The New Zealand Herald

Report a climate warning

Scientists contradict President’s claims on global warming

- Michael Biesecker and Seth Borenstein in Washington — AP

As President Donald Trump touts new oil pipelines and pledges to revive the nation’s struggling coal mines, federal scientists are warning that burning fossil fuels is already driving a steep increase in the United States of heat waves, droughts and floods.

It is the latest example of collisions between Trump’s environmen­tal policies and the facts presented by his Government’s experts.

Contradict­ing Trump’s claims that climate change is a “hoax”, the draft report representi­ng the consensus of 13 federal agencies concludes that the evidence global warming is being driven by human activities is “unambiguou­s”. That directly undercuts statements by Trump and his Cabinet casting doubt on whether the warming observed around the globe is being primarily driven by manmade carbon pollution.

“There are no alternativ­e explanatio­ns, and no natural cycles are found in the observatio­nal record that can explain the observed changes in climate,” says the report, citing thousands of peer-reviewed studies. “Evidence for a changing climate abounds, from the top of the atmosphere to the depths of the oceans.”

Faced with reams of evidence compiled by federal scientists that conflicts with their policy positions, Trump and his advisers frequently cite the work of industry-funded thinktanks. Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt and Energy Secretary Rick Perry have championed the formation of a “redteam, blue-team” exercise where climate-change sceptics would publicly debate mainstream climate scientists.

Submitted as part of the upcoming National Climate Assessment, the draft federal report sends the overriding message that failing to curb carbon pollution now will exacerbate negative consequenc­es in the future. That assessment calls into question the wisdom of Trump’s environmen­tal and energy policies, which seek to boost US production and consumptio­n of fossil fuels even as the world’s other leading economies promote cleaner sources of energy.

An early version of the report, a copy of which was obtained by the Associated Press, was distribute­d widely in December for review by leading scientists. The New York Times published a copy on Tuesday.

The US Global Change Research Programme, which will edit and produce the final climate report, did not respond to phone calls and emails seeking comment yesterday.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders criticised the Times for reporting on the draft document “without first verifying its contents with the White House or any of the federal agencies directly involved with climate and environmen­tal policy”. She then declined to comment on the report. “The White House will withhold comment on any draft report before its scheduled release date,” she said.

The assessment has generally been released every four years under a federal initiative mandated by Congress in 1990. The current draft for 2018, targeted for release later this year, largely builds on the conclusion­s of the 2014 assessment released under the Obama Administra­tion.

The assessment said global temperatur­es will continue to rise without steep reductions in the burning of fossil fuels, with increasing­ly dire effects on the lives of every American.

Worldwide, 15 of the last 16 years have been the warmest years on record. The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said yesterday that 2017 is on track to be the second warmest for the US.

Scientists from all over the world have documented warming in the air and water, melting glaciers, disappeari­ng snow, shrinking sea ice and rising sea level. The report said the US will see temperatur­e increases of at least 1.4C over the next few decades, even with significan­t cuts to carbon pollution.

Even if humans stop spewing heattrappi­ng gases today, the world will warm another 0.3C, the report said, citing high confidence in those calculatio­ns.

Scientists, such as Stanford University’s Chris Field, say that even a few tenths of a degree of warming can have a dramatic impact on human civilisati­on and the natural environmen­t.

“Every increment in warming is an increment in risk,” said Field, who wasn’t part of the report but reviewed it for The National Academy of Sciences.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? The United States can expect more floods like those this week in Houston, the report says.
Picture / AP The United States can expect more floods like those this week in Houston, the report says.

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