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EPA Chief Wheeler: Trump admin might ‘re‑examine’ climate science

https://www.eenews.net/climatewire/stories/1060305525

Wheeler: Trump admin might ‘re‑examine’ climate science

Jean Chemnick, E&E News reporter 
EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler used an overseas gathering of environment ministers this week to hint that the United States might overhaul the way it uses climate data and modeling. Five days after his assertion was included in an official document from the Group of Seven meeting in Metz, France, it remains unclear if Wheeler revealed a potential policy to reexamine climate modeling.

It’s become common for the United States to have its own climate and energy paragraph in multilateral statements, and on Monday, Wheeler broke away from the six other nations on issues like the Paris Agreement, providing support for poor and climate-affected countries, and overseas investments in fossil fuels.

That much was normal. It’s happened ever since President Trump took office in January 2017.

But Wheeler added something new that’s raising concern among some environmentalists that the United States might be formally questioning climate science inside federal agencies.

“The United States reaffirms its commitment to re-examine comprehensive modeling that best reflects the actual state of climate science in order to inform its policy-making decisions, including comparing actual monitored climate data against the modeled climate trajectories on an on-going basis,” says the U.S. portion of the communiqué.

Greens who follow the G-7 process were dismayed.

Alden Meyer, director of policy and strategy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, called the language “pretty troubling,” and Luca Bergamaschi of the Britain-based E3G called it “a major step back.”

They read Wheeler’s language as an attempt to undercut a report last year by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The report drew on thousands of peer-reviewed studies to warn of the importance of holding postindustrial warming to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Wheeler has been critical of the IPCC’s conclusions and of the National Climate Assessment, a U.S. report that issued similar warnings last year. He’s not alone in the Trump administration. In December, U.S. delegates to the U.N. climate talks in Katowice, Poland, joined Russia and Saudi Arabia to block language to “welcome” the IPCC’s findings.

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