skip to main content

→ Top Stories:
Keystone XL Pipeline
Clean Energy Successes
Defending the Clean Air Act

Frances Beinecke’s Blog

Climate Change "Pervasive, Wide-Ranging" White House Task Force Reports

Frances Beinecke

Posted March 17, 2010 in Curbing Pollution, Health and the Environment, Moving Beyond Oil, Solving Global Warming

Tags:
, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Share | | |

Climate change is already having "pervasive, wide-ranging" effects on "nearly every aspect of our society," a task force representing more than 20 federal agencies reported Tuesday.

"These impacts will influence how and where we live and work as well as our cultures, health and environment," the report states. "It is therefore imperative to take action now to adapt to a changing climate."

Indeed, climate change has begun to affect the ability of government agencies to fulfill their missions, reports the White House Interagency Climate Change Adaptation Task Force.

The group is led by the White House Council on Environmental Quality, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

It is made up of representatives from more than 20 federal agencies, departments and offices, including the Department of Commerce, the National Intelligence Council, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Pentagon. That's diverse - and it's definitive.

President Obama convened the task force in October, directing it to look into whether climate change was affecting the United States and, if so, what might be done about it.

On Tuesday, the group issued preliminary findings. As to the question of whether climate change is impacting our country, the report is emphatic.

"The Task Force has found that climate change is affecting, and will continue to affect, nearly every aspect of our society and the environment," the report states. "Some of the impacts are increased severity of floods, droughts, and heat waves, increased wildfires and sea level rise.

"Climate change impacts are pervasive, wide-ranging and affect the core systems of our society: transportation, ecosystems, agriculture, business, infrastructure, water, and energy, among others," the report continues. "Climate change already is affecting the ability of Federal agencies to fulfill their missions."

Strong stuff.

When reports like this come out of a White House task force, each word is parsed, discussed and vetted by all participants. It's a consensus document, meaning it reflects the view of the group as a whole. That makes writing the report a challenge, but it ensures authenticity and weight.

Those are two things notably lacking from the raft of climate change deniers who have been having a field day of late trying to rally an assault on science with a handful of stolen e-mails and a couple of minor errors in a 2,800-page report by the International Panel on Climate Change.

These same critics will likely try to paint the task force report in partisan terms. In fact, it relies on sound science developed over two decades through four administrations – two of them Republican, and two Democratic.

The White House task force tells us the truth. Our climate is changing, and it's affecting our country in fundamental ways.

One reason is that U.S. smokestacks and tailpipes will dump roughly 6 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the Earth's atmosphere this year alone. That's nearly one-fifth of the world total of this heat-trapping pollution.

We can do better.

The clean energy and climate legislation being drafted in the Senate can put us on the path to curbing carbon pollution. It can put Americans back to work building the next generation of energy-efficient cars, homes and workplaces. And it can make our country more secure by cutting our dependence on foreign oil in half. It needs and deserves our support.

I look forward to October, when the task force issues its final report.

A few things, though, are already clear. Climate change is happening, right here, right now. It threatens our future, our children, our way of life. It's time we face the facts and deal with what's happening right before our eyes – before it’s too late.

Share | | |

Comments

S BillingsleyMar 18 2010 10:49 AM

So I am reading this unsubstantiated opinion by Frances Beinecke. Unsubstantiated simply because other than naming institutions as sources supporting her opinion, she gives no actual numbers nor does she quote an actual scientist or scientists.

To give credibility to the critics, she has even dumped the specific "Global Warming" label to go to the wimpy, "no duh" label of "Climate Change."

Let's face it. This planet has a climate and it is in a constant state of change. But since 1995, it has been cooling according to NOAA and the original scientists that started the Global Warming scare.

So, if you are going to defend Global Warming and the doctored numbers behind it, continue to call it Global Warming or just shut up.

Thomas DeanMar 18 2010 03:39 PM

Men of stamina, knowing the way of life, steadily keep to it; …
Stupid men know the way of life
And having once laughed at it, laugh again the louder.
If you need to be sure which way is right, you can tell by their laughing at it.
To such laughers a level road looks steep,
Top seems bottom,
“White appears black,”…
Harmony is his who can hear beyond sound, …
Life is his who can tell beyond words,
Fulfillment of the unfulfilled.
Lao Tzu

Crazy KevMar 18 2010 04:43 PM

What a shame that the AGW supporters will not even stop long enough to acknowledge that the information they have used to support their arguement has been proven unreliable. The author sites unrelated government agencies that have little value in the dicussion. Since the original global warming proponents have backed off their original predictions and commented that the process has been heavily politicised, how can anyone have any remaining support for the theory of Man-Made global warming.

Comments are closed for this post.

About

Switchboard is the staff blog of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the nation’s most effective environmental group. For more about our work, including in-depth policy documents, action alerts and ways you can contribute, visit NRDC.org.

Feeds: Frances Beinecke’s blog

Feeds: Stay Plugged In