Judging Climate Claims: Prove It, Pruitt
Judging Climate Claims: Prove It, Pruitt
In March 2017, Scott Pruitt appeared on CNBC's “Squawk Box” morning news and talk show. When asked about carbon dioxide and climate change, he opined, “I would not agree that it’s a primary contributor to the global warming that we see.” He also said that there was a “tremendous disagreement” about the impact human activity has on the Earth's climate. The next day, the nonprofit group PEER (Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility) filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request asking Pruitt's EPA to share any and all studies that backed up Pruitt's on-air climate claims. Since Pruitt's statements fly in the face of the overwhelming consensus regarding climate change (and, frankly, against some rather basic science), surely he must be sitting on some revolutionary information that would change everything (if true).PEER's broad FOIA filing requested “EPA documents that support the conclusion that human activity is not the largest factor driving global climate change.” The EPA, an agency once tasked with protecting the environment, fought back, refusing to comply with the request. Prior to Pruitt's tenure at the agency, the EPA released many reports outlining the overwhelming effects of human activity on our destabilizing climate; now, apparently, it's all essentially unknowable, and the details are just too hard to dig up. The EPA couldn't, or wouldn't, support Pruitt's climate claims. PEER decided to sue the agency, adding one more lawsuit to the EPA's impressive and growing pile of litigation.Last week, Judge Beryl A. Howell, an Obama nominee serving as chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, ruled that the EPA would have to comply with the FOIA request by producing the documentation to back up the climate claims by July 2, 2018. If they are unable to do so, they will have some explaining to do by July 11th.While it's certainly satisfying to make Scott Pruitt and his agency squirm, asking Pruitt and the EPA to produce the evidence behind the climate claims shows a misunderstanding, perhaps deliberately so, surrounding the EPA's new role under the Trump administration. While Steve Bannon was banished from the Trump inner circle last August (centuries ago, in Trump news cycles), his plan to deconstruct the administrative state lives on in Trump's picks to head federal agencies. Scott Pruitt, in particular, was previously known for repeatedly challenging EPA regulations during his tenure as Oklahoma's attorney general. The point is to reduce that which should be the guardian of the public interest into a tiny, remnant rubber-stamper for corporate interests.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, which captures solar radiation and heats the Earth, as the EPA described in this 2012 graphic. Public domain image created by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Sources:
Scott Pruitt Must Do His Job, Federal Judge Rules
Judge orders EPA to disclose any science backing up Pruitt’s climate claims
Judge Orders EPA to Produce Science behind Pruitt’s Warming Claims
2 key environmental policies Scott Pruitt was dismantling this week amid his scandals
Conservatives probably can’t be persuaded on climate change. So now what?
Waking Conservative Climate Movement Struggles Against Denialism In Red States
This Is How the Republican Party Plans to Destroy the Federal Government
Steve Bannon Says Trump's Cabinet Picks Are Intended to ‘Deconstruct’ Regulation and Agencies
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.