The book was widely cited in
conservative media and groups who oppose environmental regulations. In a profile of Lomborg preceding the book's publication
The New York Times stated that "The primary target of the book, a substantial work of analysis with almost 3,000 footnotes, are statements made by environmental organizations like the
Worldwatch Institute, the
World Wildlife Fund and
Greenpeace." In August 2001,
The Guardian published three exclusive essays by Lomborg and hosted an online debate with him, describing him as "Europe's most controversial environmental thinker". The
Wall Street Journal deemed Lomborg's work "a superbly documented and readable book." In
The Washington Post, Denis Dutton claimed that "Bjørn Lomborg's good news about the environment is bad news for
Green ideologues. His richly informative, lucid book is now the place from which environmental policy decisions must be argued. In fact,
The Skeptical Environmentalist is the most significant work on the environment since the appearance of its polar opposite, Rachel Carson's
Silent Spring, in 1962. It's a magnificent achievement."
Rolling Stone wrote that "Lomborg pulls off the remarkable feat of welding the techno-optimism of the Internet age with a lefty's concern for the fate of the planet."
Chris Lavers gave a mixed review in
The Guardian, saying Lomborg "is clearly committed to rubbishing the views of hand-picked environmentalists, frequently the very silly ones such as
Ehrlich, whom professionals have been ignoring for decades" and criticising his framing of deforestation. :I am neither a statistician nor a scientist, and I lack the skill to judge Lomborg's reworkings of the statistics of conventional wisdom. But I am worried that on virtually every topic he touches, he reaches conclusions radically different from almost everybody else. That seems to suggest that most scientists are wrong, short-sighted, naïve, interested only in securing research funds, or deliberately dancing to the campaigners' tune. Most I know are honest, intelligent and competent. So it beggars belief to suppose that Professor Lomborg is the only one in step, every single time. One critical article, "The Skeptical Environmentalist: A Case Study in the Manufacture of News", attributes the book's media success to its initial, influential supporters, who linked its message to a European visit from United States president
George W. Bush. Richard C. Bell, writing for
Worldwatch argued that many reviews in prominent publications were written by individuals with prior association with Lomborg, "instead of seeking scientists with a critical perspective." In
The Wall Street Journal, a review was published by the
Competitive Enterprise Institute's
Ronald Bailey, someone "who had earlier written a book called The True State of the World, from which much of Lomborg's claims were taken." Bell also criticized the
Washington Post, whose Sunday Book World assigned the book review to
Denis Dutton, identified as "a professor of philosophy who lectures on the dangers of pseudoscience at the science faculties of the
University of Canterbury in New Zealand", and the editor of the web site
Arts and Letters Daily. Bell noted that "The
Post did not tell its readers that Dutton's web site features links to the
Global Climate Coalition, an anti-Kyoto consortium of
oil and coal businesses, and to the messages of Julian Simon—the man whose
denial that global warming was occurring apparently gave Lomborg the idea for his book in the first place." == Pieing incident ==