Below is an open letter from 13 NGOs urging media to revisit their bogus "Climategate" reports.
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Dear Editorial Boards and Journalists, Last winter, newsrooms across the world raced to add the newest layer to the then-controversy over stolen emails, the reliability of climate science, and the legitimacy of the findings of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The journalistic arms race on both sides of the Atlantic, enabled by the lax publishing standards of Europe and fueled by oil industry-funded climate deniers in the U.S., resulted in the mutual destruction of accurate reporting and an informed readership. These false reports had a measurable impact on public opinion. With the dust finally settling now six months later, it's painfully clear that news outlets across the globe hastily published hundreds of stories -- based on rumors, unsubstantiated claims, and the shoddy reporting of their competitors -- questioning the overwhelming scientific consensus that human activities are causing climate change. One by one, the pillars of evidence supporting the alleged "scandals" have shattered, causing the entire storyline to come crashing down.
Every newspaper, magazine, and television show that reported on these bogus scandals owes it to its audience to set the record straight with the same forcefulness and frequency that it reported the original, disproven charges. Failure to publicly correct the record undermines the very heart of journalism -- to report the truth. Respectfully,
350.org
Alliance for Climate Protection Center for American Progress Action Fund Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future (PennFuture) Earthjustice League of Conservation Voters Media Matters for America Natural Resources Defense Council Project on Climate Science Safe Climate Campaign Sierra Club United Nations Foundation World Wildlife Fund |

I myself have been so stunned by the lack of retractions following the report by Dutch PBL (mentioned in the last bullet point of the letter above) that I have begun collecting screenshots of news articles mentining it, highlighting where the actual main conclusion of the report is mentioned in it on top of "just" collecting them at Diigo. Of course, many articles sum up several reports, add quotes and otherwise popularize the story. But look, for example, how Danish Berlingske Tidende only briefly admit the main PBL conclusion (marked in green) deep into the text. The rest of the article actually reiterates the climategate allegations!
I suggest YOU, dear reader, forward the open letter to your local or preferred media to have them check if their climate reporter is a) doing OK, b) whipping up faux scandals or, perhaps, c) is just being a denialist camp messenger.


thanks for spreading the voice
A Newspaper Apologizes to United Nations’ Climate Chief
“Last December, Britain’s Sunday Telegraph newspaper published a 2,000-word article accusing Rajendra Pachauri, the chairman of the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, of potential financial conflicts of interest.
On Sunday, The Telegraph made an abrupt about-face, pulling the story from its Web site and apologizing to Dr. Pachauri. The occasion for the retraction was the release of an audit of Dr. Pachauri’s finances by the international accounting firm KPMG, which found that he had, in fact, made little income from his outside dealings since 2008.”