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Thursday, October 9, 2025

At a time of mounting climate urgency, the integrity of our public discourse is under siege. Coordinated disinformation campaigns propelled by actors with particular interests, and accelerated by our algorithmically driven digital sphere, are not only sowing doubt about proposed solutions to mitigate climate change — they are undermining the very policy tools they require. 



Although the scientific consensus on climate change is growing, and innovative economic policies and tools have the potential to make a difference, disinformation is becoming ever more sophisticated, shifting from outright denial to a more nuanced politics of delay, distortion, and inaction. Climate disinformation is no longer just an environmental issue – it’s a structural barrier to democratic governance.

This day-long event brought together global experts in climate and economic policy, media, and civil society to explore how climate disinformation is restraining progress. In the face of growing gaps in informational integrity there is a growing need for multi-sectoral, coordinated responses that work.



The conference features three panels and a keynote, all in person:

Panel 1: Mapping The State of Climate Disinformation 

Climate disinformation has evolved from efforts to contest the science to coordinated campaigns directed at influencing public opinion, markets, and policy. This panel will explore the current landscape of climate disinformation. What are the dominant disinformation narratives and strategies around climate change and mitigation? How are particular interests and actors amplifying them? And how do these evolving tactics undermine both policy and collective action?

Headshots of each panellist on top of a white background, with each name under the headshots. The order is the following: Amy Janzwood, Michael Khoo, Chris Russill, and Sonja Solomun.

Amy Janzwood, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and the Bieler School of the Environment, 91
Michael Khoo, Policy and Development Co-Chair, Climate Action Against Disinformation
Chris Russill, Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University; Academic Director, Re.Climate
Sonja Solomun, Assistant Professor (Research), Max Bell School of Public Policy; Deputy Director, Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy, 91


Panel 2: Markets Under Pressure: Ecofiscal Tools and Climate Disinformation

Ecofiscal policies such as carbon pricing and sustainable finance rely on transparency and public trust. This panel investigates how disinformation campaigns are exploiting these mechanisms – from nuanced delay narratives that seed doubt about the energy transition and the potential for renewables to overt forms of ‘greenwashing’ and manipulation – and what can be done to reinforce accountability and legitimacy.

Headshots of each panellist on top of a white background, with each name under the headshots. The order is the following: Kathryn Harrison, Andrew Leach, Catherine McKenna, and Christopher Ragan.

Kathryn Harrison, Professor, Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia
Andrew Leach, Professor of Economics and Law, University of Alberta
Catherine McKenna, CEO, Climate and Nature Solutions; Former Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Infrastructure; Chair, UN Secretary General Expert Group on Net Zero
Christopher Ragan, Founding Director, Max Bell School of Public Policy, and Chair, 䲹Բ岹’s Ecofiscal Commission


Panel 3: Building Resilience Against Climate Disinformation

Although climate disinformation is increasingly creating obstacles to timely and effective policy, institutions and governments are beginning to respond. Once driven by civil society and researchers, the newfound urgency is now reflected in the work of international bodies: the EU has called for a universal definition of climate disinformation, Canada has cracked down on greenwashing, and the International Panel on Climate Change has formally acknowledged its impact on policy for the first time. This panel explores these emerging efforts to build systemic resilience against climate disinformation, and how they can be connected to the everyday, lived realities of people around the world.

Headshots of each panellist on top of a white background, with each name under the headshots. The order is the following: Andrea Cairola, Geoff Dembicki, Adam Lynes-Ford, Juhi Sohani, and Molly Thomas.

Andrea Cairola, Chief of Section for Freedom of Expression and Safety of Journalists ad interim, UNESCO
Geoff Dembicki, Investigative Reporter and Global Managing Editor, DeSmog
Adam Lynes-Ford, Co-Founder, My Climate Plan
Juhi Sohani, Managing Director, Action CoLab
Molly Thomas, Host, TVO’s Big [If True]


Final Keynote: Addressing Climate Disinformation Beyond Borders

Climate disinformation knows no borders. In this keynote “fireside chat”, Charlotte Scaddan, Senior Adviser on Information Integrity, United Nations Global Communications, explores how transnational disinformation campaigns are undermining global climate action and how international institutions can respond collectively. Drawing from emerging models such as the UN Global Initiative for Information Integrity on Climate Change, this moderated discussion will address calls for a coordinated international strategy to safeguard informational integrity and environmental policy on a planetary scale.

Headshots of each panellist on top of a white background, with each name under the headshots. The order is the following: Charlotte Scaddan and Jennifer Welsh.

Charlotte Scaddan, Senior Adviser on Information Integrity, United Nations Global Communications
Interviewed by Jennifer Welsh, Director of the Max Bell School of Public Policy and Professor of Global Governance and Security


About the Ecofiscal Commission  

䲹Բ岹’s Ecofiscal Commission was formed by a group of experienced, policy-minded economists from across the country, seeking to broaden the discussion of ecofiscal policy reform beyond the academic sphere and into the realm of practical policy application. The Ecofiscal Commission and its Commissioners were fully independent and aimed to inform the public and policy-makers across the political spectrum, at all levels of government. Together, from 2014-2019, they aimed to bring people together around the table to have the critical discussion about ecofiscal reform that 䲹Բ岹’s future requires.

The list of sponsors for the event and their logos: 91 Max Bell School of Public Policy, TELUS, The WALRUS, ECHO, Peter Gilgan Foundation, IVEY foundation, KTG PUBLIC AFFAIRS, Max Bell Foundation. The J.W. MCCONNELL FAMILY FOUNDATION, METCALF FOUNDATION, NORTH GROWTH FOUNDATION, TD, and Trottier.

About this Conference Series  

䲹Բ岹’s operated from 2014-2019 and was funded through the generosity of 11 donors, including corporations and family foundations.

When Ecofiscal wound up its operations, the donors signed over the remaining funds to the Max Bell School of Public Policy, to finance a series of ten annual conferences on policy issues at the intersection of the economy and the environment.

Like the Ecofiscal Commission before it, the Max Bell School thanks these donors for their generous support while maintaining its independence to explore and debate public policies that can advance 䲹Բ岹’s economic and environmental prosperity.

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