Sky News Australia’s Outsiders breached industry code for accuracy on climate science, media watchdog finds
Acma investigation highlights four segments on Sky News Australia that tried to play down the threat to Great Barrier Reef Four segments on a Sky News Australia show that tried to undermine climate science and play down the threat of global heating on the Great Barrier Reef breached industry codes, an investigation by Australias media watchdog has found. Segments fronted by presenter Rowan Dean who has described climate change as a fraudulent and dangerous cult breached codes for fairness and for failing to distinguish opinion from fact. The Australian Communications and Media Authority investigated complaints made in late 2021 by the former prime minister Kevin Rudd, who the previous year had launched a petition calling for a royal commission to look at the dominance and role of Rupert Murdochs media outlets. Rudd launched a campaign group Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission in October 2021 as he filed his first complaints about the Sky News content to Acma. The current co-chair, the former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull, said Acmas finding was significant and that Sky News Australia, together with Rupert Murdochs Fox News, had been systematically spreading lies and disinformation that was damaging democracies and in this case, the climate. At long last they are being held to account, he said. Foxtel, the licensee that broadcasts Sky News Australia, will have to report back to Acma within four months on steps it is taking to avoid further breaches, including carrying out staff training. Sign up for Guardian Australias free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup Three of the four Outsiders segments were part of a running series called Weather and the Sceptics Ice-Age Watch presented by Dean, the editor of the Australian edition of conservative magazine the Spectator, between October and December 2021. In one instance, Dean said carbon dioxide trapped in ice cores showed that the temperature drives carbon dioxide, not the other way around a common argument put by climate science deniers . So if global warming comes before carbon dioxide increases, then reducing carbon dioxide to net-zero is as pointless as it is laughable, Dean told viewers. Foxtel attempted to argue that viewers would have clearly understood Deans statement as an opinion, but Acma disagreed, saying it breached the code that asks broadcasters to clearly distinguish factual material from commentary. On another broadcast, Dean claimed the UKs then prime minister Boris Johnson was mandating that everyone in Britain get rid of their perfectly good gas heaters and replace them with desperately inefficient eco heat pumps at around 10 to 20 thousand pounds a pop. Acma found that no actual mandate existed, and so the segment breached its code for accuracy in news reporting. In another segment, Dean showed charts of temperature in selected locations in Japan which, he said, shows no warming in 30 years. Clearly if the planet was warming to the dire extent that we are being told, it would show up in the data, wouldnt it? said Dean. Acma said while the data had been presented accurately, further data was available from Japans weather agency but was not shown. Acma said it was misleading to audiences to set up a hypothesis and then present only the subset of available data that supported the view that the host wanted the audience to form. In a news segment on Outsiders, viewers were told the Great Barrier Reef was looking fantastic and that the Australian Maritime Institute [sic] had said theres never been so much coral. The segment referred to a report from the Australian Institute of Marine Science, which Acma said had found an increase in coral cover but reported any recovery was fragile and at risk. This, Acma said, gave a false impression about the AIMS report and so breached its news code covering accuracy and fairness. The chair of Acma, Nerida OLoughlin, said Australians should expect factual material to be accurate. Sign up to Morning Mail Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you whats happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion She said: The program has an obligation to its audience to clearly separate fact from comment. Across a number of its episodes Outsiders failed to do so and did not present news content either accurately or fairly. Acma found the regional broadcasters WIN and SCA had also breached the commercial TV code of practice because they aired the Outsiders programs. WIN and SCA will report to Acma within four months on steps taken to comply with the code in relation to programs supplied by third parties. In a separate investigation , Acma looked at claims on Foxtels evangelical Christian Daystar channel made during two programs called Ministry Now and Joni Table Talk. During the shows, viewers heard numerous claims about Covid-19 which Acma found to be false including that vaccines would lead to infertility and had caused a 400% rise in miscarriages. Acma said Foxtel had claimed it had limited control over broadcasts distributed by third-party providers in relation to both Outsiders and the Daystar channel. But OLoughlin said: Broadcasters cannot outsource their compliance responsibilities to a third party. It is important that Australian audiences are able to trust that the information presented in current affairs programs is accurate and factual, particularly when national health issues are concerned. Last year a report from a UK thinktank identified Sky News Australia as a global hub for climate misinformation. Rudd cut his ties with Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission, which has 40,000 members, before being appointed to his current role as ambassador to the US. Turnbull said: This is a significant finding from Acma about Skys false and inaccurate climate change coverage. Sky will be required to report on the actions it has taken in response to the findings, including training for its staff. The Murdoch media, from Fox in the US to Sky in Australia have been systematically spreading lies and disinformation with terrible consequences for our democracies and in this case the climate. At long last they are being held to account. In a statement, Sky News said: We would like to assure Sky News Australia viewers of our ongoing commitment to broad discussion and debate on the issues they care about. We will not shy away from exploring a wide range of viewpoints. Sky News takes its obligations under the broadcasting codes of practice seriously. The complaints were made by Mr Rudd as part of a politically motivated campaign against Sky News Australia including in his role as chairman of the activist organisation Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission. This article was amended on 28 April 2023 to clarify that the initial complaints to Acma were made by Kevin Rudd personally, not by Australians for a Murdoch Royal Commission.