Last night, Sean Hannity hosted Patrick Moore, introduced merely as “co-founder of Greenpeace,” who has found “zero evidence that the earth is warming because of human activity.” But for some reason, Hannity failed to mention that Moore’s more recent resumé – like, for the last 20 years – has him as a spokesman for the very industries fingered by real climate change experts.

According to Greenpeace, Moore is not a co-founder. The organization says on its website, “Although Mr. Moore played a significant role in Greenpeace Canada for several years, he did not found Greenpeace.”

But wait, Greenpeace has more to say about Moore:

Patrick Moore is a Paid Spokesperson for the Nuclear Industry In April 2006, the Nuclear Energy Institute, the principal lobby for the nuclear industry, launched the Clean And Safe Energy Coalition and installed former Bush Administration EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman and Mr. Moore as its co-chairs. The Clean and Safe Energy Coalition was part of a public relations project spearheaded by the public relations giant Hill & Knowlton as part of its estimated $8 million contract with the nuclear industry. Patrick Moore Does Not Represent Greenpeace For more than 20 years, Mr. Moore has been a paid spokesman for a variety of polluting industries, including the timber, mining, chemical and the aquaculture industries. Most of these industries hired Mr. Moore only after becoming the focus of a Greenpeace campaign to improve their environmental performance. Mr. Moore has now worked for polluters for far longer than he ever worked for Greenpeace. Greenpeace opposes the use of nuclear energy because it is a dangerous and expensive distraction from real solutions to climate change.

Media Matters has a good take down of the substance of Moore’s comments. They also note that he has no real expertise in climate science.

But despite all this, Moore seems to have spent almost all day on Fox shilling for polluters as a “co-founder of Greenpeace.” Media Matters caught him on Fox & Friends, The Real Story with Gretchen Carlson and Fox Business’ Varney & Company yesterday. All before his prime time visit to Hannity.

Yet in his introduction, Hannity described Moore's appearance as "an exclusive interview you'll see only here tonight on Hannity."

Furthermore, Moore made it sound as though he was only motivated by a sense of personal outrage at Greenpeace and others concerned about man-made global warming. He said, "I just had to come out and express what I have been studying for the last 25 years." Moore also claimed he left Greenpeace because they "turned sharply to the political left and began to adopt positions that I could not accept from my scientific background." That background, according to Moore, included a Ph.D. in ecology and being "very well versed" in climate change.

Not surprisingly, Hannity didn't ask what "very well versed" actually meant. He was too busy prompting Moore to attack Hannity's favorite targets for having an "agenda" over climate change.