Mother Jones
•80% Informative
Oil and gas companies were active on Twitter during international negotiations over the Paris Agreement to limit global warming, promoting the incorrect notion that Americans did not support taking action on climate change.
Other branches of the fossil fuel industry have also taken to social media to discourage actions to reduce the use of their products.
Four types of denial rhetoric argue climate change is either not happening, not that bad, or not caused by humans, or that it’s being adequately taken care of.
The tweets that promoted delay either redirected responsibility for climate change, advocated for nontransformative solutions, emphasized the downsides of climate regulations, or “surrendered” to the idea that solving climate change isn’t feasible.
PLOS Climate study is "comprehensive in its approach," says Kinol .
Kinol is confident companies are still using the same strategies to minimize the need for climate action.
Additional analysis is needed to confirm whether the organizations in question really intended to obstruct climate action, she says.
VR Score
80
Informative language
78
Neutral language
35
Article tone
informal
Language
English
Language complexity
70
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
medium-lived
External references
33
Source diversity
29
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