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Al Gore’s Incredible Shrinking Climate Change Footprint
Buzz Feed Politics ^ | September 3, 2013 | Evan McMorris-Santoro BuzzFeed Staff Ruby Cramer BuzzFeed Staff

Posted on 09/04/2013 5:53:17 PM PDT by lbryce

Last January, Al Gore took a boatload of scientists, donors, and celebrities to Antarctica to talk about climate change.

Richard Branson, James Cameron, Ted Turner, Tom Brokaw, and Tommy Lee Jones joined more than 100 other paying guests — Gore’s handpicked best and brightest — on the National Geographic Explorer, an ice-class 367-foot cruise ship, to see “up close and personal” the effects of a warming planet, courtesy of the former vice president’s environmental nonprofit, the Climate Reality Project. Singer Jason Mraz, another passenger aboard Gore’s Antarctic voyage, would later describe the trip on his blog as “a kind of floating symposium, much like the TED Talks series.”

Back in the more populated areas of the world, climate change activists snickered. The trip, and the Climate Reality Project, drew headlines but did little, they said privately, to affect the movement Gore hoped to revolutionize when he founded the group in 2006.

In the years since the Oscar-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth and the Nobel Peace Prize that followed made Gore the No. 1 climate change advocate in the world, the activist group he created with his fame has been steadily shrinking, as has its once-lofty mandate: to create a new nonpartisan global movement around climate change.

The numbers, according to a review of the nonprofit’s tax filings, show the change has been severe. In 2009, at its peak, Gore’s group had more than 300 employees, with 40 field offices across 28 states, and a serious war chest: It poured $28 million into advertising and promotion, and paid about $200,000 in lobbying fees at the height of the cap-and-trade energy bill fight on Capitol Hill.

Today, the group has just over 30 people on staff and has abandoned its on-the-ground presence — all of its field offices have since shut down — in favor of a far cheaper digital advocacy plan run out of Washington. Advertising expenses have decreased from the millions to the thousands, and the organization no longer lobbies lawmakers. Donations and grants have declined, too — from $87.4 million in 2008 to $17.6 million in 2011, and many of its high-profile donors have drifted away, one telling BuzzFeed she now sees the group’s initial vision as “very naïve.”

Slick and omnipresent television ads from the group’s early years, produced by the same agency that made the Geico Auto Insurance gecko famous, have been replaced by smaller web-based programs. One ongoing effort, “Reality Drop,” helps activists post boilerplate comments to blog entries written by climate change skeptics.

Some climate change activists look at the Climate Reality Project today and question whether it can do much in its newest, stripped-down iteration. In a testament to Gore’s celebrity, however, most of these comments come in private.

“I can’t really think of much to say about Gore’s efforts that I’d want to put on the record,” a prominent climate change activist told BuzzFeed in a typical email.

Gore poses for a photo with singer Jason Mraz (left) on the Climate Reality Project ice cruise to the Southern Hemisphere last January. Jason Mraz / Via jasonmraz.com

Supporters of Gore’s team, including the current leadership of his group, say the changing focus of the organization — first called the Alliance for Climate Protection — reflects the shift in the climate debate that has transformed nearly every player in the movement since Gore won his Oscar in 2007.

In those six years, a Democratic president was elected; a Democratic-led Congress tried and failed to pass legislation limiting carbon emissions; and a conservative revolution inside the GOP has all but banished talk of a bipartisan climate change bill from mainstream Republican politics. In 2008, both candidates vying for the White House had to sell their solutions to climate change on the national stage; in 2012, the subject didn’t come up in a single debate question. The issue got something of a reboot this year when, in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, President Obama gave it top billing in his inaugural address, delighting activists and putting the issue back on the table in an era when skeptics are as powerful as ever.

Yet there’s no denying the Gore organization is significantly smaller in size and scope than when it first launched. Back then, the Nobel laureate aimed for a “blitz as sweeping and expensive as a big corporation’s rollout of a new product,” according to a 2008 60 Minutes segment on Gore’s early efforts. Press coverage at the time noted blanket coverage by the group’s signature ads featuring unlikely political allies: Al Sharpton and Pat Robertson in one spot, Nancy Pelosi and Newt Gingrich in another. The ads appeared on American Idol and across prime-time television.

Now, discussing their efforts online, Gore staffers say the effort isn’t smaller — the group has just found its “niche,” said Dan Stiles, the chief operating officer of the Climate Reality Project, in a wide-ranging interview with BuzzFeed on the organization’s history. “I don’t think what we’re doing right now is any less expansive than what we were doing before,” Stiles said. “We’re not narrowing the blitz, but we’re doing it in a digital space.”

Rev. Al Sharpton and Pat Robertson, an unlikely bipartisan pairing, film a climate commercial on Virginia Beach for Gore’s group in 2008 as part of a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign. Alliance for Climate Protection / Via thedailygreen.com

But a person close to Gore, who was present at the creation of the Alliance for Climate Protection and was a former senior official with the group, described an original plan to create something like the Apple Computer of climate change. There was the expensive signature logo, described in The New York Times as an update of “1960s Swiss/Modernist poster design.” There was the CEO, Maggie Fox, a 30-year veteran of environmental and progressive organizing. And then there was the goal: to revitalize climate change activism, building a national movement with fans focused on unique solutions to the problem rather than fear-mongering about a future in which climate change goes unchecked.

“When we first started it, it was about lobbying big national groups and rallying the country,” the former official said. “The Alliance was supposed to be the big force in climate change, the group that united America behind the problem.”

In 2009, the political landscape changed. With climate change-friendly leadership in Washington, Gore’s group shifted gears to focus almost entirely on lobbying Congress to pass climate change legislation. That year, the organization invested in 40 field offices around the country, poured hundreds of thousands into lobbying government officials directly, and beefed up its staff and volunteer army to partner up with older and larger grassroots organizing groups like the Sierra Club. “After the stimulus bill, the decision was made to move [the Alliance] to D.C. and go full-court press on a climate bill,” the senior person familiar with the early years of the group said.

Stiles described the significant and expensive change of course as a period referred to internally as Climate Reality Project’s “Chapter 2.” (“Chapter 1,” he says, spanned years 2007 and 2008, when the group focused its national media campaign.) “To build broad public support for the passage of climate change legislation,” Stiles said, the organization “focused on building out a full-scale boots-on-the-ground campaign across the United States, which involved expanding our staff greatly.”

That move turned out to be a mistake. Instead of turning Gore’s group into a major national institution, it left it much diminished.

“Turning the organization into a lobbying group didn’t really work,” the former Alliance official said.

Conservatives quickly villainized the cap-and-trade bill that became the focus of advocates’ efforts in 2009, and the legislation died in the Senate, sending the climate change community and the Gore group into a tailspin from the defeat.

“We all know what happened there,” said Stiles, referring to the failed legislation. “We came up short in the legislative battle, and we took some time as an organization, with our chairman Vice President Gore, to take a step back and look at what was missing, and why we had come up second as a movement.”

That soul-searching process, said Stiles, led to the group’s current iteration: “Chapter 3.” From the embers of the lobbying effort came a smaller, less ambitious Alliance. The group that had planned to bring revolution to climate change advocacy instead sought out a smaller part of the existing movement. “We saw as our niche to bring together leaders in the advertising and social media and marketing worlds from some of the world’s most innovative companies,” Stiles said.

The former top official said it was an end to the broad ambitions. “Everyone hunkered down and stopped going for the moon shots,” the former official said. Gore himself took a step back, as his involvement was seen as politicizing in a way that it hadn’t at the outset, when his documentary was an international hit.

The smaller operation has drawn less interest from the national media — and even from some of the group’s own early backers. Susie Tompkins Buell, a California-based Democratic donor and one of Hillary Clinton’s closest friends, seeded $5 million in 2007 to the organization, but now says she hasn’t “followed it very much” or contributed since.

Buell cited her admiration for Gore — for “sticking with it,” she said in an interview by phone — but acknowledged her frustration at the lack of progress from the group, and the climate movement on the whole. (Last year, she notably declined to contribute to Obama’s reelection campaign because, she said, he had not been “vocal enough” on environmental issues.)

“I don’t regret doing it,” Buell said of her initial donation. “I think, honestly, we were all very naïve. We thought this would catch on. I really felt with the right media, with everything in place, we could really bring this problem to the forefront and really solve it.”

The Gore group’s current era, Stiles said, is focused on a “lean, mean machine” — but practically, that means an organization that is spending less, raising less, and employing fewer people.

Gore gives the climate change slideshow presentation that served as the centerpiece of his Academy Award-winning documentary. Eric Lee / Paramount Classics

Current efforts include “leader trainings” for the “Climate Reality Leadership Corps,” a volunteer group well acquainted with the up-to-date science on climate change, tutored on public speaking best practices, and versed in the rhetoric that made An Inconvenient Truth so accessible. Earlier this year, Gore held two climate leader trainings, one in Istanbul and the other in Chicago. Between the two events, the group trained 1,500 new people, 100 of whom were members of Organizing for Action, Obama’s outside grassroots organizing group, and the latest player in the climate movement. An attendee at the Chicago training said she learned “how to communicate climate change in a compelling and informative way” at the session.

Outside the trainings, the Gore group focuses on the digital world, trying to tell the story of climate change and shame skeptics online. The “Reality Drop” program, still in beta phase, allows users to post prewritten comments on articles the group says distort the facts about climate change. The effort has caught the attention of the Heartland Institute, the biggest skeptic group in the country — but it hasn’t impressed officials there.

“They credit themselves with 55 ‘drops’ into one of our recent environment blog posts, of which I approved one for posterity,” said Jim Lakely, communications director at Heartland and the main author of posts on the group’s blog, “making their claims of ‘victory’ as exaggerated as their claims of man-caused climate catastrophe.”

More than one climate change activist said privately it might be better for Gore to divert his fundraising prowess and brand awareness to other, longer-lasting groups at this point and abandon the idea of running his own operation. Gore and his prowess are still praised, but there seems to be confusion about what exactly the group does.

“[They] did an amazing production end of last year, a 24-hour live broadcast on climate that circled the globe,” said Kert Davies, research director at Greenpeace, referring to a live-stream video project the group aired last November that picked up 14 million unique viewers worldwide. Davies also cited Gore’s continued influence as a singular voice in the climate change community; the former vice president recently gave an interview on the subject to the Washington Post. “They have creative juices and cash and also do a lot of work behind the scenes. And they have Al Gore.”

Though the group has long since abandoned lobbying, current climate change activists still associate the group with those efforts.

“I’m on their email list and that’s about all I know,” said Daniel Kessler, spokesperson for 350.org, a grassroots climate change startup that has worked with billionaire Democratic donor Tom Steyer. “Their emphasis seems to be ongoing after congressional deniers.”

Stiles described a third iteration of Gore’s climate change group that no longer casts Gore as Steve Jobs. Rather than revolutionize the movement, Gore’s group is settling into a role of support player in climate change fight.

“Everything from what 350.org is doing and their impact on the movement to what we’re doing and our impact on the movement — we’re all contributing to the momentum that’s out there that we can feel,” said Stiles, when asked what specifically Gore’s group had brought to the climate change movement. “It takes all of us, so that’s really how we’re moving forward on this issue. That’s together, and not really pointing to any particular impact that one organization is having over the other.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: algore; aljazeera; aljazeeragore; climatechange; devolved; globalwarming; gore
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Yet there’s no denying the Gore organization is significantly smaller in size and scope than when it first launched. Back then, the Nobel laureate aimed for a “blitz as sweeping and expensive as a big corporation’s rollout of a new product,” according to a 2008 60 Minutes segment on Gore’s early efforts. Press coverage at the time noted blanket coverage by the group’s signature ads featuring unlikely political allies: Al Sharpton and Pat Robertson in one spot, Nancy Pelosi and Newt Gingrich in another. The ads appeared on American Idol and across prime-time television.

Now, discussing their efforts online, Gore staffers say the effort isn’t smaller — the group has just found its “niche,” said Dan Stiles, the chief operating officer of the Climate Reality Project, in a wide-ranging interview with BuzzFeed on the organization’s history. “I don’t think what we’re doing right now is any less expansive than what we were doing before,” Stiles said. “We’re not narrowing the blitz, but we’re doing it in a digital space.”

If you're not going forward, advancing, you're going to end up devolving.

Now, discussing their efforts online, Gore staffers say the effort isn’t smaller — the group has just found its “niche,” said Dan Stiles.

What do you mean by saying the effort isn't smaller-the group has just found its "niche"

To say Global Warming is a niche, to say Global Warming has found its niche, is quite preposterous. A global movement, a global belief finding its niche is quite laughable.

Now, discussing their efforts online, Gore staffers say the effort isn’t smaller — the group has just found its “niche,”

Yeah, that's what they always say when things aren't working out quite right. They found their niche, at the bottom of some landfill.

1 posted on 09/04/2013 5:53:17 PM PDT by lbryce
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To: lbryce

Maybe Mrs. Gore ate too much chicken, when pregnant with Manbearpig.


2 posted on 09/04/2013 5:57:09 PM PDT by rfp1234 (Arguing with a marxist is like playing Chess with a Pigeon.)
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To: lbryce
I had an idea and I wrote about it
The idea caught on and I lobbied for it
I rode the wave for some years getting fantastically wealthy
Then people began to drop off
we went on line
we've found our niche


There ... wasn't that a lot easier than going through 1400 paragraphs ?

3 posted on 09/04/2013 6:02:54 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true)
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To: lbryce
Last January, Al Gore took a boatload of scientists, donors, and celebrities to Antarctica to talk about climate change.

Was the Poodle trying to be funny? January? Really? You take a trip during the Antarctic Summer to prove...WHAT?

4 posted on 09/04/2013 6:09:44 PM PDT by stormhill (Guns Save Lives!)
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To: knarf

Got fat on lies
‘bout climate highs
then cashed in, wise
to the inevitable demise.


5 posted on 09/04/2013 6:13:43 PM PDT by golux
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To: rfp1234
joined more than 100 other paying guests — Gore’s handpicked best and brightest — on the National Geographic Explorer

Damn, where is Al Qaeda when you need them?

6 posted on 09/04/2013 6:15:00 PM PDT by PGR88
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To: lbryce

I just picked up a copy of NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC August 2006 issue with the gloom and doom title “No End In Sight KILLER HURRICANES. (Big picture of a hurricane seen from space.)

Inside there is a “we are all gonna die” type article with this headline.. SUPER STORMS No end in sight. “We’re 11 years into the cycle. I can’t tell you if it will last another ten years, or thirty”.

Now, eight years after Katrina and Rita, just how many of these superstorms have hit the US!

Sandy was barely a low class hurricane but came ashore at high tide, with two Nor’easterners blowing down on her, and came ashore at the most populated spot in the US.


7 posted on 09/04/2013 6:15:25 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (Sometimes you need 7+ more ammo. LOTS MORE.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

When has the left ever let facts get in the way of their dogma? Let’s call it what it really is - the Global Warming movement... I know they changed it to climate change after realizing it was not getting warmer, but these people were all certain the Earth had a fever.

Go back and read the ludicrous statements made by these clowns. The preposterous predictions that never came true. Arguing with these fools is the modern version of ancient men who could not convince the flat-earth crowd that the world was round. They are one world government proponents who don’t know the first thing about science - they want control. The scariest part is that there are so many human beings incapable of applying the scientific process for themselves. If they did, they would realize that the Sun drives our climate and everything else is irrelevant. If they did, they would study the motives of Gore and his elitists minions who know nothing about science.

I will give credit where credit is due - no illusionists in history has made more money out of his craft than Gore.


8 posted on 09/04/2013 6:46:25 PM PDT by volunbeer (We must embrace austerity or austerity will embrace us)
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To: stormhill

The only thing more ridiculus that this would have been if the boat was called the “Minnow” and it was a 3 hour tour.


9 posted on 09/04/2013 6:46:50 PM PDT by anoldafvet
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To: lbryce
For some insight into the seriousness of the energy debate a person could simply observe the actions of the US congress.

In a frenzy over the hype of Algore's movie they actually tried to force the purchase of those crappy squiggly light bulbs that are already being done away with by most users and suppliers.

Subsequently, in a move more fairly designed the congress passed a law granting valuable tax credits for verifiable energy reduction.

The 179D energy credits were actually a good incentive for insulating, reducing energy use and conserving fuel. But, it also let businesses keep some of their money.

So .... you guessed it - the program is being dropped at the end of the year.

When government actually does something good, they figure out a way to kill it.

10 posted on 09/04/2013 6:48:09 PM PDT by Baynative (Lord, keep your arm around my shoulder and your hand over my mouth.)
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To: lbryce

He doesn’t need all those people, lobbyists and campaigns.

Nearly everyone, and I do mean almost everyone, has bought into the lie.

Think about it. Do you have ‘recycle bins’? Do you still use roll-on or rub-on deodorant, instead of the more convenient, let alone more hygienic spray? Do you still fill up with ethanol blend? Buy curly light bulbs?

I’ll bet within an hour we could come up with a 5,000 item long list of “Al Gore’ forced life choices we no longer have. And that would only be the start. Think coal.

The useful idiots are carrying his water. He’s easily won round 1.


11 posted on 09/04/2013 7:05:06 PM PDT by Balding_Eagle (SWAT stands for Storing Weapons for patriots to Attack Tyranny.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

National Geographic has become a joke. Nothing but a propaganda rag. Check out their latest pile of lies:

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/2013/09/rising-seas/folger-text


12 posted on 09/04/2013 7:15:30 PM PDT by Third Person (Welcome to Gaymerica.)
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To: Third Person; Ruy Dias de Bivar

Bad link. Sorry... Try this:

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/09/rising-seas/folger-text


13 posted on 09/04/2013 7:19:10 PM PDT by Third Person (Welcome to Gaymerica.)
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To: knarf

Bull’s Eye. Very eloquently expressed.


14 posted on 09/04/2013 7:25:41 PM PDT by lbryce (The 22nd Amendment Lives:1142 Days Until America's Greatest Nemesis Gets the Heave "Ho")
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To: golux

There was a failed pol named Al Gore
Who turned science reports to folk lore
He stole cash like a thief
Selling lies as belief
But then fizzled out as a bore


15 posted on 09/04/2013 7:39:56 PM PDT by MV=PY (The Magic Question: Who's paying for it)
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To: lbryce

What a pile of rubbish.

No mention of Climate-gate, the UK emails from the East Anglia University Marxists who admitted to lying and shaping data to fit the theory, and all the scandal that in my opinion, drove a stake thru Gore’s climate warming heart. And then the last two horribly cold winters in Britain, with a famous satellite photo showing the whole island frosty white, turned all Gore’s posturing on its ear. Much of the push for carbon credits and other Ponzi schemes dried up then, too.

The whole thing has been abandoned by the “This is so silly, what were we thinking, now moved on to something that’s trendy this year” crowd.


16 posted on 09/04/2013 7:43:02 PM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: lbryce

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2006/01/27/algore_we_have_ten_years_left_before_earth_cooks

We’re getting close to the end. More than 7 years ago Rush Limbaugh put the countdown clock until the end of time when everything ends in firery doom.

As of the time I’m posting we have only 2 yrs, 144 days and 2 hrs 16 min left. It may already too late. Only The Messiah can save us. (By executive orders bypassing Congress).


17 posted on 09/04/2013 7:44:48 PM PDT by StopGlobalWhining (What is a proportional response to a poison gas attack?)
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To: golux

you win


18 posted on 09/04/2013 7:46:38 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true)
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To: lbryce
One ongoing effort, “Reality Drop,” helps activists post boilerplate comments to blog entries written by climate change skeptics.

And there you have it - agitation as an "effort"...

19 posted on 09/04/2013 7:50:03 PM PDT by jonno (Having an opinion is not the same as having the answer...)
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To: golux

Got fat on lies
‘bout climate highs
then cashed in, wise
to the inevitable demise.

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

All I know is lies
But I made lots of money
It cost me my soul


20 posted on 09/04/2013 7:54:47 PM PDT by Eccl 10:2 (Prov 3:5 --- "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding")
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