Mark Lynasâ Inaccurate, Deceptive Promotions for Cornell Alliance for Science
Mark Lynas is a former journalist turned promotional advocate for genetically engineered foods and pesticides who makes inaccurate claims about those products from his perch at the Gates Foundation-funded Cornell Alliance for Science. Housed at Cornell University since 2014, the Cornell Alliance for Science is a public relations campaign that trains spokespeople and creates networks of influence, particularly in African countries, to promote acceptance of GMOs and agrichemicals.
Scientists, food experts say Lynas is wrong on science
Scientists and food policy experts have criticized Lynas for making inaccurate and unscientific statements in his efforts to promote agribusiness interests. As one example, academics panned a July 2020 article Lynas wrote for Cornell Alliance for Science claiming agroecology ârisks harming the poor.â Critics described Lynasâ article as a âdemagogic and non-scientific interpretation of a scientific paperâ and a âreally flawed analysisâ that âerroneously conflates conservation ag with agroecology and then makes wild conclusions.â The agronomist Marc Corbeels, whose paper Lynas purported to describe in the article, said Lynas made âsweeping generalizations.â Marcus Taylor, a political ecologist at Queenâs University, called for a retraction; âthe right thing to do would be to withdraw your very flawed piece that confuses basic elements of agricultural strategies,â Taylor tweeted to Lynas. He described the article as âpure ideologyâ and âan embarrassment for someone who wants to claim to be âscientificâ.â More critiques from scientists and policy experts about Lynasâ work (emphases ours):
âI can unequivocally state that there is no scientific consensus about GMO safety and that most of (Lynasâ) statements are false,â wrote David Schubert, PhD, Head, Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory & Professor at The Salk Institute, in a letter to the San Diego Union Tribune.
âHere are some of the incorrect or misleading points that Lynas makes about the science or development of GE,â wrote Doug Gurian-Sherman, PhD, former senior scientist, Union of Concerned Scientists. âInstead of debating or discussing the actual science, Lynas casts aspersions and resorts to relying on authority rather than data or research.â
Lynasâ claims about the certainty of GMO safety are âunscientific, illogical and absurd,â according to Belinda Martineau, PhD, a genetic engineer who helped develop the first GMO food (see letter to NYT and Biotech Salon).
In a review of Lynasâ book Seeds of Science, the anthropologist Glenn Davis Stone described the book as an âamateurish rehash of common industry talking points.âÂ
âThe laundry list of what Mark Lynas got wrong about both GMOs and science is extensive, and has been refuted point by point by some of the worldâs leading agroecologists and biologists,â wrote Eric Holt-GimĂ©nez, PhD, former director Food First, in the Huffington Post.
Mark Lynas has âmade a career out of ⊠demonization,â wrote Timothy A. Wise, former director of research at the Global Development and Environment Institute at Tufts University.
âLynasâ narrative is demonstrably false,â according to a 2018 press release from the African Centre for Biodiversity, a South-Africa based group.
âMark Lynasâ claims display deep scientific ignorance, or an active effort to manufacture doubt. You should ignore him,â tweeted Pete Myers, PhD, chief scientist at Environmental Health Sciences, publisher of EHN.org.
âManipulative, misleading and unethicalâ tactics
Africa-based groups say Lynas has repeatedly misrepresented facts to promote a political agenda. According to a December 2018 report by the African Center for Biodiversity, Lynas and the Cornell Alliance for Science used the images of African farmers without their knowledge and consent, exploiting the images in misleading ways to claim farmers need GMOs.
Lynas used this image of a Tanzanian farmer, Mrs. R, out of context and without her permission.
As one example, Lynas posted this image of a Tanzanian farmer, Mrs. R, without permission and out of context, suggesting she is a victim of âglobal injustice.â Mrs. R is in fact a successful farmer who champions agroecological practices and makes a good living, according to the ACBio report. She asked Lynas to remove her image, but it remains on his twitter feed. ACBio said in its report that Lynasâ tactics âcrossed an ethical red line and must cease.â The food sovereignty group also said in a press release that Lynas has a âhistory of mischief-making in Tanzaniaâ for the agricultural biotech industry lobby. âHis visits to the country are well organized by the lobby, using platforms such as the regular meetings of the Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology in Africa (OFAB), where the media are in attendance to report on his talks. His attacks have principally been directed at the countryâs biosafety regulations, particularly its precautionary approach and strict liability provisions.â The Alliance for Food Sovereignty (AFSA), a coalition representing 35 farmer and consumer groups across Africa, has also accused Lynas of promoting âfalse promises, misrepresentation, and alternative facts.â In a 2018 article, they described Lynas as a âfly-in punditâ whose âcontempt for African people, custom and tradition is unmistakable.â
Pesticide messaging based on industry talking points, not science
Another example of inaccurate reporting by Lynas is his 2017 article for the Cornell Alliance for Science attacking the World Health Organizationâs cancer agency for reporting glyphosate is a probable human carcinogen. Lynas claimed the expert panel report was a âwitch huntâ and an âobvious perversion of both science and natural justice,â orchestrated by people overcome with âhysteria and emotion.â He claimed glyphosate is the âmost benign chemical in world farming.â A fact check by U.S. Right to Know found that Lynas made the same misleading and erroneous arguments and relied on the same two flawed sources as a blog posted a month earlier by the American Council on Science and Health, a group Monsanto was paying to help defend glyphosate and other agrichemical products. In pushing his case that âactivist groups abused science and sidelined evidence-based policy in the glyphosate saga,â Lynas not only relied on industry arguments and sources, but also ignored substantial evidence, widely reported in the media, that Monsanto manipulated the science and regulatory reviews on glyphosate for decades using covert tactics including ghostwriting studies and articles, killing studies, pushing dubious science, attacking scientists and strong-arming regulatory agencies in order to protect its profits from glyphosate-based products.
Promoted by, tied to pesticide industry propaganda network
Agrichemical companies and their public relations operatives frequently promote Mark Lynas and his work. See for example Monsantoâs website, many promotional tweets by pesticide industry trade groups, lobby groups, pro-industry academics and writers, and various Monsanto employees, and the dozens of Lynasâ articles promoted by Genetic Literacy Project, a propaganda group that partners with Monsanto. Lynas and Cornell Alliance for Science also collaborate with other key players in the agrichemical industryâs lobbying and propaganda network.
Advises Monsanto partner group Sense About Science
A confidential Monsanto PR plan dated February 2015 suggested Sense About Science as a group that could help lead the industryâs response in the media to discredit the WHO cancer report about glyphosate. Lynas serves on the advisory council of Sense About Science. The Intercept has reported in 2016 that âSense About Science does not always disclose when its sources on controversial matters are scientists with ties to the industries under examination,â and âis known to take positions that buck scientific consensus or dismiss emerging evidence of harm.â Sense About Science partners with the Cornell Alliance for Science to offer âstatistical consultation for journalistsâ via the groupâs director Trevor Butterworth, who has been described by journalists as a âchemical industry public relations writer.â Related: Monsanto relied on these âpartnersâ to attack top cancer scientists
Aligned with climate science skeptic to launch pro-fracking, pro-nuke, GMO âmovementâ
Lynas calls himself a co-founder of the âmovementâ of âecomodernism,â a corporate-aligned strain of âenvironmentalismâ that the British writer George Monbiot describes as âtake no political action to protect the natural world.â The eco-modernists promote fracking, nuclear power and agrichemical products as ecological solutions. According to eco-modernist leaders Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger of the Breakthrough Institute, energy technologies favored by the oil billionaire Koch brothers âare doing far more to reduce greenhouse gas emissions than the ones favored by the climate-apocalyptic Left.â At a failed launch event for ecomodernism in September 2015, Lynas aligned himself with Owen Paterson, a prominent climate science denialist in the UK who slashed funding for efforts to prepare the country for global warming when he was the environment secretary. The same month, Paterson spoke at Cornell Alliance for Science, where he promoted GMOs in a hyperbolic speech filled with unsupportable claims, and accused environmentalists of allowing children to die in Africa. âBillion dollar green campaigns kill poor children,â touted a headline reporting on Patersonâs Cornell speech from the  American Council on Science and Health, a front group Monsanto was paying to defend its products.
Mark Lynas background
Lynas authored several books on climate change (one of which was recognized by the Royal Society) before he attracted worldwide attention with his âconversionâ from an anti-GMO activist to a promoter of the technology with a widely-promoted 2013 speech at Oxford that critics have described as misleading. Later that year Lynas became a fellow at Cornell University Office of International Programs at the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and began working for the Cornell Alliance for Science, a communications campaign developed in 2014 to promote GMOs with funding from the Gates Foundation. See: Why is Cornell University hosting a GMO propaganda campaign? Lynas identified himself as the âpolitical directorâ for Cornell Alliance for Science in a 2015 New York Times op-ed. The Cornell Alliance for Science does not explain what its political agenda is, but the groupâs messaging and goals closely track the agrichemical industryâs commercial agenda: to increase acceptance of genetically engineered crops and pesticides around the world, particularly in Africa.
Mysterious Lynas PR push, and leaked EuropaBio memo
The massive media coverage of Lynasâ pro-GMO conversion in 2013 raised suspicions that an industry PR campaign was helping to elevate him behind the scenes. A leaked 2011 memo from an industry PR firm â describing plans to recruit high profile âambassadorsâ to lobby for GMO acceptance â heightened suspicions of industry backing because the document specifically named Lynas. He has said the group never approached him. According to a Guardian report, EuropaBio, a trade group whose members include Monsanto and Bayer, planned to recruit PR ambassadors to help decision makers ârethink Europeâs position on GM crops.â The ambassadors would not be paid directly but would receive travel expenses and âdedicated communications supportâ from industry funding. The PR firmâs operative rep claimed to âhave interest fromâ Lynas, among others, in the ambassador role. Lynas denied having any contact with them. âI have not been asked to be an ambassador, nor would I accept such a request if asked,â he told the Guardian.
Gates Foundation, GMOs & Monsanto
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the principal funder for the Cornell Alliance for Science with $12 million in grants, has been criticized for its agricultural development funding strategies that favor corporate agribusiness agendas. A 2014 analysis from the research group GRAIN found that the Gates Foundation spent most of its agricultural development funds âto feed the poor in Africaâ â nearly $3 billion spent over a decade â to fund scientists and researchers in wealthy nations. The money also helps buy political influence across Africa, GRAIN reported. A 2016 report by the advocacy group Global Justice Now concluded that the Gates Foundationâs agricultural development strategies are âexacerbating global inequality and entrenching corporate power globally.â The Gates Foundation massively expanded its funding for agricultural projects about a decade ago when Rob Horsch, Monsantoâs former head of international development joined the foundationâs agricultural development leadership team. Lynasâ new book âSeeds of Scienceâ spends a chapter (âThe True History of Monsantoâ) trying to explain some of the corporationâs past sins and lauding Rob Horsch at length. It spends another chapter (âAfrica: Let Them Eat Organic Baby Cornâ) arguing that Africans need agrichemical industry products to feed themselves.
Criticisms of the Gates Foundationâs colonialist approach to Africa
Seeds of Neo-Colonialism: Why the GMO Promoters Get it So Wrong About Africa, statement by the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa, 5/7/2018
Are Gates and Rockefeller using their influence to set agenda in poor states?âStudy identifies Bill and Melinda Gates and Rockefeller foundations among rich donors that are close to government and may be skewing priorities,â by John Vidal, The Guardian, 1/15/2016
Philanthropic Power and Development. Who shapes the agenda? by Jens Martens and Karolin Seitz, 2015 report (page 48).
Philanthrocapitalism: The Gates Foundationâs African programmes are not charity, by Philip L Bereano, Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington, Third World Resurgence, 2017
How Bill Gates is Helping KFC Take Over Africa, by Alex Park, Mother Jones, 1/10/2014
Gates Foundationâs Seed Agenda in Africa âAnother Form of Colonialism,â Warns Protesters, by Lauren McCauley, Common Dreams, 3/23/2015
Gates Foundation is spearheading neoliberal plunder of African agriculture, by Colin Todhunter, The Ecologist, 1/21/2016
How does the Gates Foundation spend its money to feed the world?GRAIN report, 2014
Bill Gates is on a mission to sell GMOs to Africa, but heâs not telling the whole truth, by Stacy Malkan, Alternet, 3/24/2016
The post Mark Lynasâ Inaccurate, Deceptive Promotions for Cornell Alliance for Science appeared first on U.S. Right to Know.
https://www.forlawfirmsonly.com/mark-lynas-inaccurate-deceptive-promotions-for-cornell-alliance-for-science/














