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CBS 60 Minutes March 19, 2006
Rewriting the Science
(James
Hansen, Global Warming)
Interviewer: Scott Pelley
*
means narration, not
verbatim from interview
*As a government
scientist,
James Hansen
is taking a risk. He says there are things the White House doesn't want you
to hear but he's going to say them anyway.
James Hansen
is arguably the world's leading researcher on global warming. He's the head
of NASA's top institute studying the climate. But this imminent scientist
tells
60 Minutes
correspondent Scott Pelley that the Bush administration is
restricting who he can talk to and editing what he can say. Politicians, he
says, are rewriting the science. But he didn't hold back speaking to Pelley,
telling
60 Minutes
what he knows.
Pelley: Do you believe
the administration is censoring what you can say to the public?
Hansen: They're
censoring whether or not I can say it. I mean, I say what I believe if I'm
allowed to say it."
*What James Hansen
believes is that global warming is accelerating. He points to the melting
arctic and to
Antarctica,
where new data show massive losses of ice to the sea.
Pelley: Is it fair to
say at this point that humans control the climate? Is that possible?
Hansen: There's no
doubt about that. The natural changes, the speed of the natural changes is
now dwarfed by the changes that humans are making to the atmosphere and to
the surface."
*Those human changes,
he says, are driven by burning fossil fuels that pump out greenhouse gases
like CO2, carbon dioxide. Hansen says his research shows that
man has just 10 years to reduce greenhouse gases before global warming
reaches what he calls a tipping point and becomes unstoppable. He says the
White House is blocking that message.
Hansen: In my more than
three decades in the government I've never witnessed such restrictions on
the ability of scientists to communicate with the public.
*Restrictions like this
e-mail Hansen's institute received from NASA in 2004. "… there is a new
review process … ," the e-mail read. "The White House (is) now reviewing
all climate related press releases," it continued.
*Why the scrutiny of
Hansen's work? Well, his Goddard Institute for Space Studies is the source
of respected but sobering research on warming. It recently announced 2005
was the warmest year on record. Hansen started at NASA more than 30 years
ago, spending nearly all that time studying the earth. How important is his
work?
60 Minutes asked someone
at the top, Ralph Cicerone, president of the nation’s leading institute of
science, the National Academy of Sciences.
Cicerone: There's two
or three others as good, but nobody better.
And Cicerone, who’s an
atmospheric chemist, said the same thing every leading scientist told 60
Minutes.
Cicerone: Climate
change is really happening.
Pelley: What is causing
the changes?
Cicerone: Carbon
dioxide and methane, and chlorofluorocarbons and a couple of others, which
are all the increases in their concentrations in the air are due to human
activities. It's that simple."
*But if it is that
simple, why do some climate science reports look like they have been
heavily edited at the White House? With science labeled "not sufficiently
reliable." It’s a tone of scientific uncertainty the president set in his
first months in office after he pulled out of a global treaty to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
*”We do not know how
much our climate could, or will change in the future," President Bush said
in 2001, speaking in the Rose Garden of the White House. "We do not know
how fast change will occur, or even how some of our actions could impact
it."
*Annoyed by the
ambiguity, Hansen went public a year and a half ago, saying this about the
Bush administration in a talk at the University of Iowa: "I find a
willingness to listen only to those portions of scientific results that fit
predetermined inflexible positions. This, I believe, is a recipe for
environmental disaster."
*Since then, NASA has
been keeping an eye on Hansen. NASA let Pelley sit down with him, but only
with a NASA representative taping the interview. Other interviews have been
denied.
Hansen: I object to the
fact that I’m not able to freely communicate via the media. National
Public Radio wanted to interview me and they were told they would need to
interview someone at NASA headquarters and the comment was made that they
didn’t want Jim Hansen going on the most liberal media in America. So I
don’t think that kind of decision should be made on that kind of basis. I
think we should be able to communicate the science.
*Politically, Hansen
calls himself an independent and he’s had trouble with both parties. He
says, from time to time, the Clinton administration wanted to hear warming
was worse that it was. But Hansen refused to spin the science that way.
Hansen: Should we be
simply doing our science and reporting it rigorously, or to what degree the
administration in power has the right to assume that you should be a
spokesman for the administration. I've tried to be a straight
scientist doing the science and reporting it as best I can.
*Dozens of federal
agencies report science but much of it is edited at the White House before
it is sent to Congress and the public. It appears climate science is edited
with a heavy hand. Drafts of climate reports were co-written by Rick Piltz
for the federal Climate Change Science Program. But Piltz says his work was
edited by the White House to make global warming seem less threatening.
Piltz: The strategy of
people with a political agenda to avoid this issue is to say there is so
much to study way upstream here that we can’t even being to discuss impacts
and response strategies. There’s too much uncertainty. It's not the
climate scientists that are saying that, its lawyers and politicians.
*Piltz worked under the
Clinton and Bush administrations. Each year, he helped write a report to
Congress called "Our Changing Planet." Piltz says he is
responsible for editing the report and sending a review draft to the White
House.
Pelley: What
happens?
Piltz: It comes back
with a large number of edits, handwritten on the hard copy by the
chief-of-staff of the Council on Environmental Quality.
Pelly: Who is chief of
staff?
Piltz: Phil Cooney.
Cooney is not a scientist. He's a lawyer. He was a lobbyist for the
American Petroleum Institute, before going into the White House.
*Cooney, the former oil
industry lobbyist, became chief-of-staff at the White House Council on
Environmental Quality. Piltz says Cooney edited climate reports in his own
hand. In one report, a line that said "earth is undergoing rapid change"
becomes “may be undergoing change.” “Uncertainty” becomes “significant
remaining uncertainty.” One line that says "energy production
contributes to warming" was just crossed out.
Piltz: He was obviously
passing it through a political screen. He would put in the word potential
or may or weaken or delete text that had to do with the likely consequence
of climate change, pump up uncertainty language throughout.
*In a report, Piltz
says Cooney added this line “… the uncertainties remain so great as to
preclude meaningfully informed decision making. …” References to human
health are marked out.
60 Minutes obtained the
drafts from the Government Accountability Project. This edit made it into
the final report: the phrase “earth may be” undergoing change made
it into the report to Congress.
*Piltz says there
wasn’t room at the White House for those who disagreed, so he resigned.
Piltz: Even to raise
issues internally is immediately career limiting. That’s why you will find
not too many people in the federal agencies who will speak freely about all
the things they know, unless they’re retired or unless they’re ready to
resign.
*Jim Hansen isn't
retiring or resigning because he believes earth is nearing a point of no
return. He urged 60 Minutes to look north to the arctic, where temperatures
are rising twice as fast as the rest of the world. When
60 Minutes visited
Greenland this past August, we saw for ourselves the accelerating melt of
the largest ice sheet in the north.
Pelley: Here in
Greenland about 15 years ago the ice sheet extended to right about where
I'm standing now, but today, its back there, between those two hills in the
shaded area. Glaciologists call this a melt stream but, these days, its a
more like a melt river. (spoken in front of ice sheet in Greenland)
*The Bush
administration doesn’t deny global warming or that man plays a role. The
administration is spending billions of dollars on climate research. Hansen
gives the White House credit for research but says what’s urgent now is
action.
Hansen: We have to, in
the next 10 years, get off this exponential curve and begin to decrease the
rate of growth of CO2 emissions, and then flatten it out. And
before we get to the middle of the century, we’ve got to be on a declining
curve. If that doesn't happen in 10 years, then I don’t think we can keep
global warming under one degree Celsius and that means we’re going to, that
there’s a great danger of passing some of these tipping points. If the ice
sheets begin to disintegrate, what can you do about it? You can’t tie a
rope around the ice sheet. You can’t build a wall around the ice sheets. It
will be a situation that is out of our control.
*But that's not a
situation you'll find in one federal report submitted for review.
Government scientists wanted to tell you about the ice sheets, but before a
draft of the report left the White House, the paragraph on glacial melt and
flooding was crossed out and this was added: "straying from research
strategy into speculative findings and musings here."
*Hansen says his words
were edited once during a presentation when a top official scolded him for
using the word "danger."
Hansen: I think we know
a lot more about the tipping points. I think we know about the dangers of
even a moderate degree of additional global warming about the potential
effects in the arctic about the potential effects on the ice sheets.
Pelley: You just used
that word again that you’re not supposed to use, danger.
Hansen: Yeah. It’s a
danger.
For months,
60 Minutes had been
trying to talk with the president’s science advisor.
60 Minutes was finally
told he would never be available. Phil Cooney, the editor at the Council on
Environmental Quality didn’t return
60 Minutes' calls. In
June, he left the White House and went to work for Exxon Mobil.
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