ClimateScienceWatch

Promoting integrity in the use of climate science in government

Climate Science Watch is a nonprofit public interest education and advocacy project dedicated to holding public officials accountable for the integrity and effectiveness with which they use climate science and related research in government policymaking, toward the goal of enabling society to respond effectively to the challenges posed by global warming and climate change. See Details

US State Dept. request for comments on the future of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

Posted on Saturday, February 09, 2008

“The U.S. State Department, in its role as coordinator for the U.S. Government’s role in the IPCC, requests public comment on the activities and process of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in order to facilitate the U.S. Government’s effort to assess and enhance the IPCC’s high-level of scientific credibility and relevance for the evolving needs of decisionmakers.” We have some questions for consideration.

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President’s FY 2009 climate science budget proposal remains below the 2001 level

Posted on Friday, February 08, 2008

While President Bush has requested an increase in funding for the Climate Change Science Program for Fiscal Year 2009, the inflation-adjusted program budget still remains below what it was in 2001, and significantly below the mid-1990s level. This despite growing observed signs of global climatic disruption, and the President’s recurrent insistence that scientific uncertainties needed to be resolved as a precondition to backing a requirement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

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Presidential Climate Action Project “State of the Climate” statement calls for federal action

Posted on Thursday, February 07, 2008

In signing the Presidential Climate Action Project “State of the Climate” statement, Climate Science Watch joins Nobel Prize winners, leading scientists, elected leaders, heads of major environmental organizations, and others in urging the federal government to invest more in climate science, to seize the opportunity of an emerging global market for clean energy technologies, and to recognize that global warming is an economic, public health and national security issue. The statement was delivered to the White House, Congressional leaders, and presidential candidates.

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For a National Climate Change Preparedness Initiative

Posted on Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Climate Science Watch director Rick Piltz put forward our proposal that the next administration undertake a National Climate Change Preparedness Initiative, at a national conference on “Climate Change: Science and Solutions,” in Washington, DC. He spoke on January 17 as part of a panel on the future of the the federal global change research program.

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“The American Denial of Global Warming”

Posted on Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Prof. Naomi Oreskes, of the University of California-San Diego Science Studies Program, lectures on the history of the global warming disinformation campaign, led by corporate-funded policy operatives and ideologically-driven scientists, who employed the “tobacco strategy” to manipulate public opinion to create an exaggerated sense of uncertainty about scientific evidence on global warming and climatic disruption. (See especially from 26:00 forward in this 58-minute video.)

A strategy session on the future of the US Global Change Research Program

Posted on Tuesday, February 05, 2008

A process for developing a set of recommendations to the next administration and Congress in January 2009 was kicked off on January 17 at a national conference on Climate Change: Science and Solutions, in Washington, DC.  Climate Science Watch participated in and reports on the session, chaired by Dr. Robert Corell: “The US Global Change Research Program:  What do we want from the next Administration?”

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CCSP Synthesis Reports are years behind schedule as program scrambles to meet court deadline

Posted on Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Geotimes reports: “Four years ago, the U.S. Climate Change Science Program agreed to prepare 21 reports on various topics related to climate change and its impacts by the end of September 2007. As of December, however, only four had been released. And now, Congress and many scientists are taking the program to task.” The program is not connecting with the real needs of society’s decisionmaking, CSW director Rick Piltz says in the article. 

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“Everything’s Cool” global warming documentary TV premiere January 22-28 on the Sundance Channel

Posted on Tuesday, January 22, 2008

“Everything’s Cool”—a feature-length documentary film about the efforts of global warming citizen activists and educators, and about the dangerous chasm between scientific understanding and political action, will have its television premiere tonight January 22 at 9 P.M. on the Sundance Channel’s environmental series The Green. It will play tonight and through the week.

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CBS News to re-air “Rewriting the Science” and other 60 Minutes climate change stories on Jan. 20

Posted on Thursday, January 17, 2008

On Sunday, January 20, CBS News Presents will re-air three climate change stories that were done by 60 Minutes during the past two years. These include a segment on the warming trend in the Arctic region, another on Antarctica, and a third, “Rewriting the Science,” on administration political interference with climate change communication. The latter includes interviews with Jim Hansen of NASA and CSW Director Rick Piltz.

House global warming committee hearing on administration’s delayed decision on polar bear protection

Posted on Wednesday, January 16, 2008

The House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming announced that it will hold a hearing on January 17 on the future of the polar bear.  On January 8 we noted that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had announced a politically suspicious delay in missing a statutory deadline for a ruling on threatened status protection for the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act. Committee Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) will question members of the Bush Administration regarding the delay of a decision until after a controversial lease sale for oil drilling off of Alaska.

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“The US Global Change Research Program – What do we want from the next administration?”

Posted on Monday, January 14, 2008

Dr. Robert Corell, Director of the Global Change Program at the Heinz Center for Science, Economics and the Environment, invites comments on “The US Global Change Research Program – What do we want from the next administration?” a scoping paper drafted for discussion on January 17 at a national conference on Climate Change: Science and Solutions, being held in Washington, DC.  CSW Director Rick Piltz will participate on a panel that will lead a discussion of topics covered in the paper, and will call for changes in the federal climate and global change research program. 

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New research finds escalating melt of Antarctic ice sheet

Posted on Monday, January 14, 2008

NASA scientist Eric Rignot, lead author of the new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience: “Without doubt, Antarctica as a whole is now losing ice yearly, and each year it’s losing more....We believe it is related to global climate forcing.” “The new findings come as the Arctic is losing ice at a dramatic rate and glaciers are in retreat across the planet,” the Washington Post reported on January 14. 

Climate Change Science Program acting director William Brennan to face Senate confirmation hearing

Posted on Saturday, January 12, 2008

On January 10 the President announced his intention to nominate Bill Brennan, current acting director of the Climate Change Science Program, to fill the position previously held by James Mahoney as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere. This is a Senate-confirmed political appointment and offers the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation an opportunity to get his answers to questions about the problems and direction of the program before voting on confirmation.

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Fish and Wildlife Service suspicious delay of decision on polar bear threatened status

Posted on Tuesday, January 08, 2008

On January 7 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced a politically suspicious delay in making a court-ordered ruling on “threatened” status protection for the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act. The administration could refuse to give the polar bear threatened status only by denying the science of global warming. Are administration officials politicizing the agency’s decision and its timing? One year ago, on January 8, 2007, we explained how Interior Secretary Kempthorne was misrepresenting the analysis of his own agency’s scientists of the threat to the polar bear from projected disappearance of sea ice habitat due to global warming. 

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Call for public comments on revised U.S. climate science research plan

Posted on Sunday, January 06, 2008

A summary of a revised research plan for the U.S. Climate Change Science Program has been posted for public review and comment during January and February. Following our August 2007 victory in federal court in the Center for Biological Diversity et al. lawsuit against the Bush administration, the administration is scrambling to meet a court ordered deadline to produce by May 2008 a new federal research plan and a scientific assessment focusing on global change impacts—two documents that they previously had no intention of producing during this year. 

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