighted to be handed "polling cards" showing that 96% of Brighton residents that
Greenpeace had spoken to were against nuclear weapons. This was encouraging, as it's in
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line with what the Green Party has been saying for years.” – Caroline Lucas, MP, “On the
campaign trail – Greenpeace, jobcentre and retail therapy”, April 13, 2010
They also like to use these figures when describing the Greenpeace organization itself:
• “Our funding
[… ] More than 95% of our funding comes from generous individual donors, which allows us
to make independent decisions and take action on campaigns that matter the most to our
supporters.” – Greenpeace Australia website, "About" page.
• “Some 98% of Greenpeace’s money comes from individual donors…” – John Sauven,
executive director of Greenpeace UK, as reported in a July, 14 2014 Guardian article
• “Our direct actions are vital to winning our campaigns, but we can only take action because
individuals – people who have made a personal choice to act to stop environmental
destruction – are willing to put their liberty on the line. If you’d like to join us, please get
active with a local Greenpeace group/network. Please note: 95% of people we invite to
attend such a training event have been locally involved for 6 months or more.” –
Greenpeace UK website, “Taking Action” page
In 2009, the personal care corporation, Kimberly-Clark, who make paper-based products such as
toilet paper, facial tissues, etc., agreed to work with Greenpeace to ensure their paper usage met
Greenpeace’s forest sustainability targets. In 2014, Triplepundit.com organised an hour-long Twitter
chat with representatives from both Kimberly-Clark and Greenpeace to discuss their achievements.
In it, the Kimberly-Clark representative makes sure to introduce a 97% figure:
“We were also the first away-from-home towel and tissue products company in North
America to seek and obtain Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) chain-of-custody certification
for a broad range of towel and tissue products and now over 97% of our K-C Professional
towel and tissue codes are FSC certified.” – Peggy Ward (Kimberly-Clark), “Greenpeace and
Kimberly-Clark Twitter Chat follow-up”, Aug 15, 2014.
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Appendix 3. Influence of Chris Rose’s “How to Win Campaigns” (2005)
Dr. Chris Rose is a former Strategic Advisor for Greenpeace International, as well as the former
Deputy Executive and Programme Director of Greenpeace UK. He has also worked for Friends of the
Earth, WWF International and other environmental campaigning groups. He currently runs his own
UK-based consultancy firm, Campaign Strategy, offering advice to NGOs and other campaigning
groups on “how to win campaigns”. In the mid-1990s, he devised a new organisational strategy for
Greenpeace, which led to the highly successful “Brent Spar” fundraising campaign. In 2005, he wrote
a “how-to” manual describing in detail the campaigning strategies he developed and implemented
while at Greenpeace.
Dr. Rose’s strategies and techniques have been highly influential on Greenpeace, as well as other
similar environmental campaigning groups, e.g., Friends of the Earth. This can be seen for example
from the following endorsements which are taken from the inside and back covers of his book:
“They’ve got Karl Rove. We’ve got Chris Rose. Bet on us!” – John Passacantando,
former Executive Director, Greenpeace USA
“Chris Rose is one of the UK’s most successful campaigners, and his vast
experience is brought together in this outstanding practical guide. If you believe
there is a problem that needs to be fixed, then How to Win Campaigns is a vital
resource.” – Tony Juniper (former Executive Director of Friends of the Earth,
England, Wales and Northern Ireland; former Vice Chair of Friends of the Earth
International)
The book is currently in its 2nd edition (2010) and is available from amazon.co.uk.
In this section, we will provide some key extracts from his book (the 2010 version), along with some
commentary on their significance, which we believe provide important insights into Greenpeace’s
philosophies and strategies for fundraising and campaigning. Quotes from the book are indented
and printed in a different font for clarity. Some low-resolution screenshots of relevant figures from
the book are included for reference.
A3.1. Greenpeace’s “Motivation sequence campaign” model
Greenpeace often invest several years into developing a successful fundraising campaign. They find
that the campaigns are more successful when they appear to roll out like a story with each of the
chosen story elements appearing in sequence before the final fundraising (“call to action”) takes
place:
1. Identify the “problem”,
2. Identify the “enemy”,
3. Identify the “solution”,
4. Call the troops to arms for the battle (“engagement mechanism”)
5. Raise funds (“Call to action”)
6. React and report
Dr. Rose summarises this “Motivation sequence campaign model” on p20-22:
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“Plan backwards from the call to action. That should either be a fixed date (such
as an event) or a date that can be estimated sufficiently well to have all the
necessary communications, assets and capabilities in place when it arrives. The
possible start date is then generated by adding together the critical time periods
needed for each stage before the call to action opportunity.
Campaigns usually need to start with awareness. Awareness of the problem,
preferably made more compelling by showing the victim.
The campaign sequence illustrated in Figure 1.5 shows how to plan using the
basic formula of the fire notice: awareness → alignment → engagement → action.
Each part needs to fit to the next like a jigsaw – the ‘enemy’ needs to be the
particular one that fits with that victim, the solution really does have to solve the
specific problem, and so on.
So in this classic communication path, the story begins when we see the problem
– we see ‘victims’. These might be human or physical, or animal or even plants.
Fish dying from pollution, or a building damaged by acid rain, for example or
someone suffering torture. This is the awareness-building phase.
Next we see what or who is responsible, the ‘enemy’ or causal agent that is to
blame – with no cause, a problem is not an issue. This is followed by a period of
reinforcement by repetition or ‘demonization’: former UK Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher was an expert at this; she demonized striking miners, for
example. This phase ought to last until the problem is established in the mind of
our audience. By this time the public state of mind is one of concern.
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If the ‘bad news’ just continues, the audience gets fed up and withdraws or
switches off – the problem is just another tragedy. Concern with no solution will
lead to withdrawal; with no constructive outlet it will create frustration, most
probably towards the messenger. You can’t hold people’s emotional attention in
that way for long.
When an ‘answer’ is supplied by revealing a solution, the campaign can progress
because we get angry. It’s no longer a tragedy but an avoidable problem: ‘it
doesn’t have to be like this’. In journalistic terms you have the elements of a
scandal (Chapter 8).
Alignment gets everyone looking in the same direction, agreeing what the
problem is, who suffers, who’s to blame and what the solution is. Skip any of this
part and the audience won’t see what you are doing as relevant to them.
[...]
For the campaign to call for action, it must have a suitable engagement
mechanism ready; and when the timing is just right, give a clear call. In a public
advocacy campaign, this might be a call to lobby a politician to pressure the
government, visit a shop to lobby the manager about a brand or contact a
company about corporate behaviour.
[...]
For a fund-raising group, if the campaign is at all successful, this may be when it
goes back to its supporters or stakeholders to explain the success and ask for
further help. If campaigners become too obsessed with the media, they may
neglect engagement mechanisms, and the campaign generates publicity but no
effective pressure. In this way, the campaign rolls out like a story, told from the
beginning, with each step revealing something new. It does not start by
communicating the whole route – if it did, there wouldn’t be any change because
there wouldn’t be engagement, there would be no build-up or focus of pressure.
Unlike a play or film, which progresses irrespective of audience interest, a
campaign must not press on until the present stage is successfully completed. It
has to gather support for each step – ‘to take people with you’. Sometimes this is
a long, slow process. An overambitious project may try to take too many people
along too far, too fast. An overcautious one may do the opposite.” – p20-22,
Chapter 1. How to Begin.
Looking back on some of their most successful campaigns, we can see that the entire campaign is
often orchestrated to take place over several years.
For example, as discussed in Section 2, when Kert Davies of Greenpeace USA announced in 2001 that
they were choosing Exxon Mobil as the ‘enemy’ on climate change (as opposed to some other oil
company, or some other fossil fuel industry), they did not have any “evidence” of villainy other than
a non-committal e-mail response from some board members. But, this was just the first step. Kert
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Davies then began a project called “Exxon Secrets” with the view to specifically vilify Exxon by
alleging (through innuendo) that they were secretly “funding” climate “deniers”. They published
their findings in 2004 with a remarkably successful press release which is to this day, the main
“evidence” for the popular perception that “Big Oil” is funding “climate denial.
A3.2. Campaigning is the anti-thesis of education
A common reaction many people have when they discover that a particular Greenpeace campaign
has oversimplified and misrepresented a particular environmental issue is to argue that they have at
least “raised awareness” of “the problem”, and that this can lead to an informed and educated
discussion on how to deal with the issue in question. However, Dr. Rose is quite explicit in his book
in his opinion that the goal of campaigning is directly opposed to the goal of education. He argues
that education increases knowledge and understanding, leading to a more nuanced and reflective
discussion, but that this can lead to indecision when there is no clear solution to the problem.
Instead, he argues that campaigners should fight against education by deliberately oversimplifying
the issue and reducing awareness of the available options. In that way, he argues people are more
likely to become concerned and angry at what they believe is an urgent problem, leading to action.
He summarises his views on this in his section, “Campaigning is not education” (p23-p25):
“CAMPAIGNING IS NOT EDUCATION
Campaigning involves stimulating action, best achieved by narrowing the focus
and eliminating distractions and reducing options, as in advertising (Figure 1.6).
Typically, it starts (left column) with a problem and moves a target audience
through the stages of awareness (and alignment, not shown here), concern and so
on, to action.
In contrast, education expands awareness of options and complexity (right-hand
column). It typically takes a problem and shows that it is not so simple as you
may have first thought.
The educational model is great for education but not for campaigning. It reaches
understanding but not action. Using it to try and decide or stimulate action is
likely to lead to confusion and frustration.
Attend meetings of university professors discussing a practicality to see this in
practice. In one university I know, a discussion over what to do with a gap left by
a 1940s World War II bomb, subsequently occupied by a car park, remained
unresolved until the 1980s.
Contesting professors tend to make things complex, and dazzle each other with
clever reframing, find angles nobody had thought of, or make reference to
additional bodies of information that must be taken into account. Perpetual
questioning is how knowledge advances. The same discussion in a bank or a
double-glazing company would probably be over in minutes. Questioning
fundamentals and reflecting on things is not how business, politics or war
advances.
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On the other hand, listen to the professors discussing the meaning of life or
public motivations, or what music is, and you will probably leave impressed,
turning over new insights in your mind, maybe seeing your whole existence in a
new way. Ask the bankers and the sales directors to hold the same discussion (or
even ‘what business is’) and you will quickly find it bottoms out in cliché, leaden
tautologies and the sort of wisdom you can find in a fortune cookie (Figure 1.7).
Beware campaigners who want to educate others to see the issue in a right way
before accepting their support. To be driven by principle is an admirable thing,
but to campaign by trying to make others adopt your principles is not likely to be
effective. As Gerd Leipold has written: ‘Campaign organizations have to be
opportunistic, not in terms of their beliefs and values but in terms of reaching
audiences.’” – p23-25, Chapter 1. How to Begin.
A3.3. Carefully choosing your villain
Dr. Rose believes that campaigns are most effective when they seem like a classical “story” like the
ones we listened to as children. That way, you can shift the discussion from one based on ‘...facts
and rationality’ to one based on ‘...emotions and feelings’ [p44, Chapter 2. Communicating with
humans]:
“STORIES
[...]Campaign communications need to roll out before an audience like a story,
from the beginning.
[...] Stories with human interest, based around a person, whether real or not, can
move us from right-brain to left-brain communication, from facts and rationality
to emotions and feelings. They take us there: ‘it could be me’. Like pictures,
stories don’t need to argue, and you can’t argue with them. Because you work out
the meaning of a story yourself without having it thrust upon you, they can also
more easily lead to that rare event, a change of mind.
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[...]It is vital that the story, myth, legend, or whatever is chosen is selected
carefully.” – p43-45, Chapter 2. Communicating with humans
With this in mind, Rose argues that one of the most important parts of a successful campaign is to
have a villain, “enemy” or bad guy. If you want to be “the hero” of the story, then you need to find
your bad guy. As we discussed in Section 3, and as the Business Insider article discussed in Appendix
1 illustrated, the actual “enemies” identified by Greenpeace are often remarkably arbitrary, and the
“evidence” of their alleged villainy is often contrived, tenuous, contradictory, inconsistent and
completely taken out-of-context. But, for Rose, it is essential to bring a villain into the campaign
narrative at some stage (see also Section A3.1 above).
“CHOOSING AN ANTAGONIST
How a campaign opens is all-important. Who is it against? All campaigns have
an opponent: the antagonist, to you, as the protagonist in your story.
Like a tennis player, you may serve for the first point. Where you place the ball
will play a part in determining what happens next. Unlike tennis, the campaign
game may be joined by any number of other players, including the spectators. It’s
more like the original versions of football, played between villages, in which the
whole community could participate if it felt like it.
The campaigning dialogue is with society, your opponent, your supporters, and
sometimes, between them all. The starting conditions help determine the future
route of the ‘conversations’ just as surely as if you stood on a watershed and
dropped a toy boat into one headwater or another.
So try to think several steps ahead: use ‘what if’ scenarios. ‘If I communicate this,
then what will the reaction be?’ Then ‘what will I do next – and what will be the
response to that?’ And so on, as far ahead as you can envisage. Then try another
sequences and another.
To pick an opponent, examine the chain of responsibility – from who or what you
think is ultimately responsible, to who is immediately responsible. Decide where
in that chain to start. Consider:
• How the buck-passing will work
• Public motivation – how do people feel about blaming a potential target
(demonology)?
• Likely response – can you ignite a conversation?
• Are some ostensible opponents actually closet supporters, who’d welcome
pressure?
Companies, encouraged by their PR companies and some journalists, tend to
assume that the main factor in deciding a target is demonology – how big and
bad the reputation is. Effective campaign planners, in fact, spend more time
thinking through the dynamics – the buck-passing and interests at play.
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To make these choices is very hard if you haven’t worked out a critical path. Tip:
this is the part of campaign planning that politicians tend to be very good at, so
involve them if they are available.
Lastly, be sure to choose your antagonist – don’t let values choose them for you.
As you can see from the ‘Schwartz wheel’ ([a diagram developed by Dr. Rose to
quickly identify potential audiences for a campaign] see page 81), each Schwartz
values dimension has opposing values at either end. Vigorous general promotion
of one set of values is almost certain to arouse opposition from people who share
the opposite values orientation. The most likely one for campaigners to encounter
is power versus universalism, but others can also set up an unhelpful see-saw
effect in which a polarized debate swings back and forth. This is not what you
want to happen unless you simply want a perpetual debate, so think about how
to avoid it, for example by finding ways to satisfy, sideline, outweigh or work
around opponents with diametrically opposed values sets (Figure 5.14).”
– p141-142, Chapter 5. Campaign Plans.
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As well as picking the ‘enemy’, Rose insists that you must make sure that the ‘victim’ you have sided
with is ‘the most empathetic figure in the story’. Again, repeating his claim that campaigning is the
opposite of education, he warns that you should avoid letting the dialogue progress to a more
systematic, objective and knowledgeable analysis. He warns that if this happens, people will begin to
lose interest in your campaign. Instead, you should keep the dialogue emotional and focused on the
‘victims’ you are siding with. He offers advice on how to do this:
“STAYING ON THE SIDE OF THE VICTIMS
A constant media reprise is that the ‘real victims deserve our sympathy’ (their
case is implicitly right). Make sure that the most empathetic figure in the story is
you, or on your side. Don’t let the media fall out of love with your campaign
through the natural tendency for it to dry out and become an elite dialogue.
• Causes start their lives as ‘left-field’, driven from the heart and over
simple instances of injustice or abuse, expressed in everyday language.
• As time goes by, progress brings calls for systematic evaluation,
qualification, objectivity, dispassionate analysis. ‘Expert’ dialogue
develops: this is harder to understand, less public.
• Knowledge of problems and solutions progresses; the campaign pushes for
further change; perhaps losers start to fight back. For example, polluting
industries see costs rise and markets shrink as policies favour cleaner
technologies. They are self-interested, yes; but what they now kick against
is an abstraction, a bureaucratic policy, an esoteric issue and statistics,
maybe about risks yet to arise or problems that seem far away.
Now flesh-and-blood ‘victims’ are appealing for ‘fairness’. The woeful business
person finds a sympathetic hearing in an economics report on TV, positioned
against ‘bleeding-heart liberals’, ‘rules’ or ‘the interests of frogs’. The campaign
‘no longer deserves sympathy’ and the media positions the campaigners as the
ones to blame.
Avoid this roll-back in two ways: First, don’t let it happen.
• Keep the victims’ reality locked into the heart of the campaign, be they
coral reefs succumbing to climate change, victims of chemical poisoning,
cancer patients, or slum-dwellers thousands of miles away;
• Make them the channels or messengers, or get as close as you can;
• Keep experts on tap, not on top.
Second, lead renewed calls for progress with evidence of the victims in terms that
make them the most empathetic characters in the story – not, say, the latest
results of a computer model – unless a victim is also the messenger.”
– p205-206, Chapter 9. Keeping a campaign going. [Emphasis in original]
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A3.4. Importance of (over?)-simplifying the narrative
Albert Einstein is reported to have said that, “everything should be as simple as it can be but not
simpler”. That is, we should simplify things if we can, but we shouldn’t oversimplify. However, as
discussed in Section A3.2, Rose believes that the aim of campaigning is not to promote knowledge
and understanding on the issue. Instead, he believes campaigning should be trying to invoke
emotional responses (specifically concern, urgency and anger).
For this reason, Rose has no qualms about oversimplifying the issue in question. He is more
interested in constructing a campaign that will engage the public – regardless of whether the
campaign has any relevance to the issue or not. They find that moral outrage generates more
revenue for them than nuanced discussion of serious issues.
A key theme of Rose’s strategy (and one of Greenpeace’s) is to design and plan campaigns around a
particular image, photograph or series of photographs (or video footage).
“CONSTRUCTING VISUAL ECHOES
One trick of effective visual language is to make people respond to an image
without considering whether they have seen it before. Find something powerful
and then create a visual echo of it.
In spring 1995, Greenpeace ‘invaded’ the Sellafield nuclear plant, and blocked
various parts to try and stop the separation of plutonium. The action was timed
to coincide with talks about to be held in New York on the Nuclear Non-
Proliferation Treaty. Greenpeace was concerned to make the Sellafield ‘invasion’
look interesting, and like an invading swarm of people rather than just another
white-suit protest.
Sarah Wise, one of the organizers of the campaign, had just seen the Japanese
film Ran. This featured a battle with hundreds of warriors carrying orange
banners streaming across the screen. It enjoyed cult status with TV professionals
because of its cinematography.
If they could make the Greenpeace action look like that, she reasoned, TV news
editors might say ‘I have to have those pictures’, rather than waiting (it was on
Easter Bank Holiday Monday at 0600 hours) for the skeleton staff in the
newsroom to find time to haul some energy or nuclear journalist out of bed to
pronounce on whether the story was newsworthy, and trying to describe the
footage to them over the phone. So Greenpeace put hundreds of its local group
activists in orange boiler suits and gave them pole banners, echoing the troops in
Ran.
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Wise says: ‘It worked so well because the sky was indigo blue in the film, and the
scenery was a dark green – not unlike the hills around Sellafield. We considered
using smoke bombs to ensure the dark-sky effect, but decided they would be a
choking hazard. As it was, the morning was dark and rain-filled, just like in the
movie.’ The film ran extensively on TV.” – p154-155, Chapter 6. Organizing
campaign communications.
A common logical fallacy is known as “affirming the consequent”. The format of this fallacy is to
claim that X will happen because of Y, and then point to Y as proof of your theory, e.g.,
1. If Fred wanted to get me sacked then he’d go and have a word with the boss.
2. There goes Fred to have a word with the boss.
3. Therefore, Fred wants to get me sacked.
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- Example of “affirming the consequent” logical fallacy taken from logicalfallacies.info
This is flawed logic, but Rose has found that most people don’t notice the flaw when they hear an
argument made using it. For this reason, he recommends using it as a deliberate technique for
convincing people to support your campaign. He calls it, “the self-validating proposition”:
“There’s one type of proposition that I call ‘self-righting’ or ‘self-validating’. Like a
lifeboat with built-in buoyancy, it stays upright no matter which way you start it
off. You can look at it starting from either end, and it will always appear
validated. Here, two or more pieces of ‘evidence’ have a link that can be
discovered to be true. They are like the buoyancy tanks. Many are in the form: ‘X
is true because all As are B’, in which the A-B relationship is true, but the
connection to X may not be.
For example:
All environmental campaigners are just after publicity: (because) all
campaigns involve publicity – they’re always trying to get on the news, the
only time you ever see them is when they’re doing some sort of stunt (and so
on).
Test:
Do all campaigns involve publicity? ‘They appear to do so.’
Are they always trying to get on the news? ‘Seems like it to me.’
Is the only time you ever see them when they’re doing some sort of stunt?
‘Yes, every time they’re on TV.’
So it’s true, then? ‘Guess so.’
If you examine this proposition by starting either from who campaigners are, or
what’s on the news, it seems valid. It works because the audience either draws on
his or her very limited existing experience (mainly gleaned from the ‘news’
anyway) or they check it out by watching the news. The person who wants to use
this approach to mislead will be careful to pitch it so that the evidence, likely to
be to hand, will validate the proposition. The fact that the audience actually adds
it up from their own first-hand experience adds to its veracity: ‘Now you come to
mention it, that’s exactly what I found.’
[...] Saying ‘go test it yourself, next time you are...’ can be much more powerful
than trying to lead a person through a version of your own experience.
More subtle versions of this in spin and propaganda work by use of association
and loose ends, laid out like bait. Over a period of time it can be given the form of
a discovery, the search for truth, and judges any new information with those
things. By giving cues and prompts, the orchestrators can ensure the ‘right’
things get used as evidence and so the ‘right’ conclusions are drawn.
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[...] A self-validating proposition can then be used to further dismiss critics with
a vested interest. For example:
Interviewer: ‘But Mrs Campaigner, some people are saying that these new engines
are much more expensive...’
Mrs Campaigner: ‘They are saying that and if you check you will find that those
people represent the car industry who are making significant profits from the
current grossly polluting engines, whose emissions as we all know cause asthma.’
Or she might have added:
‘As anyone who’s seen the prices of new cars will know, there’s a lot of money being
made somewhere. Have you seen the prices?’
‘Gosh, yes, now you come to mention it.’
– p178-180, Chapter 7. Constructing campaign propositions
Rose strongly recommends removing any nuance from the discussion, and framing the issue as a
simple, binary, “either/or” situation:
“MAKE THE ISSUE AN ‘EITHER/OR’
A yes/no, ‘binary’, presence/absence, black/white, either/or type of proposition is
more compelling than a matter of degree, such as a how-much or a bit-less. It is
more useful and robust, invulnerable to differing perceptions of ‘how much is
enough’. Monitoring, evaluation and accountability are easier. It allows for
‘closure’: a supporter can see there can be a clear end point.
[...] Find the ‘point of irreducibility’ where the two adjacent bits of the issue are
differentiated by a single simple difference: one is what you want, and is right,
the other is not what you want, and is wrong. Here’s your objective.” – p181,
Chapter 7. Constructing campaign propositions
Rose also recommends making the problem seem more urgent and acute than it is:
“CONVERT THE DIFFUSE TO THE ACUTE
Political reflexes are stimulated by acute problems, not diffuse ones. The former
threaten careers, reputations and interests. The latter can be more safely
ignored, not because they are not serious problems, but because watchdogs such
as voters, the media and campaigners have a hard time showing that they are
there and needing attention now. In this way, ‘soft disasters’ creep up on us
undetected or ignored by political systems.” – p182-183, Chapter 7. Constructing
campaign propositions
Similarly, he recommends sticking only to dramatic “solutions” which could completely “eliminate”
the problem, rather than gradual or partial solutions that “merely mitigate it”:
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“A big outcome grabs the attention much more than a small one. The technology
that, at a stroke, can eliminate a whole factory’s worth of pollution, is dramatic.
[...] Propositions to eliminate a problem are stronger than those that merely
mitigate it.” – p185, Chapter 7. Constructing campaign propositions
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Appendix 4. Influence of Saul Alinsky’s “Rules for Radicals” (1971)
Saul Alinsky (1909-1972) was an influential American community organizer whose 1971 book, “Rules
for Radicals” has become an important guidebook for community organizers. His book is still in print
(Amazon.com link), and there is an unofficial version of the text available on the Internet here.
Alinsky wrote the book as a Machiavellian handbook summarising his techniques for most effectively
achieving social change,
“What follows is for those who want to change the world from what it is to what
they believe it should be. The Prince was written by Machiavelli for the Haves on
how to hold power. Rules for Radicals is written for the Have-Nots on how to
take it away.” – Saul Alinsky, Chapter 1 – The Purpose, Rules for Radicals
(1971).
As an aside, Hillary Clinton has controversially been accused of being heavily influenced by Alinsky’s
approach because she wrote her undergraduate thesis on the book, and was offered a job working
for him, e.g., see here. However, according to the Washington Post, she did not necessarily endorse
Alinsky’s approach.
At any rate, whether or not Clinton is a fan, Greenpeace strategists are fans. More importantly, they
appear to have incorporated many of Alinsky’s ideas into their approach. In particular, in Chris
Rose’s book, he speaks favourably of Alinsky’s book and recommends reading it,
“As Saul Alinsky wrote in the now old but still readable tract Rules for
Radicals...”, Dr. Chris Rose, How to Win Campaigns, p6 (2nd Ed.)
With that in mind, it may be helpful to consider Alinsky’s views on the problem of “noble cause”
corruption, and whether the ends justify the means. In his book, his second chapter was entitled, “Of
Means and Ends”. In it, he clearly disagreed with the view that the road to Hell is paved with good
intentions. He argued that,
“That perennial question, ‘does the end justify the means?’ is meaningless as it
stands; the real and only question regarding the ethics of means and ends is, and
always has been, ‘Does this particular end justify this particular means?’
Life and how you live it is the story of means and ends. The end is what you
want, and the means is how you get it. Whenever we think about social change,
the question of means and ends arises. The man of action views the issue of
means and ends in pragmatic and strategic terms. He has no other problem; he
thinks only of his actual resources and the possibilities of various choices of
action. He asks of ends only whether they are achievable and worth the cost; of
means, only whether they will work. To say that corrupt means corrupt the ends
is to believe in the immaculate conception of ends and principles. The real arena
is corrupt and bloody. Life is a corrupting process from the time a child learns to
play his mother off against his father in the politics of when to go to bed; he who
fears corruption fears life.” – Saul Alinsky, Chapter 2 – Of Means and Ends,
Rules for Radicals (1971). [Italics in original text]
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Alinsky argued that it is quite acceptable to intentionally misrepresent the opposition to make them
seem far worse than they actually are. He used the (admittedly interesting) example of the drafting
of the Declaration of Independence,
“Jefferson, Franklin, and others were honorable men, but they knew that the
Declaration of Independence was a call to war. They also knew that a list of
many of the constructive benefits of the British Empire to the colonists would
have so diluted the urgency of the call to arms for the Revolution as to have been
self-defeating. The result might well have been a document attesting to the fact
that justice weighted down the scale at least 60 per cent on our side, and only 40
per cent on their side; and that because of that 20 per cent difference we were
going to have a Revolution. To expect a man to leave his wife, his children, and
his home, to leave his crops standing in the field and pick up a gun and join the
Revolutionary Army for a 20 per cent difference in the balance of human justice
was to defy common sense.
The Declaration of Independence, as a declaration of war, had to be what it was,
a 100 per cent statement of the justice of the cause of the colonists and a 100 per
cent denunciation of the role of the British government as evil and unjust. Our
cause had to be all shining justice, allied with the angels; theirs had to be all evil,
tied to the Devil; in no war has the enemy or the cause ever been gray. Therefore,
from one point of view the omission was justified; from the other, it was
deliberate deceit.” – Saul Alinsky, Chapter 2 – Of Means and Ends, Rules for
Radicals (1971).
He argued that morals should be kept if you are already winning, but can be abandoned if it helps
you “win”,
“So far, so noble; but, if I had been convinced that the only way we could win was
to use it, then without any reservations I would have used it [‘it’ here refers to
information about the leader of the opposition being homosexual], then without
any reservations I would have used it. What was my alternative? To draw myself
up into righteous ‘moral’ indignation saying, ‘I would rather lose than corrupt my
principles,’ and then go home with my ethical hymen intact?” – Saul Alinsky,
Chapter 2 – Of Means and Ends, Rules for Radicals (1971).
However, while he argued that it can be acceptable to adopt immoral means to achieve your desired
ends, he stressed that it is essential to use “moral clothing” to maintain the public appearance that
your side is the moral one,
“Moral rationalization is indispensible at all times of action whether to justify the
selection or the use of ends or means. Machiavelli’s blindness to the necessity for
moral clothing to all acts and motives – he said ‘politics has no relation to morals’
– was his major weakness.
All great leaders, including Churchill, Gandhi, Lincoln, and Jefferson, always
invoked ‘moral principles’ to cover naked self-interest in the clothing of ‘freedom’,
‘equality of mankind’, ‘a law higher than man-made law,’ and so on. This even
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held under circumstances of national crises when it was universally assumed
that the end justified any means. All effective actions require the passport of
morality.” – Saul Alinsky, Chapter 2 – Of Means and Ends, Rules for Radicals
(1971). [Italics in original text]