// ARS TECHNICA — HARDWARE & GADGET
Have politics finally come for the National Academies of Science?
A pending report on climate attribution may be setting the stage for conflict.
Founded during the US Civil War to provide advice to the government, the National Academies of Science have become one of the most prestigious scientific organizations. Its primary function is to prepare comprehensive reports on scientific and technological issues, aided by its ability to attract top talent from across the country.
Those reports have not been afraid to weigh in on matters of public controversy and risk offending powerful groups, which it has managed to do without losing the respect of the governmental organizations that fund these reports. But this year, there have been increasing signs that the Academies’ ability to dodge political firestorms has reached its limit. Yesterday, a deeply reported story from Politico explained the breakdown between the National Academies and Republican politicians.
The National Academies is preparing an expert report on attribution of weather events to human-driven climate change, and fossil fuel companies are worried it will lead to findings of liability in the many cases where those companies are being sued.
In public, the National Academies has been very circumspect in its approach to the overt hostility toward science displayed by the Trump administration. The organization’s president, Marcia McNutt, almost completely ignored the attacks in her annual “state of the science” address last year, and repeated that approach in this year’s. But that hasn’t helped the organization stay out of Republican crosshairs.
The problem, apparently, was projects that were started during previous administrations. One of these was the production of the fourth edition of the Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence. This was prepared for the Federal Judicial Center to help judges determine how to handle scientific issues that come before the courts.
The fourth edition was the first to contain a chapter on climate change, but a group of Republican state attorneys general had issues with it. The chapter included information from people who had been involved in litigation over climate damages; rather than seeing that as a sign of expertise, the AGs viewed it as a form of bias. Also an issue: the chapter treated human-driven climate change as established science (which it is), which was termed a failure to be impartial.
The state attorneys general demanded that the Federal Judicial Center pull the chapter, and it immediately caved. But the National Academies had already placed the original, intact report on its website. When the state attorneys general demanded that it follow the Judicial Center’s lead, it declined.
At that point, Republicans in Congress stepped in. A group of 11 representatives sent a letter to the head of the Office of Management and Budget in which they “respectfully urged” the office’s director to “investigate whether NASEM should be suspended or debarred from all
federal funding under your jurisdiction.” Again, the issue is that they feel there should be some sort of affirmative action for the views of people who refuse to accept the evidence for human-driven climate change: “Most shocking is that there was no fully independent, meaningful peer review from scientists with differing views on climate science.”
Similarly, members of Congress threatened to investigate the National Academies when it organized an updated climate report at the same time as the Department of Energy had brought together a group of fringe contrarians to produce something that said that all those carbon emissions are probably fine.