White House drafts guidelines for panel
questioning climate threat to security
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[March 01, 2019]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House is
advancing plans to form a presidential panel that will question science
used in U.S. military and intelligence reports showing that human-driven
climate change poses national security risks, according to a source
briefed by participants in the negotiations.
The National Security Council at the White House has been considering
the formation of a climate panel that would likely be headed by William
Happer, a retired Princeton University physics professor who says
greenhouse gas emissions are good for the planet and who lacks a
background in climate science.
Happer said on CNBC in 2014 that the main greenhouse gas, carbon
dioxide, has been demonized, "just like the demonization of the poor
Jews under Hitler."
The NSC held a meeting on Feb. 22 to discuss the 12-member panel. Next
the NSC will likely send participants a document for comment, the source
said. Then there will likely be a deputies' meeting and a cabinet
meeting before President Donald Trump puts forward an executive order
calling for the panel.
Trump has repeatedly questioned whether humans are causing climate
change and has been angered by reports from his military and
intelligence agencies that storms, droughts and floods made worse by
climate change pose national security risks. Trump's administration has
pursued policies to boost output of oil, gas and coal and roll back
emissions limits on power plants, cars and trucks.
U.S. military bases, including North Carolina's Camp Lejeune, have
suffered billions of dollars in damage from recent hurricanes and
climate change could force the military to increase global humanitarian
missions.
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At last week's meeting, attendees also discussed downgrading the
panel to an ad hoc advisory group that would not be subject to rules
of a panel, also known as a federal advisory committee, including
that meetings must be subject to public records requests. That idea
was first reported by the Washington Post. But several officials
opposed forming an ad hoc panel, the source said.
"There were more people at the meeting in support of forming the
panel than those who voiced opposition," said the source who spoke
on condition of anonymity. John Bolton, Trump's national security
adviser who supports forming the committee, is expected to talk with
military and intelligence officials who oppose it, the source said.
If the presidential panel is formed it would feature scientists
including Steven Koonin, a New York University professor who has
written editorials questioning whether climate science is settled
and who served at the Department of Energy under President Barack
Obama.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
The heads of four committees in the Democratic-led U.S. House of
Representatives decried the panel and sent Trump a letter asking for
the names of people on it.
Such a panel would run counter to the "overwhelming scientific
consensus on the causes and impacts of climate change," the House
chairs, Adam Smith, Frank Pallone, Raul Grijalva and Eddie Bernice
Johnson, said in the letter.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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