Just
don’t look at them (or call them something else)
In what environmental experts warned
could be President Donald Trump's most dangerous assault on science yet, the
White House is reportedly moving to end long-term
assessments of the impacts of the climate crisis while pushing a polluter-friendly agenda that
is making the planetary emergency worse.
As the New York Times reported, "the White
House-appointed director of the United States Geological Survey, James Reilly,
a former astronaut and petroleum geologist, has ordered that scientific
assessments produced by that office use only computer-generated climate models
that project the impact of climate change through 2040, rather than through the
end of the century, as had been done previously."
"As a result," according
to the Times, "parts of the federal government will no longer
fulfill what scientists say is one of the most urgent jobs of climate science
studies: reporting on the future effects of a rapidly warming planet and
presenting a picture of what the earth could look like by the end of the
century if the global economy continues to emit heat-trapping carbon dioxide
pollution from burning fossil fuels."
The Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC)—the United Nations' leading climate body—warned in a landmark report last
October that if carbon emissions are not dramatically and rapidly reduced,
catastrophic effects of the climate crisis could be felt across the world as
early as 2040.
But, as the Times reported, scientists say that Trump administration's attempt to cut off government climate projections at that year "would give a misleading picture because the biggest effects of current emissions will be felt after 2040."
"Models show that the planet will most likely warm at about the same rate through about 2050," according to the Times. "From that point until the end of the century, however, the rate of warming differs significantly with an increase or decrease in carbon emissions."
Philip Duffy, the president of the
Woods Hole Research Center, told the Times that the White
House's move to restrict government climate predictions "is a pretty
blatant attempt to politicize the science—to push the science in a direction
that's consistent with their politics."
Critics also expressed alarm on
social media.
"The Trump gang is attacking
the scientific process itself," tweeted environmentalist Alex Steffen,
"in an attempt to prop up fossil fuel industries, delay inevitable action,
and run the carbon bubble as long as it will last."
In addition to attempting to
severely limit the government's climate science methodology, the Times reported,
the Trump administration is also working "to question its conclusions by
creating a new climate review panel" led by physicist William Happer, who
once said the "demonization of carbon dioxide is just like the
demonization of the poor Jews under Hitler."
Happer was brought on to the
National Security Council by John Bolton, Trump's national security adviser.
"Mr. Happer and Mr. Bolton are
both beneficiaries of Robert and Rebekah Mercer, the far-right billionaire and
his daughter who have funded efforts to debunk climate science," the Times reported.
"The Mercers gave money to a super PAC affiliated with Mr. Bolton before
he entered government and to an advocacy group headed by Mr. Happer."
The Trump administration's efforts
to distort government climate findings in a way that aligns with its fossil
fuel agenda began after the release of the second volume of the National
Climate Assessment last November, according to the Times.
As Common Dreams reported, the Trump administration
attempted to bury the report—which warned that "Earth's climate is now
changing faster than at any point in the history of modern
civilization"—by releasing it on the Friday after Thanksgiving.
The assessment's findings directly
contradicted the Trump administration's denialism, as environmentalists and
climate scientists pointed out at the time.
"This report makes it clear
that climate change is not some problem in the distant future," said
Brenda Ekwurzel, the director of climate science at the Union of Concerned
Scientists (UCS). "It's happening right now in every part of the
country."