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Scientists launch coordinated response after Trump admin attempts to wipe credible climate research off the record

Scientists launch coordinated response after Trump admin attempts to wipe credible climate research off the record

CNN5 days ago
Dozens of veteran climate scientists are launching a coordinated response to a Trump administration report that casts doubt on the severity of climate change. The report, released last week alongside proposals to deregulate some polluting sectors, was authored by five researchers well-known for sowing doubt over the impacts Americans are feeling from the climate crisis.
The scientists, responsible for authoring or contributing research to hundreds of peer-reviewed studies, want to counter what they interpret as the Trump administration's attempts to wipe credible, widely accepted climate science off the record.
In addition to the report, which the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Agency are using as evidence to weaken pollution rules, the administration has removed all congressionally mandated climate assessments from federal websites. Energy Sec. Chris Wright said the administration is changing those previously published assessments before they put them back on the web, CNN reported.
The scientists are planning to author a public comment on the Energy Department's report released last week, according to Andy Dessler, director of the Texas Center for Extreme Weather at Texas A&M University, who is organizing the response.
'We want to get all the science into the public record, so that any debate over this will have access to solid science,' Dessler told CNN.
In addition to the self-organized efforts by mainstream climate scientists, the National Academy of Sciences announced Thursday it is launching a comprehensive review of climate science findings since 2009 — the year the endangerment finding was issued, which concluded climate pollution was endangering public health and welfare. The fast-track review, which the academy says will be self-funded, is set to be completed by September.
'Decades of climate research and data have yielded expanded understanding of how greenhouse gases affect the climate,' NAS president Marcia McNutt said in a statement. 'We are undertaking this fresh examination of the latest climate science in order to provide the most up-to-date assessment to policymakers and the public.'
In stark contrast to the National Climate Assessments, which take years to research with multiple rounds of peer review, the five-person Trump report took just two months to research and write, with no peer review. Several climate scientists whose research was cited in the Trump report said it misused or misrepresented their work.
Dessler said scientists are going through the report 'section by section' to address all 'the mistakes (and) the things they left out.'
'There are a lot of things in there that fall into both those categories,' he added. 'It is not a valid representation of the science of climate change, and we want to make that clear.'
One federal climate scientist, who requested anonymity because they are not authorized to talk to the media, told CNN the notion that the DOE report is an assessment or comprehensive review of climate science is 'nonsensical on its face.' The scientist pointed to the lack of peer review, paucity of the report's authors and rushed timeframe, among other reasons.
'It's just garbage,' the scientist said, referring to the reigniting of the 'false debate' over whether climate change is caused by humans and threatens lives and livelihoods. 'It's like somebody took all the bullshit from 10 years ago, didn't refrigerate it and has now regurgitated it.'
Kim Cobb, who directs the Institute at Brown University for Environment and Society and is part of the group working to respond to the DOE report, told CNN it's significant that the Trump administration is deep-sixing the climate assessments at the same time it's releasing a misleading new report.
'The fact that this administration has buried the gold standard for climate science — the National Climate Assessments — while lifting up a report filled with misrepresentations and half-truths is a grim historical marker,' she said in an email. 'It's giving me flashbacks to 2005, when such false debates raged.'
Cobb said she hopes to help 'set the record straight' on climate science in their response to the DOE report. She intends to speak at the public hearing on the repeal of the endangerment finding, a 2009 scientific finding that human-caused climate change endangers human health and safety, which has underpinned many of the federal government's biggest pollution regulations.
Wright told CNN he hand-picked the four researchers and one economist who authored the Trump administration report: John Christy and Roy Spencer, both research scientists at the University of Alabama at Huntsville, Steven E. Koonin of Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Georgia Tech professor emeritus Judith Curry and Canadian economist Ross McKitrick.
'I just made a list of who do I think are the true, honest scientists,' Wright said. 'I made a list of about a dozen of them that I thought were very senior and very well respected. I called the top five, and everyone said yes.'
Zeke Hausfather is one of the scientists whose work was misrepresented in the DOE report and is the climate research lead at financial services company Stripe. Hausfather also helped author the Fifth National Climate Assessment.
Hausfather told CNN he 'wasn't that surprised' that his research was included, because it has focused on how climate modeling can be improved.
'The problem with the way both the EPA and DOE report used my findings is they left out the context of how the community has adapted and evolved' on modeling, Hausfather said.
In arguing for the endangerment finding to be overturned, the Trump EPA highlighted how the direst climate scenarios are getting less likely; therefore, the US government doesn't need continue to adhere to the endangerment finding — a bit of circular reasoning these scientists are particularly frustrated about.
It's as if the Trump administration is saying, 'We're heading towards a slightly less dire future in terms of emissions, so we can roll back existing climate policy,' Hausfather said.
The worst-case scenarios, like the planet warming to 4 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, are looking less likely precisely because nations are cutting their planet-warming fossil fuel emissions and moving to clean tech like wind, solar, batteries and electric vehicles.
That doesn't mean the planet is out of the woods.
'A 3-degree world by 2100 is going to be a world with huge climate damages,' Hausfather said.
Wright called the critiques about the DOE report misusing others' research an 'unfair assessment.'
'I don't know that particular author, but if some data set is taken from some author and his conclusions are different from the data set, well, that's the process of science,' Wright said. 'It'll be improved as we get feedback and comments from others, and we'll continue to elaborate on it.'
Dessler, the climate scientist leading the response to the DOE report, said the science community is angry about their work being deleted and twisted to fit the Trump administration's narratives promoting fossil fuels and downplaying the severity of climate change.
'People are really mad,' Dessler said. 'We've devoted our lives to doing good science, and bad science is offensive. They're not raising interesting questions and they're not identifying things that scientists have overlooked; much of it is already debunked.'
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Timelapse video captures dramatic rise of glacial lakes in Alaska that prompted floods
Timelapse video captures dramatic rise of glacial lakes in Alaska that prompted floods

Yahoo

timea few seconds ago

  • Yahoo

Timelapse video captures dramatic rise of glacial lakes in Alaska that prompted floods

Timelapse video captured the dramatic increase in water level at a glacial lake near Alaska's capital city of Juneau, which was bracing for flooding after a "glacial outburst" inundated a nearby river. It's the third consecutive year that significant summer glacial flooding has threatened parts of the city of more than 30,000, as authorities warned Wednesday morning, Aug. 13, that the Juneau area would remain in "major flood stage area for several more hours." Scientists say each flood, including the current one, were all due to climate change. Alaska is warming faster than any other state, and its many glaciers are among the fastest melting, or retreating, glaciers on Earth, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Watch: Timelapse video captures dramatic water level increase Video footage captured rising water levels from July into August at Mendenhall Lake and a lake roughly 2.5 miles north of Nugget Creek. 'Glacial outbursts' have become more common in area Glacial lake outburst floods in Mendenhall Valley, where the majority of Juneau resides, have become a yearly occurrence since 2011, NOAA scientists say, as a once ice-covered basin formed from a retreating glacier above the city regularly fills with rain and snowmelt, similar to a lake. In this case, the Mendenhall Glacier north of Juneau acts as an ice dam for the meltwater that fills the basin, named Suicide Basin, but fails each summer amid higher temperatures. It gives way and sends waters that have collected in the Suicide Basin to drain past the glacial dam and empty into Mendenhall Lake and Mendenhall River, increasingly leading to major flooding. As of the latest updates from the National Weather Service, Mendenhall River levels surpassed what was seen in 2023 and 2024, when a similiar glacial lake outburst flood, or GLOF, events set records and damaged dozens of homes and structures. As of 8:30 a.m. local time, the river stood at 15.92 feet and was falling after reaching 16.65 feet about an hour prior, according to monitors at the National Weather Service. City officials said in a statement that affected areas downriver would remain in major flood stage area for several more hours. City officials said in statements to social media that power has been cut to swaths of the city and said it will be restored once flood waters recede. During the 2023 flood, Mendenhall Lake reached a peak water level of 15 feet, and in 2024, it rose a foot higher to 16 feet. In the 2024 flood, which broke records at the time, scientists with the the University of Alaska and the U.S. Geological Survey said river flow jumped to 42,000 cubic feet per second − a 25% increase − about half the flow rate of Niagara Falls. Gov. Mike Dunleavy issued a preemptive disaster declaration on Aug. 10, citing the devastation caused by "glacial outbursts" in 2023 and 2024. Juneau city officials, with federal assistance, installed emergency flood barriers over the past year along more than two miles of riverbanks in areas considered most at risk of overflowing from these glacial lake outburst floods. Although the new barriers are designed to hold back a flood of this potential magnitude, officials asked some residents to evacuate as a precaution. Official updates and resources are available at and mergency preparedness information can be found at Contributing: Trevor Hughes and Jeanine Santucci, USA TODAY; Reuters Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@ and on X @KathrynPlmr. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Timelapse video shows glacier lakes rise, causing Juneau floods

Meet The Tech Billionaire Giving Students A Boost
Meet The Tech Billionaire Giving Students A Boost

Forbes

time2 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Meet The Tech Billionaire Giving Students A Boost

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Alien: Earth premiere review: a deep, dark sci-fi masterpiece
Alien: Earth premiere review: a deep, dark sci-fi masterpiece

Digital Trends

time32 minutes ago

  • Digital Trends

Alien: Earth premiere review: a deep, dark sci-fi masterpiece

Alien: Earth episode 1 Score Details 'FX's hit series, Alien: Earth, brings intense sci-fi terror to Earth and new life to the Alien franchise.' Pros Terrific performances Compelling characters Haunting atmosphere Expansive worldbuilding Cons Many plotlines with a slow pace 'Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.' Noah Hawley's (Fargo, Legion) long-awaited sci-fi horror series, Alien: Earth, has premiered on FX and Hulu, kicking off a bold, frightening new chapter in the Alien franchise. The pilot, written and directed by Howley, shows the spaceship Maginot crash-landing on Earth while delivering some of the deadliest alien creatures in the universe, including the franchise's dreaded mascot, the Xenomorph. Recommended Videos From the very beginning, Alien: Earth replicates the look and feel of Ridley Scott's original horror film, from the music to the set design to the cinematography. Even the awakening of the Maginot's crew mirrors that of Ripley and her crew in the 1979 film. Though the show's beginning is familiar to franchise fans, it quickly forges its own stellar identity within the world of Alien. And like the franchise's vicious aliens, this new series gets under viewers' skin until their chest bursts with sheer terror. A brave new world The first episode of Alien: Earth takes its time introducing its main characters, specifically Wendy, CJ, and Morrow. Much of the pilot is dedicated to building up their respective stories, which ultimately converge when the Maginot crashes into a city on Earth. This sets off Wendy's thrilling adventure, not just to stop the Xenomorph, but also to reunite with her brother, CJ, with their loving bond adding plenty of heartwarming drama and childlike wonder to this dark tale. Also, in its first episode, Alien: Earth greatly expands the world of the franchise, not just by introducing new, creepy extraterrestrials, including a crawling eyeball with tentacles. The series delves deep into the bleak, dystopian sci-fi world that Earth has become, with five megacorporations ruling over entire countries and planets throughout the solar system like royal houses. At the same time, the show puts a unique spin on synthetic androids, introducing a group of terminally ill children whose minds are transferred into robot bodies by the Prodigy Corporation. Much like Stranger Things, Prodigy holds these special children captive in their 'Neverland' lab, observing them until they leave to battle otherworldly creatures that appear on Earth. Nevertheless, this setup makes Alien: Earth its own story within the franchise's world, and the latter is better off for it. The characters Alien: Earth features a variety of eerie and entertaining characters. Sydney Chandler leads this new series as Wendy, who is introduced as the first child to have her mind transferred to a synthetic body. Though she now inhabits a grown-up's body, ironically, she is unable to grow physically older in a clear allusion to the story of Peter Pan. Chandler delivers an entrancing performance portraying a wide-eyed, playful child living in an adult's body. It is clear that Wendy has some growing up to do, as she's still learning about the world and her new, ageless form. However, she is forced to grow up fast when she decides to save her brother. Speaking of him, Alex Lawther also sells his respective role as CJ, who, despite being a soldier, is clearly still a kid who's way in over his head as he ventures into the Maginot's crash site and witnesses world-shattering horrors. Meanwhile, actor Samuel Blenkin rules over Prodigy as Boy Kavalier, whose persona as an immature, kidnapping 'tech bro' parallels young Wendy with a sinister mix of Peter Pan and Mark Zuckerberg. However, the series features even greater menace from its sinister androids. Babou Ceesay stands out as the callous, emotionless robot Morrow, who, like Ian Holm's Ash, is driven solely by his directive from his company to capture the Xenomorph. Timothy Olyphant's android, Kirsh, is just as unsettling with his icy demeanor. He also delivers an especially chilling monologue about humans being food, wrapping up the episode on a high note and setting the stage for humanity's bloody, existential war against their alien guests. On Earth, everyone can hear the screams Like Ridley Scott's Alien, Hawley's new series takes its time building up terror and suspense. In true reverence to its predecessor, Alien: Earth crafts a dark, chilling atmosphere as it turns the Maginot into another haunted house in space. This is a sharp contrast to the bright, lush 'paradise' of Neverland. While scenes in such Earth-bound locations steer away from alien gore, its horror hits close to home. With Prodigy no longer considering its children human due to their new synthetic bodies, the series shows more of the corrupt, exploitative nature of one of the franchise's multiple evil corporations, using lies and technicalities to further their twisted agendas. It's a slow-burning horror, but all that careful construction pays off with frightening scenes like the Xenomorph's rampage on the Maginot and the ship's crash into the city. Composer Jeff Russo's foreboding music, reminiscent of the original Alien's score, fills the air with an even greater sense of impending doom. The show pairs it well with dreamlike imagery, including flash cuts and superimposed shots, to bring a surreal, sci-fi nightmare to life. Is Alien: Earth worth a watch? Though few Alien projects have come close to rivaling Ridley Scott's iconic original film, Alien: Earth is one of those exceptional few that lives up to its legacy and stands tall on its own. Diehard fans of Alien will enjoy the show's faithful, frightening style. Fans of Prometheus should also enjoy its philosophical exploration of humanity and evolution through its compelling cast of characters. While the dense, slow-burning story may turn off some viewers, the show's second episode (which premiered on the same day) goes all in on the alien terror as it unleashes a gory, sci-fi slasher-fest. This all makes Alien: Earth a distinctive addition to the franchise's canon, with the pilot setting up a vast, thoughtful epic that demands audiences' attention. The first two episodes of Alien: Earth are now streaming on Hulu. Episode 3 will air at 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday, August 19.

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