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Bjørn Lomborg (born January 6, 1965) is a political scientist and former director of the Institute for Environmental Assessment in Copenhagen, Denmark. In 2001, he attained significant attention by penning The Skeptical Environmentalist, a controversial book whose main thesis is that many of the claims and dire predictions of environmentalists are exaggerated.
Lomborg is also director of the Copenhagen Consensus project.
His professional areas of interest include the simulation of strategies in collective action dilemmas, simulation of party behavior in proportional voting systems, use of surveys in public administration, and use of statistics in the environmental arena.
Bjørn Lomborg earned a Ph.D. at the Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen, 1994. He was an associate professor, lecturing in statistics, in the Department of Political Science at the University of Aarhus. In 1998 he published four lengthy articles about the state of our environment in the leading Danish newspaper Politiken, which "resulted in a firestorm debate spanning over 400 articles in major metropolitan newspapers."
In November 2001 he was selected "Global Leader for Tomorrow" by the World Economic Forum. In March 2002, the newly elected center-right prime minister appointed Lomborg to run Denmark's new Institute for Environmental Assessment .
Lomborg declared on the 22th of June 2004 his decision that he would resign from his post to go back to the University of Aarhus, citing that his work in the institute was done, and that he better could service the public debate from the academic sector.
Many people involved with environmental issues were so incensed by Lomborg's book that they made significant efforts to show that his book was wrong. During the first quarter of 2002, the plagiarism, and deliberate misrepresentation of others' results. In his replies, Lomborg dismisses practically all of the accusations.
The DCSD could not form a consensus as to whether the book The Skeptical Environmentalist is a scientific work and should be assessed in accordance with scientific standards. Some members instead regarded the book as a polemic designed to encourage debate.
After much qualification, the DSCD states:
One of the people who brought the charges against Lomborg is Jeff Harvey, a former editor of the scientific journal Nature, who is currently a senior scientist at the Nobel Prize-winning chemist Jens Christian Skou, former University rector Kjeld Møllgård, and professor Poul Harremoës from the Technical University of Denmark.
Among Lomborg's supporters is The Economist news magazine and Patrick Moore, a founder and former director of Greenpeace Canada. Favorable comments have also appeared in Wired and other periodicals.
Lomborg says that the DCSD "does not give a single example to demonstrate their claim of a biased choice of data and arguments", nor did they offer Lomborg any chance to respond .
On December 17, 2003, the findings of the DCSD were remitted by the Danish government (which had appointed Lomborg on the strength of his book) and returned to the committee for reconsideration. The ministry concluded that the DCSD had not established that it had the authority to review the case, and that during the review they did not establish that scientific dishonesty had occurred, with respect to the normal standards of social science. Note that this is attacking a strawman, since the DCSD did not accuse Lomborg of being guilty of scientific dishonesty in the first place.
In 2004, the DCSD declined to reconsider their decision.
The Economist defended Lomborg in this way:
An issue of Scientific American featured strong criticism of his book, which Lomborg rebutted on his website, quoting the Scientific American article at length. Lomborg removed his rebuttal from his website following Scientific American's threat of bringing a lawsuit over copyright infringement. The rebuttal has since been published in PDF format on Scientific American's website . The magazine also printed a repsonse to the rebuttal .
Lomborg is
He's known to wear jeans to formal business meetings.