Trump Will Meet With Top Advisers To Discuss Plans To Challenge Climate Change Reports

Thunderian

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Awesome.

Trump Will Meet With Top Advisers To Discuss Plans To Challenge Climate Change Reports, Source Says
  • President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet Wednesday with close advisers to discuss creating a commission to scrutinize government climate change reports.
  • The commission would be spearheaded by Princeton physicist William Happer, who sees CO2 emissions as a net benefit for the planet.
  • Democrats have attacked Happer’s plan, but it’s gotten backing from a vast coalition of conservative groups and activists.
President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet Wednesday with White House officials to discuss creating a commission to scrutinize climate change reports, according to a source familiar with the matter.​
Top National Security Council (NSC) officials John Bolton and William Happer will press Trump to create a commission to scrutinize major climate change reports, like last year’s National Climate Assessment, the source told the Daily Caller News Foundation.​
Should Trump agree, the plan is to issue an executive order creating a climate commission within the NSC, said the source who spoke on condition of anonymity. The White House did not respond to TheDCNF’s request for comment, and with unrest breaking out in Venezuela, such a meeting could be postponed.​
The source added that National Economic Council head Larry Kudlow and Kelvin Droegemeier, a climatologist who heads the Office of Science & Technology Policy, will be among those meeting with Trump to argue against creating a climate commission.​
Happer, a Princeton physicist, has pushed for Trump to create a commission to scrutinize U.S. military and intelligence claims that global warming is a national security threat. Happer was brought on to the NSC in September to analyze emerging technologies.​
Happer’s plan is similar to the failed effort spearheaded by former Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt to hold a “red team” exercise to debate climate science. Pruitt’s plan was heavily criticized and eventually abandoned.​
Likewise, Happer’s push for a climate commission has been viciously attacked by politicians and environmentalists. House Democrats opposed Happer’s push for a climate panel, saying his intent was to undermine the “consensus.”​
The Democratic chairs of four house committees wrote to Trump over “recent reports that the National Security Council (NSC) is planning to assemble a secret panel, led by a discredited climate change denier, to undermine the overwhelming scientific consensus on the nature and threats of climate change.”​
Many conservative activists, on the other hand, have come out in favor of setting up a commission to scrutinize climate claims, including nearly 140 groups and experts who sent a letter of support to Trump in March.​
“We suggest that climate science requires at least the same level of scrutiny as the engineering employed in building a bridge or a new airplane,” conservatives wrote to Trump.​
“If the defenders are confident that the science contained in official reports is robust, then they should welcome a review that would finally put to rest the doubts that have been raised,” conservatives wrote.​
“On the other hand, their opposition could be taken as evidence that the scientific basis of the climate consensus is in fact highly suspect and cannot withstand critical review,” conservatives wrote.​
Happer sits on the board of the CO2 Coalition, a group of scientists and policy experts who think carbon dioxide will end up being a net benefit to the planet by stimulating plant growth.​
“I like to call this the CO2 anti-defamation league,” Happer said at a conservative conference in 2016, “because there is the CO2 molecule, and it has undergone decade after decade of abuse, for no reason.”​
Most climate scientists probably disagree with Happer on the benefits of warming, but NASA satellites have observed so-called “global greening” over the past three decades, which experts attribute largely to CO2 emissions.​
 

justjess

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Mar 16, 2017
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Ok so yes in theory increased co2 should benefit plant growth, but what we or atleast i am seeing is that the broad climate change accompanying it discourages plant growth (excessive rain, snow, rapid and extreme temperature swings like 36 degrees one day and 72 the next).. I haven’t seen a single cherry blossom so far this year, I used to see tons, we seem to be getting rain or snow every goddamn day for well over a year now and tornados are striking the appalachian mountains... granted I’ve only been alive 35ish years but the weather is crazy for the last couple and possibly before that but I was to busy to pay attention. Idk. What I do know is I used to be able to wear a T-shirt and hoodie for st pats and go to the jersey shore on spring break and right now I still have my winter coats out because it literally snowed this past weekend. The weather patterns are all screwed up.

I’m cool with all the various scientists getting together and debating though, I just feel that’s already been done and nauseum so I don’t know what else is to gain from it at this point.
 

Thunderian

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Mar 13, 2017
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I've been alive a bit longer than you, and I remember hearing in 1980 that we were going to be buried under a wall of ice by the year 2000. If the acid rain didn't melt us first.

These days it's, "This weather is crazy! Everything is melting! Give me 10 trillion dollars or you're a hate criminal." I don't buy it anymore.
 
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