Climate experts call for 'dangerous' Michael
Moore film to be taken down
Planet of the Humans, which takes aim at the green
movement, is ‘full of misinformation’ says one distributor
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Published
onTue 28 Apr 2020 13.54 BST
A new
Michael Moore-produced documentary that takes aim at the supposed hypocrisy of
the green movement is “dangerous, misleading and destructive” and should be
removed from public viewing, according to an assortment of climate scientists
and environmental campaigners.
The film,
Planet of the Humans, was released on the eve of Earth Day last week by its
producer, Michael Moore, the baseball cap-wearing documentarian known for
Fahrenheit 9/11 and Bowling for Columbine. Describing itself as a “full-frontal
assault on our sacred cows”, the film argues that electric cars and solar
energy are unreliable and rely upon fossil fuels to function. It also attacks
figures including Al Gore for bolstering corporations that push flawed
technologies over real solutions to the climate crisis.
Planet of
the Humans has provoked a furious reaction from scientists and campaigners,
however, who have called for it be taken down. One distributor, Films for
Action, temporarily took down the film after describing it as “full of
misinformation”, though they later reinstated it, saying they did not want
accusations of censorship to give the film “more power and mystique than it
deserves.” A free version on YouTube has been viewed more than 3m times.
A letter
written by Josh Fox, who made the documentary Gasland, and signed by various
scientists and activists, has urged the removal of “shockingly misleading and
absurd” film for making false claims about renewable energy. Planet of the
Humans “trades in debunked fossil fuel industry talking points” that question
the affordability and reliability of solar and wind energy, the letter states,
pointing out that these alternatives are now cheaper to run than fossil fuels
such as coal.
Michael
Mann, a climate scientist and signatory to Fox’s letter, said the film includes
“various distortions, half-truths and lies” and that the filmmakers “have done
a grave disservice to us and the planet by promoting climate change inactivist
tropes and talking points.” The film’s makers did not respond to questions over
whether it will be pulled down.
Planet of
the Humans has been shown at Moore’s Traverse City film festival, where the
producer said it was “perhaps the most urgent film we’ve shown in the 15-year
history of our film festival”. Jeff Gibbs, who wrote and directed the film, has
suggested that unrestrained economic and population growth should be the target
of environmentalists’ efforts rather than technological fixes.
Climate
activist Bill McKibben, one of the targets for the film for allegedly being
influenced by corporate money and for supporting the burning of biomass such as
wood chips for energy, said the characterisations are untrue. McKibben has
previously changed his views on biomass energy, which he now sees as being
detrimental to climate action, and claims he has “never taken a penny in pay”
from any environmental group.
“I am used
to ceaseless harassment and attack from the fossil fuel industry, and I’ve done
my best to ignore a lifetime of death threats from rightwing extremists,”
McKibben said. “It does hurt more to be attacked by others who think of
themselves as environmentalists.”
Renewable
energy has long been portrayed as expensive and unreliably intermittent by oil
and gas companies and their lobby groups, which have spent several decades
questioning the veracity of climate science and undermining efforts to
radically reduce planet-heating emissions.
In fact,
the technology used for wind and solar energy has improved markedly in recent
years, while the costs have plummeted. While electric cars often require fossil
fuel-generated energy to produce them and provide the electricity to fuel them,
research has shown they still emit less greenhouse gas and air pollutants over
their lifetime than a standard petrol or diesel car.
Generating
all power from renewables will take significant upgrades of grid infrastructure
and storage but several researchers have declared the goal feasible, most
likely with carbon-capture technology for remaining fossil fuel plants.
Scientists say the world must reach net zero emissions by 2050 to head off
disastrous global heating, which would likely spur worsening storms, heatwaves,
sea level rise and societal unrest.
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