Global Times

Childish behavior

US climate science hearing descends into bullying ‘ food- fight’

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Lawmakers and scientists called names, lamented Soviet- era tactics and accused each other of wrongdoing at a nearly three- hour hearing on climate science in the US capital on Wednesday.

Similar hearings have been held in years past, notable for the often combative comments by conservati­ve lawmakers who doubt the impact of humans on global warming – and who outnumber Democrats 22 to 16 on the House of Representa­tives Committee on Science, Space and Technology.

Wednesday’s hearing took place one day after President Donald Trump ordered a massive rollback of rules that limited carbon emissions, and just weeks after he released a budget proposal that would slash funding and jobs at key federal science and health agencies.

Michael Mann – a Penn State University professor of atmospheri­c science who has received death threats in the past for his work on climate change – was the only mainstream climate scientist on the four- member panel, which also included three noted deniers of the scientific consensus on global warming.

Some colleagues had urged Mann to boycott the hearing, titled “Climate Science: Assumption­s, Policy Implicatio­ns, and the Scientific Method.”

“In the past, the science community has participat­ed

in these hearings, even though questionin­g the basics of climate change is akin to holding a hearing to examine whether the Earth orbits the sun,” wrote David Titley, a professor in the department of meteorolog­y at Pennsylvan­ia State University, in the Washington Post on the eve of the hearing.

But Mann went ahead, undaunted.

“I was more than willing to endure the food- fight I knew would be coming, so that I could inject some science into a hearing that is ostensibly supposed to be about science,” Mann told AFP in an e- mail afterward.

‘ Wrongfully reported as fact’

Accusation­s and name- calling began flying immediatel­y.

The chairman of the committee, Republican Lamar Smith of Texas, opened by alleging that climate scientists often issue “alarmist findings that are wrongfully reported as facts.”

Ninety- seven percent of scientists agree that human activity and the burning of fossil fuels is driving global warming.

But Smith insisted the “science is not settled.”

“Much of climate science today appears to be based more on exaggerati­ons, personal agendas, and questionab­le prediction­s than on the scientific method,” Smith said. Judith Curry, a former pro

fessor at the Georgia Institute of Technology nology, said “sausage- making and even bullying” went into building the consensus on climate change in the UN Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change ( IPCC), which found that greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels were the dominant cause of global warming.

She also pointed to “substantia­l uncertaint­ies in our understand­ing of how the climate system works.”

Echoing the central slogan of the Trump presidenti­al campaign, Curry proclaimed: “Let’s make scientific debate about climate change great again.”

Stalinist?

Republican­s sparred with Mann repeatedly.

At one point, when Mann described an article that had been published in Science magazine, Smith responded that “is not known as an objective magazine.”

Speaking in a prosecutor­ial monotone, Louisiana Republican Clay Higgins asked if Mann was associated with the left- leaning Union of Concerned Scientists or the Climate Accountabi­lity Institute.

Mann said no no, clearly surprised by the questions.

California Republican Dana Rohrabache­r likened the tactics of climate scientists to the tactics of the late Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and lamented their “personal attacks.”

“For scientists to call names, to beat someone into submission, that’s a Stalinist tactic,” he said.

Georgia Republican Barry Loudermilk pressed the issue of natural variabilit­y in climate change, and said of Mann: “we could say you’re a denier of natural change.”

Democrats countered that three of the four scientists on the panel – which also included John Christy of the University of Alabama and Roger Pielke of the University of Colorado – represente­d the “fringe” of climate science research.

“For a balanced panel we would need 96 more Dr Manns,” said Democrat Suzanne Bonamici of Oregon.

Little common ground

Mann stood his ground and accused Republican lawmakers of

being unduly sw swayed by special int interests such as the fossil fuel industry,dus which fund theirthe A few campaigns. Democrats on thet committee soughtsoug points of agreementa­gre among the panelists. At one point, asked if funding cuts for science are wrong, all four nodded in agreement.

Rush Holt, chief executive officer of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science – which publishes the journal Science – urged Congress to speak to a broader array of climate scientists.

“There is much our nation can do to address the risks that climate change poses to human health and safety, but disregardi­ng scientific evidence puts our communitie­s in danger,” he said in a statement e- mailed to AFP.

By the end of the hearing, Mann was deluged on Twitter with offers of beer, wine and chocolate from fellow scientists who praised him for his efforts.

Asked if he felt any progress was made at the hearing, Mann told AFP: “I hope it was clear to objective observers where there real debate lies.

“It’s not in whether we have a problem,” he added.

“It’s what we choose to do about that problem.”

 ?? Photo: IC ?? Demonstrat­ors gather in front of the White House to protest President Donald Trump’s signing of an executive order rolling back rules on carbon emissions on Tuesday, the day before the US climate science hearing, which sparks fierce debate between...
Photo: IC Demonstrat­ors gather in front of the White House to protest President Donald Trump’s signing of an executive order rolling back rules on carbon emissions on Tuesday, the day before the US climate science hearing, which sparks fierce debate between...
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