Websites hosting major U.S. climate reports taken down
Scientists said the peer-reviewed authoritative reports save money and lives. Websites for the national assessments and the U.S. Global Change Research Program were down Monday and Tuesday with no links, notes or referrals elsewhere. The White House, which was responsible for the assessments, said the information will be housed within NASA to comply with the law, but gave no further details.
Searches for the assessments on NASA websites did not turn them up. NASA did not respond to requests for information. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which coordinated the information in the assessments, did not respond to repeated inquiries.
"It's critical for decision makers across the country to know what the science in the National Climate Assessment is. That is the most reliable and well-reviewed source of information about climate that exists for the United States," said University of Arizona climate scientist Kathy Jacobs, who coordinated the 2014 version of the report.
'It's a sad day for the United States if it is true that the National Climate Assessment is no longer available," Jacobs said. "This is evidence of serious tampering with the facts and with people's access to information, and it actually may increase the risk of people being harmed by climate-related impacts.'
Harvard climate scientist John Holdren, who was President Obama's science advisor and whose office directed the assessments, said after the 2014 edition he visited governors, mayors and other local officials who told him how useful the 841-page report was. It helped them decide whether to raise roads, build seawalls and even move hospital generators from basements to roofs, he said.
'This is a government resource paid for by the taxpayer to provide the information that really is the primary source of information for any city, state or federal agency who's trying to prepare for the impacts of a changing climate,' said Texas Tech climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe, who has been a volunteer author for several editions of the report.
Copies of past reports are still squirreled away in NOAA's library. NASA's open science data repository includes dead links to the assessment site.
The most recent report, issued in 2023, included an interactive atlas that zoomed down to the county level. It found that climate change is affecting people's security, health and livelihoods in every corner of the country in different ways, with minority and Native American communities often disproportionately at risk.
The 1990 Global Change Research Act requires a national climate assessment every four years and directs the president to establish an interagency United States Global Change Research Program. In the spring, the Trump administration told the volunteer authors of the next climate assessment that their services weren't needed and ended the contract with the private firm that helps coordinate the website and report.
Additionally, NOAA's main climate.gov website was recently forwarded to a different NOAA website. Social media and blogs at NOAA and NASA about climate impacts for the general public were cut or eliminated.
'It's part of a horrifying big picture,' Holdren said. 'It's just an appalling whole demolition of science infrastructure.'
The national assessments are more useful than international climate reports put out by the United Nations every seven or so years because they are more localised and more detailed, Hayhoe and Jacobs said.
The national reports are not only peer reviewed by other scientists, but examined for accuracy by the National Academy of Sciences, federal agencies, the staff and the public.
Hiding the reports would be censoring science, Jacobs said.
And it's dangerous for the country, Hayhoe said, comparing it to steering a car on a curving road by only looking through the rearview mirror: "And now, more than ever, we need to be looking ahead to do everything it takes to make it around that curve safely. It's like our windshield's being painted over.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
31 minutes ago
- India Today
Ancient Earth kept boiling for five million years. We now know what happened
Researchers believe they've found the missing piece of the puzzle — and it's rooted in the soil. (Photo: Nasa) CO₂ levels remained sky-high, and so did global temperatures The lessons from 250 million years ago feel eerily relevant Once again, the planet may be approaching a tipping point A new study has shed light on one of Earth's most mysterious climate disasters â€' revealing that the planet remained trapped in extreme heat for millions of years after a mass extinction, largely because the plants didn't grow back fast enough. The event in question is the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction, also known as the 'Great Dying,' which occurred around 252 million years ago and wiped out nearly 90% of life on Earth. Scientists have long linked this catastrophe to massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia that released huge amounts of greenhouse gases, causing runaway global warming. But here's the puzzling part: the extreme heat didn't subside when the eruptions ended. It lingered for five million years. Now, researchers believe they've found the missing piece of the puzzle â€' and it's rooted in the soil. Using fossil records and climate modeling, scientists reconstructed how plant life changed across the globe during and after the extinction. What they discovered was striking: a massive collapse of land vegetation, especially in tropical areas, led to very low carbon absorption by plants. Without enough greenery to pull carbon dioxide out of the air and store it in the ground, CO levels remained sky-high, and so did global temperatures. The study, published in Nature, shows how important plants are in balancing the Earth's climate. The collapse of ecosystems didn't just affect life on land â€' it created a dangerous feedback loop: fewer plants meant more CO in the air, which meant more heat, which made it even harder for plants to recover. 'This ancient climate crisis carries a clear warning,' say scientists. 'When ecosystems collapse, the climate doesn't just bounce back.' As the modern world faces rapid deforestation and rising carbon emissions, the lessons from 250 million years ago feel eerily relevant. Once again, the planet may be approaching a tipping point â€' and what happened in the past could happen again if natural systems that trap carbon are allowed to fail. A new study has shed light on one of Earth's most mysterious climate disasters â€' revealing that the planet remained trapped in extreme heat for millions of years after a mass extinction, largely because the plants didn't grow back fast enough. The event in question is the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction, also known as the 'Great Dying,' which occurred around 252 million years ago and wiped out nearly 90% of life on Earth. Scientists have long linked this catastrophe to massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia that released huge amounts of greenhouse gases, causing runaway global warming. But here's the puzzling part: the extreme heat didn't subside when the eruptions ended. It lingered for five million years. Now, researchers believe they've found the missing piece of the puzzle â€' and it's rooted in the soil. Using fossil records and climate modeling, scientists reconstructed how plant life changed across the globe during and after the extinction. What they discovered was striking: a massive collapse of land vegetation, especially in tropical areas, led to very low carbon absorption by plants. Without enough greenery to pull carbon dioxide out of the air and store it in the ground, CO levels remained sky-high, and so did global temperatures. The study, published in Nature, shows how important plants are in balancing the Earth's climate. The collapse of ecosystems didn't just affect life on land â€' it created a dangerous feedback loop: fewer plants meant more CO in the air, which meant more heat, which made it even harder for plants to recover. 'This ancient climate crisis carries a clear warning,' say scientists. 'When ecosystems collapse, the climate doesn't just bounce back.' As the modern world faces rapid deforestation and rising carbon emissions, the lessons from 250 million years ago feel eerily relevant. Once again, the planet may be approaching a tipping point â€' and what happened in the past could happen again if natural systems that trap carbon are allowed to fail. Join our WhatsApp Channel


India Today
3 hours ago
- India Today
One year on this newly discovered plant is just seven days on Earth
Astronomers have discovered a new planet, which is so close to its star that one year lasts just seven days. The planet completes one revolution around the Sun in just seven team found that the planet, dubbed HIP 67522 b, orbits its parent star so tightly that it appears to cause frequent flares from the star's surface, heating and inflating the planet's new planet was discovered by a team of scientists from the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland, led by Ekaterina Ilin of the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy. They used space-borne telescopes, Nasa's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) and the European Space Agency's CHaracterising ExoPlanets Telescope (CHEOPS), to track flares on the star. This is the first-ever evidence for a 'planet with a death wish'. Though it was theorised to be possible since the nineties, the flares seen in this research are around 100 times more energetic than expected. Astronomers using the European Space Agency's Cheops mission have caught a clingy exoplanet that seems to be triggering flares of radiation from the star it orbits. (Photo: ESA) advertisementThe planet is orbiting a star named HIP 67522, which was known to be just slightly larger and cooler than our own host star, the Sun. But while the Sun is a middle-aged 4.5-billion-year-old, HIP 67522 is a fresh-faced 17-million-year-old. It bears two planets."The star and the planet form a powerful but likely destructive bond. In a manner not yet fully understood, the planet hooks into the star's magnetic field, triggering flares on the star's surface; the flares whiplash energy back to the planet. Combined with other high-energy radiation from the star, the flare-induced heating appears to have increased the already steep inflation of the planet's atmosphere," Nasa said in a being bombarded with so much high-energy radiation does not bode well for HIP 67522 b. The planet is similar in size to Jupiter but has the density of candy floss, making it one of the wispiest exoplanets ever found. Graphic: ESA Over time, the radiation is eroding away the planet's feathery atmosphere, meaning it is losing mass much faster than expected. In the next 100 million years, it could go from an almost Jupiter-sized planet to a much smaller Neptune-sized planet seems to be triggering particularly energetic flares. The waves it sends along the star's magnetic field lines kick off flares at specific moments. But the energy of the flares is much higher than the energy of the waves. We think that the waves are setting off explosions that are waiting to happen,' points out Ekaterina.- Ends


India Today
5 hours ago
- India Today
Interstellar object passing through our Solar System is a comet. More details
The interstellar object passing through our Solar System has been identified as a from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius, the interstellar comet has been officially named 3I/ATLAS. It was first identified by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (Atlas) survey telescope in Rio Hurtado, is only the third such object to have been identified as having an interstellar origin, which means it did not begin its journey in our Solar System and will not end it here. Rather, it will cross the length of our Solar System and exit our world in due course of may have just discovered the third interstellar object passing through the Solar System!ESA's Planetary Defenders are observing the object, provisionally known as #A11pl3Z, right now using telescopes around the world.— ESA Operations (@esaoperations) July 2, 2025advertisementWHAT IS THE INTERSTELLAR OBJECT? An interstellar object is a space object that originates from outside our solar system, meaning it was not formed around the Sun, but instead came from another star system or the space between said that since its discovery from Chile on July 1, old observations have been gathered from the archives of three different ATLAS telescopes around the world and the Zwicky Transient Facility at the Palomar Observatory in San Diego County, California."These pre-discovery observations extend back to June 14. Numerous telescopes have reported additional observations since the object was first reported," Nasa interstellar comet's size and physical properties are being investigated by astronomers around the world. 3I/ATLAS should remain visible to ground-based telescopes through September, after which it will pass too close to the Sun to observe. A comet seen passing through the skies of Earth. (Photo: Nasa) advertisementWHERE IS IT CURRENTLY? The interstellar object is currently located nearly 670 million kilometres away from Earth in the orbit of Jupiter. As it comes closer to Earth, Nasa maintains that Earth is in a safe zone as it will fly away from a distance of 240 million kilometres from us.3I/ATLAS will reach its closest approach to the Sun around Oct. 30, at a distance of 1.4 AU or 210 million kilometres, just inside the orbit of said that once it disappears from view due to its proximity to the Sun, it will only reappear in December. "It is expected to reappear on the other side of the Sun by early December, allowing for renewed observations," Nasa added.- Ends