Climate change science censored by Bush administration

by frog

A while ago I blogged about climate change, and specifically the feeling in the scientific community that the Bush administration is attempting to cover it up.

Now, CBS’s 60 Minutes in the US have interviewed James Hansen, NASA’s chief climate scientist, and Rick Piltz, a former US government scientist who resigned in protest, who say their ability to report scientific evidence about climate change has been severely impeded by the Bush administration, which seeks to downplay the risks or muddy the science of climate change. The story is here in written form, as are video clips from the televised version. The video includes shots of draft reports on climate change, heavily edited by hand after being submitted to the White House.

Dozens of federal agencies report science but much of it is edited at the White House before it is sent to Congress and the public. It appears climate science is edited with a heavy hand. Drafts of climate reports were co-written by Rick Piltz for the federal Climate Change Science Program. But Piltz says his work was edited by the White House to make global warming seem less threatening.

“The strategy of people with a political agenda to avoid this issue is to say there is so much to study way upstream here that we can’t even being to discuss impacts and response strategies,” says Piltz. “There’s too much uncertainty. It’s not the climate scientists that are saying that, its lawyers and politicians.”

Whistle-blowing Piltz last year founded a new watchdog body, Climate Science Watch, dedicated to holding public officials accountable for the ways they use climate science data in policymaking and to supporting federal scientists experiencing political interference with their ability to communicate their findings on climate change. In the wake of the 60 Minutes story, the even larger Government Accountability Project have announced their sponsorship of Climate Science Watch.

It’s great to see this issue getting mainstream coverage in the US. Frankly it’s shocking that the Bush administration have been getting away with such behaviour on such a vital, dangerous issue of global concern.

frog says

Published in Environment & Resource Management | Media by frog on Tue, March 21st, 2006   

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