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Earth Government United States Politics

A Trump Insider Embeds Climate Denial in Scientific Research (nytimes.com) 382

An official at the Interior Department embarked on a campaign that has inserted misleading language about climate change -- including debunked claims that increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is beneficial -- into the agency's scientific reports, the New York Times reported Monday, citing internal documents. From the report: The misleading language appears in at least nine reports, including environmental studies and impact statements on major watersheds in the American West that could be used to justify allocating increasingly scarce water to farmers at the expense of wildlife conservation and fisheries. The effort was led by Indur M. Goklany, a longtime Interior Department employee who, in 2017 near the start of the Trump administration, was promoted to the office of the deputy secretary with responsibility for reviewing the agency's climate policies. The Interior Department's scientific work is the basis for critical decisions about water and mineral rights affecting millions of Americans and hundreds of millions of acres of land.

The wording, known internally as the "Goks uncertainty language" based on Mr. Goklany's nickname, inaccurately claims that there is a lack of consensus among scientists that the earth is warming. In Interior Department emails to scientists, Mr. Goklany pushed misleading interpretations of climate science, saying it "may be overestimating the rate of global warming, for whatever reason;" climate modeling has largely predicted global warming accurately. The final language states inaccurately that some studies have found the earth to be warming, while others have not. He also instructed department scientists to add that rising carbon dioxide -- the main force driving global warming -- is beneficial because it "may increase plant water use efficiency" and "lengthen the agricultural growing season." Both assertions misrepresent the scientific consensus that, overall, climate change will result in severe disruptions to global agriculture and significant reductions in crop yields.

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A Trump Insider Embeds Climate Denial in Scientific Research

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  • “No one man can terrorize a whole nation unless we are all his accomplices.” Edward R. Murrow
  • by stedlj ( 62084 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @10:39AM (#59787190)

    Trump keeps working hard to be the top source of Fake news!

  • I thought they'd ALL do it.

  • When was this thoroughly debunked? In some model somewhere? As a thought experiment?

    Look, if one side can be reasonably argued, isn't that admitting that an argument needed to be made. Maybe they should ask greenhouse owners why they raise the level of CO2 in their greenhouses.

    • by imidan ( 559239 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @06:43PM (#59789516)

      CO2 fertilization is certainly a real thing with measurable effects. I worked on a project where we studied CO2 fertilization effects on wheat. We found that under increased CO2, wheat yields increased; that is, the mass of harvested grain increased. However, several of the important nutritional components of the grain (most critically, the protein content) did not increase proportionally to the mass, which means that even though we got more grain at harvest, the grain was of poorer quality because of reduced nutrient density.

      And by the way, when farmers harvest their grain and sell it, the buyer doesn't just pay a set amount per pound. The buyers take samples of the grain as it passes into the grain elevator and assay it for protein and mineral content. The price per pound is then computed based upon average nutrient density. So what we get with higher biomass but lower nutrient density is increased harvesting and transportation costs with no increase in sale price or profits.

      The same is apparently true for other important crops including rice and soybeans. Check out the wikipedia page on CO2 fertilization.

      I'm only talking about agricultural effects of CO2 fertilization. In other species, like trees, the effects may be different. I haven't studied that. My point is, in the realm of agriculture, yes, CO2 fertilization occurs, and it has measurable effects. But the effects aren't necessarily positive, and it looks like we'd be better off without the increased CO2.

  • Here are a couple of links to the DeSmog accounts of Indur M. Goklany. 1) Indur M. Goklany https://www.desmogblog.com/ind... [desmogblog.com] 2) Congressman Calls For Hearing Into Heartland Institute Payments to Federal Employee Indur Goklany https://www.desmogblog.com/con... [desmogblog.com]
  • They do know that by 2020 everybody has wisened up to propaganda terms and just turns the page, right? Nobody says "OMG are they Climate Nazis?" anymore. Low-effort propagandists should lose their jobs.

  • Serial murders, serial rapists, child molestors, human traffickers, people who commit crimes against humanity in general, people who knowingly spread fatal diseases, and assholes like this Goklany who knowingly politicize the sciences, spreading misinformation, disinformation, and outright lies, to further a political agenda, all deserve to be sent to The Special Hell, where they will endure torments unlike any other for all eternity.
    Too bad I don't believe Hell actually exists, it's needed for 'people' li
  • by guacamole ( 24270 ) on Monday March 02, 2020 @04:34PM (#59788888)

    Republican's persistent drive to exploit and destroy earth's natural environment is incredible. The agenda is to privatize and convert every national park into an oil sands quarry, cut off and process every redwood tree, hunt down every wolf, drill for oil on the shores of California, Hawaii and everywhere else, build an oil pipeline through every vulnerable habitat or a source of drinking water, ramp up coal extraction and construction of coal fired plants, and so on. This effort now went on for at least 40-50 years.

"Experience has proved that some people indeed know everything." -- Russell Baker

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