Bush Administration suppressed Climate reports? Read them here
By Drew Bush on February 10, 2009 - 4:05pm
On Jan.16 — the last work day before the Bush Administration closed its doors — the U.S. Climate Science Program finally released five long-awaited government climate reports. Part of an interagency effort to integrate federal research on climate change, the reports began as presidential initiative started by President George H.W. Bush in 1989.
The last-minute release gave credence to the claims of critics who contended the reports were suppressed to avoid U.S. engagement on global warming. Past releases of these reports where often slowed to decrease scrutiny of them, critics contend. The newly released reports are part of a series of 21 climate studies covering topics such as the effects of climate change on sea-level rise, in the Arctic and at high latitudes, and the thresholds of global warming in ecosystems.
Find the reports here.
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Sam Goldman
Sam has been with The Wilderness Society since Fall 2007. He came most recently from M+R Strategic Services in Washington, DC where he worked with national environmental groups to improve their online campaign work and field organizing capacity. Before that, Sam was the Assistant National Field Director for U.S. PIRG where he covered a variety of issues including the fight to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
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