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Congressional hearings detail political tampering in US climate
research
By Naomi Spencer
22 March 2007
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Hearings resumed March 19 in the US Congress on charges of
political interference in governmental climate research. The evidence
and testimony further demonstrate the lengths the Bush administration,
at the behest of the oil industry, has gone to suppress scientists
findings and confuse public opinion of climate change.
Among those testifying before the House Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform were prominent NASA scientist James Hansen
and a former officer from NASA Public Affairs, George Deutsch.
E-mails presented at the hearing confirmed that Deutschs
responsibilities as a PA officer included preventing Hansen from
speaking about climate data with reporters, a fact that Bush administration
officials have repeatedly denied.
Hansen, who is the director of NASAs Goddard Institute
of Space Studies (GISS), recounted several instances of interference.
In one case, one of his staff members submitted a press release
based on a GISS paper that found the ocean was less effective
at removing human-made carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than
had previously been estimated. Public Affairs decided that this
story could not be provided to the media.
Another staff member, Hansen testified, was made to attend
a practice press conference, where he was asked whether
anything could be done to stem the accelerating loss of sea ice.
When he suggested, We could reduce emissions of greenhouse
gases, he was told by officials, Thats unacceptable!
Hansen told the House committee that Public Affairs had insisted,
scientists are not allowed to say anything that relates
to policy.
Following a public talk Hansen gave in 2004, in which he mentioned
the practice of muzzling climate data, the NASA assistant administrator
for public affairs traveled from headquarters to the Goddard Space
Flight Center and gave what Hansen called an oral dressing
down of the professional writer at Goddard Public Affairs
who had informed me about this practice.
The writer, Hansen said, was admonished to mind
his own business. Such reprimands and instructions,
Hansen said, are delivered orally so as to leave no paper trail.
This way, If NASA headquarters Public Affairs is queried
by media about such abuses, Hansen testified, they
respond thats hearsay!, a legal term that seems
to frighten the media.
The deliberate lack of written records indicates that administration
officials are well aware of the inappropriate and essentially
illegal character of restricting scientists speech.
However, a series of memos and e-mails in late 2005 detailed
instructions on constraining public speech, after Hansen presented
GISS climate data to the American Geophysical Union. The GISS
analysis demonstrated record global temperature in 2005, a finding
that sparked unwanted media attention for NASA.
In response, Public Affairs issued tight regulations on Hansen,
including a requirement that media interviews be approved beforehand,
with NASA headquarters having right of first refusal,
and that Hansen obtain approval of any posting on the GISS web
site. Hansen testified that while these orders were delivered
orally, along with a threat of dire consequences for
non-compliance, the new Public Affairs officer over him, George
Deutsch, left written descriptions of the rules.
Deutsch had worked for Bushs reelection campaign before
dropping out of college and taking the appointment for Political
Affairs at NASA. Several of his e-mails presented during the hearing
plainly demonstrated that NASA leadership was stifling Hansens
contact with the press. In one, Deutsch wrote, Senior management
has asked us not to use Jim Hansen for this interview. In
another e-mail, it was discussed who could appear in Hansens
stead to deliver Bush administration talking points: Are
[sic] main concern is hitting our messages and not getting dragged
down into any discussions we shouldnt get into.
Hansens experience is by no means unique. A January survey
by the Union of Concerned Scientists found that six in ten federally
employed scientists experienced political interference over the
past five years, and half were pressured to remove the words climate
change and global warming from their work.
During the hearing, Representative Darrell Issa, Republican
of California, ludicrously suggested that it was Hansen who was
attempting to curb science and free speech. According to the New
York Times, Issa claimed that by speaking out against White
House efforts to inject uncertainty on global warming research,
Hansen had become an advocate for limiting the debate.
Hansen replied, What Im an advocate for is the scientific
method.
The White House has enormous control over scientific research
via the allocation of funds. Along with the various other restrictive
measures, punishment by the administration of outspoken climate
researchers has also taken the form of budget cuts.
Hansen pointed out that when the Bush administration unveiled
its 2007 budget, NASAs science programs were given a funding
increase of 1 percent. Yet Earth Science Research and Analysis
faced a staggering 20 percent cut, which was to be enacted by
cutting retroactively from the 2006 budget. Hansen remarked, One
way to avoid bad news: stop the measurements!
One-third of the way into fiscal year 2006, Hansen
explained, NASA Earth Science was told to go figure out
how to live with a 20-percent loss of the current years
funds. The cuts shelve most satellite missions and support
for contracting and young scientists.
This comes at a time when NASA satellites are yielding important
results. Two satellites measuring the Earths gravitational
field, for example, found that the mass of Greenland is now decreasing
by around 150 cubic kilometers of ice each year. West Antarcticas
ice depletion registered a similar loss. The area of ice sheets
with melting has increased substantially, resulting in a doubling
in the flow of ice streams, and the area in the Arctic Ocean with
summer sea ice has decreased by 20 percent over the past two and
a half decades.
Since the first part of the hearings on January 30, the panel
has received eight boxes of relevant documents from the White
House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). The documents, released
amidst Mondays testimony, strongly support the charges of
Hansen and others that the White House made an organized and deliberate
effort to mislead the public about the dangers posed by climate
change through the editing of government climate reports.
One of those charged with this undertaking was former CEQ chief
of staff Philip Cooney, who resigned from his position in 2005
after the New York Times reported that he had made hundreds
of edits to climate reports. After quitting, Cooney quickly landed
a job at ExxonMobil; prior to his appointment, he was the climate
team leader for the oil industrys lobbying agency,
the American Petroleum Institute (API).
In his congressional testimony March 19, Cooney said his work
was solely to promote the public policies of President Bush
and his administration. Indeed, the present administration,
with its inseparable linkages to the oil industry, appointed him
for precisely this purpose.
Documents showed at least 181 edits to the administrations
Strategic Plan of the Climate Change Science Program made
by Cooney other CEQ officials, aimed specifically at exaggerating
scientific uncertainties, and at least 113 edits to the same document
for the express purpose of diminishing the importance of the human
contribution to global warming.
Cooney also inserted numerous references to supposed possible
benefits of climate change, while removing references to taking
action to combat global warming based on the scientific evidence.
He deleted references to the threat climate change posed to human
health, society, and habitation, edits that he justified by saying
he felt they risked overstating human health impacts.
He also removed references in the administrations plan
to the comprehensive National Assessment of the Potential Consequences
of Climate Variability and Change after an interest group
funded by the API sued the government over the reports linking
of global warming to the burning of fossil fuels.
Significantly, Cooney deleted any reference to average surface
temperature reconstructions, which indicate they have been rising
over the last millennium. In multiple places, he changed the words
global change to climate variability and change
to suggest that the current warming trend was part of a natural
process.
The hearing committee made special note of dozens of alterations
that amounted to reversals or negations of conclusions. For example,
after a discussion of climate data in the draft, Cooney proposed
insertion of the following sentence: The negative commentary
asserted that certain assessment efforts were exaggerated, contrived,
or otherwise unsubstantiated.
The June 2003 Strategic Plan draft read: Climate
modeling capabilities have improved dramatically in recent years
and can be expected to continue to do so. As a result, scientists
are now able to model Earth system processes and the coupling
of those processes on a regional and global scale with increasing
precision and reliability. CEQ had this passage eliminated.
Most of the alternations were subtler, but had the effect of
casting excessive doubt on already cautious and conservatively
worded scientific findings. For instance, in one passage, the
draft read, Warming temperatures will also affect Arctic
land areas. As in dozens of other passages, Cooney replaced
the word will with the word may resulting
in a statement of complete uncertainty. Similarly, in numerous
places, Cooney added the word potentially.
During his deposition March 12, Cooney was questioned about
the Strategic Plan as well as the climate section of a
major EPA report that CEQ insisted be altered in similar fashion.
The CEQ exerted so much pressure, insisting on hundreds of edits,
that the EPA eventually cut the entire section out of the report.
Related PDF files from the Oversight and Government Reform
Committee hearings are available through the committees
web site.
http://oversight.house.gov/story.asp?ID=1214
See Also:
Scientists report rampant
political interference in climate research
[5 February 2007]
Bush aide who doctored
global warming documents joins ExxonMobil
[18 June 2005]
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