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'Beefier barley' researcher says her work does not promote positives of climate change

A university researcher whose work was used in controversial billboards around Edmonton and Calgary says her work was not intended to portray any positive effects of climate change.
 
"It was not quite pleasant to see how your research results could be misinterpreted" — in the "beefier barley" ads — "but that's not something I can take control of," said Monireh Faramarzi, an assistant professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at the University of Alberta
 
Faramarzi published research in 2017, exploring how climate change and increased carbon dioxide levels could potentially affect barley production in Alberta. A potential result could be higher barley yields despite less natural rainfall for crops, she found. 
 
The research went relatively unnoticed in the broader public realm until recently, when billboards referencing it were used in the university's Truth Matters campaign.
 
The "beefier barley" billboards, displayed at four locations in Edmonton and Calgary, read, "Climate change will boost Alberta's barley yield with less water, feeding more cattle."
 
Critics say the billboards portray climate change positively.
 
"If this was the strongest key message, I would definitely have considered this for the title of the paper. But the title of the paper doesn't say so," said Faramarzi on Monday.
 
"That climate change would be something positive or negative … was definitely not the ultimate message of the paper."
 
Faramarzi says her research focused on CO2 levels, but there were other factors like water temperature, soil moisture and nutrients that presented "assumptions and limitations" to the outcomes.
 
"I think the key message of this paper is really specific to this barley yield with the assumptions and limitations that we had in our studies," she said. 
 
The Truth Matters campaign focuses on highlighting research "that tackles today's complex challenges, and to encourage discussion."
 
Public relations expert Justin Archer says the current federal election and protests surrounding climate change may have influenced public response to the billboards.
 
"It just goes to show you that timing really is everything," said Archer, a partner at Edmonton-based Berlin Communications. 
 
"Right now at this moment in time there's a real thing going on around climate change and there's a real awareness and an awakening, particularly among young people."
 
Archer believes the medium is also a factor in how the public viewed the message.
 
"You can't really have both sides of a nuanced and complicated argument on a billboard," he said.
 
The university's vice-president of university relations, Jacqui Tam, has resigned Sunday over the billboards. But Archer questions whether that was necessary.
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