In an effort to avoid public embarrassment, NOAA scientists apparently
attempted to forge a consensus among government experts about the link
between hurricanes and global warming. What they came up with was a
“Hurricane Fact Sheet” that was sent to NOAA headquarters for sign-off.
That was last spring, and that fact sheet remains
hidden from the public today.
Silencing Scientists?We also uncovered a document through the FOIA request that shows a
13 step illustration of the guantlet that a press release has to go through to be approved. Talk about red tape.
NOAA also
asks its scientists to notify the Public Affairs office when they are working on something that might be "controversial".
Read NOAA's media policy.So
let's get this straight, amplified hurricanes due to global warming is
"controversial"? What if a scientist were to discover that bird’s
migration patterns were being disrupted by global warming, or that
snowmelt in the mountains was accelerated, or drought deepened or a
heatwave worsened.
Since when should a scientist have to judge the importance of their studies on a political controversy scale?
This week, NATURE sheds light on this story with this
news feature.
For more background on this ongoing investigation by Greenpeace and others, here are some resources:
Screening Scientist InterviewsThis
shows a series of communications between a NOAA scientist and an
employee of NOAA public affairs discussing two incidents in
which reporters were denied the opportunity to interview him.
Read the e-mails.Imposed RestrictionsIn
this series of emails a NOAA public affairs official imposes
restrictions on what questions a reporter may ask in an interview with
a NOAA scientist.
Read the e-mails.
Leetma letter to MahoneyAnts
Leetma, a NOAA senior scientist writes a scathing letter to the head of
NOAA James Mahoney. Dr. Leetma is upset about NOAAs
misrepresentation of the current science available regarding the link
between hurricanes and global warming. He writes "It is
disconcerting scientifically that ... meteorologists were making
decadal hurricane projections based on a phenomena of which they know
nothing..."
Read the letter.Protest Letter
Regarding Hurricane ConsensusThis series of
emails shows an incident in which senior NOAA scientists take serious issue
with an official NOAA statement released by NOAA public affairs claiming
increased Atlantic hurricane activity "is not related to greenhouse
warming." They collaborate on writing a letter of protest to the Bush
appointee Conrad Lautenbacher, NOAA Administrator.
Read the e-mails.The New Republic dug into this story last February 2006, uncovering a muzzling of scientists on the subject of global warming and hurricanes.
Read the article.The New York Times covered how this document was blocked from release.
Read the article.Rueters gives a breakdown of the nature feature.
Read this articleThe Providence Journal ran a telling story in March 2006 containing telling interviews with NOAA scientists and public affairs officials.
Read the article.US News and World Report finds NOAA Administrator Conrad Lautenbacher in conflict with his spokesman.
Read the article.
Salon.com writer Paul Thacker revealed that the White House also had a hand on the muzzle.
Read the article.ABC News digs in and tries to get the truth from NOAA themselves.
Read the article.The Newark Star Ledger chronicles when the muzzle went on.
Read the article.
Congressman Waxman’s office has
dug its teeth into this story, sending a
letter of complaint to the Secretary of Commerce (which overseas NOAA) demanding a full explanation.
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