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</ref> Solomon's blog has been mentioned in '']'s'' website concerning carbon emissions reduction legislation.<ref>Barone, Michael. "Barack Obama's Carbon Emissions Plan Might Be Flawed." ''] Online'' 10 Nov. 2008.</ref> </ref> Solomon's blog has been mentioned in '']'s'' website concerning carbon emissions reduction legislation.<ref>Barone, Michael. "Barack Obama's Carbon Emissions Plan Might Be Flawed." ''] Online'' 10 Nov. 2008.</ref>

In a 2009 blog in ] Solomon noted that global temperatures had peaked at 1990's levels and wrote that it is "outlandish" to attribute "massive changes in climate to increases in carbon dioxide, a trace gas that represents so miniscule a fraction of our atmosphere that it must be measured in parts per million". He also noted that the mandate of the IPCC has led it to "refuse to consider the Sun's influence on Earth's climate as a topic worthy of discussion", while the scientists predicting the start of a cooling cycle more often rely on "disciplines that view the Sun, cosmic rays and Earth's orbit as the dominant factors in our climate".<ref>{{citation |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/lawrence-solomon/global-cooling_b_4413833.html|title=Why Humans Don't Have Much To Do With Climate Change|first=Lawrence|last=Solomon|publisher=The Huffington Post|date=2013-12-9|accessdate=2014-05-17}}</ref>


==Misplaced Pages== ==Misplaced Pages==

Revision as of 19:23, 17 May 2014

Lawrence Solomon
Born1948
Bucharest, Romania
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)Writer and Manager of Energy Probe Research Foundation
Organization(s)Founder and managing director of the Energy Probe Research Foundation
ChildrenEssie and Catharine
WebsiteSolomon's blog at Energy Probe

Lawrence Solomon is a Canadian writer on the environment and the founder and executive director of Energy Probe, a Canadian non-governmental environmental policy organization and fossil fuel lobbyist group. His writing has appeared in a number of newspapers, including The National Post where he has a column, and he is the author of several books on energy resources, urban sprawl, and global warming, among them The Conserver Solution (1978), Energy Shock (1980), Toronto Sprawls: A History (2007), and The Deniers (2008).

Solomon opposes nuclear power based on its economic cost, is a global warming skeptic, and has been critical of government approaches and policies used to address environmental concerns.

Career and environmental activities

Solomon writes that he was an adviser to President Jimmy Carter's task force on the environment in the late 1970s, which released The Global 2000 Report to the President in 1980. He has a regular column in The National Post, and has written for The Globe and Mail, National Review Online, CBS News, and The Wall Street Journal. He was the editor and publisher of Next City magazine, now defunct. He has also written for American Forests, an environmental conservation organization.

Serving as executive director of the Urban Renaissance Institute, a division of Energy Probe, Solomon has advocated environmental protection, conservation, and safeguards throughout the world, especially in non-affluent nations. He supports reforms in foreign aid, putting a stop to nuclear power expansion, and supports the privatization of transport projects and the expansion of toll roads. "I note that Lawrence Solomon continues to advocate road tolls, and the privatization of the TTC (like London) for Toronto's transportation system." Bruce Campion-Smith In his columns and his book Toronto Sprawls: A History, he blames government policy for exacerbating and encouraging sprawl. He is a critic of subsidies to rural Canada, and has criticized Ontario Hydro's actions and projects and their effects on Canada's environment. He writes that he was very active during the 1970s and 1980s with Energy Probe in opposing attempts to expand the use of nuclear power in Canada.

Global warming

In a series of articles and a companion book published in 2008, The Deniers, Solomon writes about scientists whose views and research promote a controversialist view of global warming in opposition to the consensus of thirty four National Academies of Science, the WMO and the IPCC. Reviews of the book have appeared in the Washington Times, Vancouver Sun, Alternatives Journal, and other publications.

In December, 2008, an executive from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for 21st Century Energy sponsored a debate about global warming between Lawrence Solomon and Dr. Jay Gulledge of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, who took the opposite view. Solomon's blog has been mentioned in U.S. News & World Report's website concerning carbon emissions reduction legislation.

In a 2009 blog in The Huffington Post Solomon noted that global temperatures had peaked at 1990's levels and wrote that it is "outlandish" to attribute "massive changes in climate to increases in carbon dioxide, a trace gas that represents so miniscule a fraction of our atmosphere that it must be measured in parts per million". He also noted that the mandate of the IPCC has led it to "refuse to consider the Sun's influence on Earth's climate as a topic worthy of discussion", while the scientists predicting the start of a cooling cycle more often rely on "disciplines that view the Sun, cosmic rays and Earth's orbit as the dominant factors in our climate".

Misplaced Pages

Solomon has written columns criticizing Misplaced Pages's articles on global warming and other topics, including his own Misplaced Pages biography page, saying that they were edited by "zealots" and that Misplaced Pages was "modern propaganda." He has also criticized the Misplaced Pages edits of William Connolley.

Clash of civilizations

On December 29, 2010, Solomon predicted a "clash of civilizations between Islam and the west," over the secession of southern Sudan. He predicted that northern Sudan would reject the secession, which would then pit "a club of non-Islamic nations" (including what he calls "Christian Kenya", "Christian Ethiopia" and Israel) against Islamic ones (including Iran).

Green Beanery

In 2004, Solomon founded Green Beanery, a non-profit online merchant specializing in organic coffee beans produced by small, independent farmers. The company is located in downtown Toronto and includes a cafe where customers can sample a wide variety of coffee. The profits from Green Beanery go to Probe International.

Published works

Solomon's books include:

References

  1. Lawrence Solomon, Energy Probe, accessed May 31, 2010.
  2. The Deniers, dedication
  3. Brown, Morgan. "Canadian nuclear list". Retrieved 2013-01-01.
  4. "Climate change: Munk Debates", Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, November 4, 2009.
  5. For his views on nuclear power, see Solomon, Lawrence. "The two blows that killed the industry, The National Post, August 1, 2001.
  6. ^ "Lawrence Solomon biography", The National Post, accessed August 2, 2010. For the Global 2000 report, see Council on Environmental Quality and Department of State. "The Global 2000 Report to the President", Pergamon, 1980; this link courtesy of the Council on Foreign Relations, accessed August 2, 2010.
  7. "The Next City magazine, published and edited by Solomon, was started in 1995." Thomas Walkom Hydro thorn Energy Probe rooted on the right; Pro-privatization empire not part of environmentalism's whole-grain world August 23, 1997 page E.1 Toronto Star
  8. Solomon, Lawrence. "Save the forests - sell the trees." American Forests Jan.-Feb. 1990: 48+.
  9. Spence, Bruce, "Correlation does not equal causation." America's Intelligence Wire 11 Aug. 2003.
  10. Toll roads safer, better maintained, expert says November 21, 1996 Toronto Star page A.20
  11. Walks, R. Alan. "Toronto Sprawls: A History." Ontario History 100.1 (2008): 110+; Berridge, Joe. "Suburbia forever: nothing, it seems, can stop cities from growing ever outwards." Literary Review of Canada 15.7 (2007): 24+
  12. You keep Yonge St.: Two writers from Alberta take on Lawrence Solomon's view that rural Canada is an unviable drag on cities. What about all those urban subsidies? May 15, 2004 America's Intelligence Wire (From Financial Post)
  13. Solomon, Lawrence. "Ontario Hydro, 1906-2002." Toronto Life. 36. 8 (May 2002): 146.
  14. Solomon, Lawrence, The Deniers, Richard Vigilante Books, 2007, pp. 2–3.
  15. "The Deniers: The World-Renowned Scientists Who Stood Up Against Global Warming Hysteria, Political Persecution, and Fraud". Book TV on C-Span2. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
  16. McBean, Gordon. "The danger of misinformation: the Deniers is so full of misinformation that it is impossible to list it all." Alternatives Journal 34.4 (2008): 37.
  17. Shawn Macomber (2008-05-06). "The climate change deniers". The Washington Times. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  18. Mark Milke (2008-05-09). "'The Deniers' details flaws in the theories on global warming". The Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  19. Ben-Peter Terpstra (January 11, 2009). "Book Review: The Deniers". Canada Free Press. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
  20. Hamburger, Tom (2008-12-02). "James L. Jones' energy views worry some environmentalists". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  21. Lawrence Solomon. "Alice in Climateland". Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  22. Barone, Michael. "Barack Obama's Carbon Emissions Plan Might Be Flawed." U.S. News & World Report Online 10 Nov. 2008.
  23. Solomon, Lawrence (2013-12-9), Why Humans Don't Have Much To Do With Climate Change, The Huffington Post, retrieved 2014-05-17 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  24. Lawrence Solomon (2008-04-12). "Misplaced Pages's Zealots" (PDF). Financial Post. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
  25. Lawrence Solomon (2008-04-19). "Hide your name on Wicked Pedia". Financial Post. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  26. Lawrence Solomon (2008-04-26). "The real climate Martians". Financial Post. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  27. Lawrence Solomon (2008-07-08). "Wikipropaganda". National Review Online. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  28. Lawrence Solomon (2009-12-23). "Lawrence Solomon: Climategate rages on at Misplaced Pages". National Post. Retrieved 2009-24-18. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  29. Lawrence Solomon: Global warming propagandist slapped down | FP Comment | Financial Post
  30. Lawrence Solomon (2008-05-03). "The Opinionator". Financial Post. Retrieved 2010-01-01.
  31. Lawrence Solomon (2010-02-13). "Lawrence Solomon: Who am I?". National Post. Retrieved 2010-02-13.
  32. Lawrence Solomon (2010-12-29). "Lawrence Solomon: To Islam's dismay, a new oil nation is born". Financial Post.
  33. The Bay Street for baristas
  34. ^ "Roast-your-own coffee business goes green" (Press release). Green Beanery. 2004-09-15. Retrieved 2008-07-10.

External links

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