How Greenpeace Co-Opted An Already Biased BBC

bbc headquarters

The BBC runs – at our expense – probably the largest and best-resourced newsroom in the world.

So how is it using its journalistic muscle? Its latest ruse is to go into partnership with … Greenpeace.

The target of this initiative – evidenced here – seems to be to interfere with the operations of the government agency UK Export Finance (UKEF), which helps facilitate financial support from banks and other sources for British companies that win contracts overseas.

UKEF is already heavily hamstrung by green ideology. For example, it is supporting unprofitable solar power but will not touch coal, the electricity generated from which has helped halve poverty in India within a decade. 

For Greenpeace, though, such restrictions are obviously not good enough, and now it is trying to stop any investment in any project that generates ‘carbon’.

Enter the BBC. Its program Newsnight has combined with Greenpeace Unearthed in a ‘special investigation’.

What is Greenpeace Unearthed? It is a clearly well-resourced operation with ten journalists who go undercover in recycling centers.

It is demanding massive spending on ‘the environment’, attacking fossil fuels in every way it can and trying to stop countries such as Mongolia developing mining.

The first story to emanate from the linkage appeared on the BBC website this week.

In hugely condemnatory tones, it explains how – shock horror! – UKEF is helping bankroll fossil fuel projects related to natural gas and oil which, it is claimed, could generate as much ‘carbon’ as a country such as Portugal.

The article confirms that the partnership exists, but does not provide any further detail. A little digging, however, reveals that this is a very cozy relationship.

Two of those who work for Greenpeace Unearthed are former BBC employees.

Its leader is Damian Kahya, who was a BBC business reporter and foreign correspondent – and trained in journalism at Cardiff University media department, which is supported by the BBC – and another staffer is Emma Howard, who worked on programs such as BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat and BBC1 Breakfast Time before seeing the green light.

No doubt the BBC will claim that there is nothing at all irregular in whatever arrangement it has struck here.

In the BBC’s estimation, climate alarmism is proven beyond doubt. But Greenpeace is an organization that sees lawbreaking in the pursuit of its goals as justified, if not irrelevant. 

And despite what the BBC believes, there is no certainty in climate science and no agreement that spending trillions on climate control will reduce global temperatures, or even if such steps are needed in the first place.

The BBC is deliberately adopting a partisan approach and amplifying that by helping in Greenpeace activism.

Extinction Rebellion (XR) is also considered an extremist organization in some police quarters and pushed the law to its limits in bringing the capital to a halt during protests last year. According to reports, Gail Bradbrook, the founder of XR, has also been enlisted as a BBC adviser.

What next for the BBC’s environmental ‘journalism’? An official Corporation ‘fact check’  manual on how to force the UK to abandon all use of fossil fuel?

Read more at Conservative Woman


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Comments (2)

  • Avatar

    Andy Rowlands

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    This doesn’t surprise me at all, the BBC have clearly sided with the alarmists and said so on their website, refusing to give air time to ‘deniers’, giving sympathetic coverage to XR protests, allowing Attenborough to make his fear-mongering programmes, all while claiming they are impartial. Their charter requires them to be impartial. They are anything but.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Matt

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    Climate change: Worst emissions scenario ‘misleading’
    By Matt McGrath

    I found this just published article by the BBC at least a pretense of honesty and integrity.

    Reply

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