Washington: The Trump administration on Monday took another step to make
it harder to find major, legally mandated scientific assessments of how climate
change is endangering the nation and its people.
Earlier this month, the official government websites that hosted the
authoritative, peer-reviewed national climate assessments went dark. Such sites
tell state and local governments and the public what to expect in their backyards
from a warming world and how best to adapt to it.
At the time, the White House
said NASA would house the reports to comply with a 1990 law that requires the
reports, which the space agency said it planned to do.
But on Monday, NASA announced that it aborted those plans. “The USGCRP
(the government agency that oversees and used to host the report) met its
statutory requirements by presenting its reports to Congress. NASA has no legal
obligations to host globalchange.gov’s data," NASA Press Secretary Bethany
Stevens said in an email. That means no data from the assessment or the
government science office that coordinated the work will be on NASA, she said.
On July 3, NASA put out a statement that said, "All preexisting
reports will be hosted on the NASA website, ensuring continuity of reporting.”
“This document was written for the American people, paid for by the
taxpayers, and it contains vital information we need to keep ourselves safe in
a changing climate, as the disasters that continue to mount demonstrate so
tragically and clearly,” said Texas Tech climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe.
She is chief scientist at The Nature Conservancy and co-author of several past
national climate assessments.
Copies of past reports are still squirreled away in the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's library and the latest report and its
interactive atlas can be seen here. Former Obama White House science adviser
and climate scientist John Holdren accused the administration of outright lying
and long intended to censor or bury the reports.
“The new stance is classic Trump administration misdirection,” Holdren
said. “In this instance, the administration offers a modest consolation to
quell initial outrage over the closure of the globalchange.gov site and the disappearance
of the National Climate Assessments. Then, two weeks later, they snatch away
the consolation with no apology.”
“They simply don’t want the public to see the meticulously assembled and
scientifically validated information about what climate change is already doing
to our farms, forests, and fisheries, as well as to storms, floods, wildfires,
and coast property — and about how all those damages will grow in the absence
of concerted remedial action,” Holdren said in an email.
That's why it's important that state and local governments and every day
people see these reports, Holdren said. He said they are written in a way that
is “useful to people who need to understand what climate change is doing and
will do to THEM, their loved ones, their property and their environment."
“Trump doesn't want people to know,” Holdren wrote. The most recent
report, issued in 2023, found that climate change is affecting people’s
security, health and livelihoods in every corner of the country in different
ways, with minority communities, particularly Native Americans, often
disproportionately at risk.