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Research article2020Peer reviewedOpen access

"Cornwallism" and arguments against greenhouse gas emissions reductions

Bjornberg, Karin Edvardsson; Rocklinsberg, Helena; Sandin, Per

Abstract

Opposition against greenhouse gas emissions reductions is strong among some conservative Christian groups, especially in the United States. In this paper, we identify five scripture-based arguments against greenhouse gas mitigation put forward by a core group of Christian conservatives ('the Cornwallists'): the anti-paganism argument, the enrichment argument, the omnipotence argument, the lack of moral relevance argument and the cost-benefit argument. We evaluate to what extent the arguments express positions that can be characterised as climate science denialist and to what degree they are consistent with support for climate adaptation. Using Stefan Rahmstorf's (2004) taxonomy of climate science denial, we conclude that the Cornwallists could be labelled climate change deniers. However, their opposition is not only based on denial of climate science but often rests on premises that render the science irrelevant, a position we term 'relevance denialism'.

Keywords

Christianity; climate change; denial; Cornwall Alliance; evangelical

Published in

Environmental Values
2020, Volume: 29, number: 6, pages: 691-711