Dubai Telegraph - Climate watchers fret over Trump's cut to sciences

EUR -
AED 4.32435
AFN 74.767596
ALL 95.493453
AMD 434.448393
ANG 2.10758
AOA 1080.940537
ARS 1640.544696
AUD 1.625937
AWG 2.119491
AZN 2.00738
BAM 1.956972
BBD 2.371841
BDT 144.756688
BGN 1.964182
BHD 0.444328
BIF 3504.225563
BMD 1.177495
BND 1.495327
BOB 8.136873
BRL 5.779501
BSD 1.177625
BTN 112.180609
BWP 15.833617
BYN 3.2932
BYR 23078.904915
BZD 2.368449
CAD 1.611013
CDF 2603.442378
CHF 0.916622
CLF 0.026858
CLP 1057.061236
CNY 8.001106
CNH 7.998367
COP 4429.866274
CRC 539.727802
CUC 1.177495
CUP 31.203621
CVE 110.713971
CZK 24.327633
DJF 209.26438
DKK 7.470865
DOP 69.648624
DZD 155.739777
EGP 62.075428
ERN 17.662427
ETB 184.981179
FJD 2.571591
FKP 0.863625
GBP 0.865724
GEL 3.149816
GGP 0.863625
GHS 13.294621
GIP 0.863625
GMD 85.956967
GNF 10335.463626
GTQ 8.987604
GYD 246.309596
HKD 9.218292
HNL 31.333495
HRK 7.531851
HTG 154.125571
HUF 355.8879
IDR 20513.672859
ILS 3.416914
IMP 0.863625
INR 112.323323
IQD 1542.518645
IRR 1544346.705877
ISK 143.607451
JEP 0.863625
JMD 185.782835
JOD 0.83484
JPY 185.192889
KES 152.073578
KGS 102.971498
KHR 4724.735533
KMF 493.370017
KPW 1059.745583
KRW 1739.218877
KWD 0.362633
KYD 0.981396
KZT 545.591364
LAK 25846.018995
LBP 105444.68985
LKR 379.330385
LRD 215.746543
LSL 19.345919
LTL 3.476837
LVL 0.712255
LYD 7.44767
MAD 10.71079
MDL 20.184259
MGA 4910.155076
MKD 61.630297
MMK 2472.182192
MNT 4211.555483
MOP 9.496808
MRU 47.041013
MUR 55.024877
MVR 18.145569
MWK 2051.196213
MXN 20.252269
MYR 4.621697
MZN 75.207284
NAD 19.358292
NGN 1610.141993
NIO 43.226545
NOK 10.814646
NPR 179.488012
NZD 1.974589
OMR 0.452755
PAB 1.177605
PEN 4.037603
PGK 5.109445
PHP 72.021519
PKR 328.046584
PLN 4.239513
PYG 7238.303958
QAR 4.289025
RON 5.206294
RSD 117.393915
RUB 86.660659
RWF 1721.497907
SAR 4.417706
SBD 9.457945
SCR 16.12077
SDG 707.085325
SEK 10.8664
SGD 1.494715
SHP 0.879119
SLE 29.037285
SLL 24691.480006
SOS 672.945382
SRD 44.042442
STD 24371.772225
STN 24.962897
SVC 10.304302
SYP 130.169658
SZL 19.357396
THB 38.026003
TJS 11.022641
TMT 4.133008
TND 3.369401
TOP 2.835126
TRY 53.446268
TTD 7.982848
TWD 36.934254
TZS 3076.205014
UAH 51.753833
UGX 4427.689146
USD 1.177495
UYU 46.948778
UZS 14300.678949
VES 588.553311
VND 30997.55979
VUV 139.62477
WST 3.187593
XAF 656.355636
XAG 0.013577
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.182239
XCG 2.122398
XDR 0.816296
XOF 654.095634
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.947421
ZAR 19.364497
ZMK 10598.86755
ZMW 22.265618
ZWL 379.152957
  • BCC

    -1.4700

    69.2

    -2.12%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    87.16

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    24.28

    +0.58%

  • RIO

    2.5200

    107.9

    +2.34%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.12

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.6000

    49.81

    -1.2%

  • JRI

    -0.0197

    13.13

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    0.0763

    23.61

    +0.32%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    63.18

    +0.43%

  • BTI

    2.1600

    60.44

    +3.57%

  • AZN

    -0.9900

    181.86

    -0.54%

  • RYCEF

    0.4200

    16.79

    +2.5%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    16.32

    +0.74%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    33.27

    -0.93%

  • BP

    0.8800

    44.22

    +1.99%

Climate watchers fret over Trump's cut to sciences
Climate watchers fret over Trump's cut to sciences / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP

Climate watchers fret over Trump's cut to sciences

In his California laboratory, Ralph Keeling examines a graph created from data his father began collecting that keeps a record of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Text size:

After 67 years, the fate of this "major indicator of climate change" is uncertain under President Donald Trump's administration.

The United States "needs this information, there's no doubt about it," the geochemistry professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego told AFP.

His father, Charles David Keeling, decided in 1958 to measure atmospheric CO2 concentrations at the summit of the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii.

This gave rise to the Keeling curve, which today represents the oldest continuous measurement of this greenhouse gas, which is produced by the burning of fossil fuels.

This graph "showed early on that humans were having an impact on the whole planet," even before the effects of climate change were palpable, Ralph Keeling said.

Even as science as evolved, the project remains an essential climate watchdog.

It provides a basis for thinking about how farmers can modify their crops in the face of a warming atmosphere, or how insurers can adapt their coverage to cope with increasingly fierce fires and more frequent flooding.

"This is very rock solid data, but the program that makes this is fragile," Keeling said.

- 'Concerning' -

Concerns arose in early March, when Elon Musk's so-called Department of Government Efficiency recommended canceling the lease on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) office in Hawaii by the end of August.

This office, located in the town of Hilo, is responsible for maintaining the measurements at the summit of Mauna Loa.

But it's not just buildings. NOAA, a key agency for American climate research, has been targeted by hundreds of layoffs since the return to the White House of Trump, who has repeatedly called climate change a "hoax".

The administration also wants to cut the agency's budget by $1.6 billion, according to documents revealed in mid-April by The New York Times.

The plan also envisages eliminating the branch dedicated to oceanic and atmospheric research.

"It's concerning," said Keeling.

At the summit of Mauna Loa, an observatory houses machines from the Scripps Institute and NOAA, which simultaneously measure atmospheric CO2 concentrations at an altitude of 3,400 meters (11,000 feet).

To ensure they're working properly, local scientists also regularly collect air samples in glass carboys, following the method developed by Charles Keeling more than six decades ago in San Diego.

Since then, other countries have begun recording the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, thanks to new methods sometimes involving satellites.

But these alone are not enough, according to Keeling.

"Although there's a bigger community now, and there's a constellation of methods being used, those additional efforts have assumed that this backbone from Scripps and NOAA is there," he said.

"A satellite measurement of CO2... gives you a lot of fine grained information, but it doesn't give you reliable long term trends, and it doesn't give you certain other measures that we can get from direct atmospheric measurements.

"You have to ground truth it, you need the calibration."

- Attack on climate science -

NOAA declined to comment on the potential impact of the proposed cuts on its program.

"We are not discussing internal management matters and we do not do speculative interviews," the agency told AFP.

"NOAA remains dedicated to its mission, providing timely information, research, and resources that serve the American public and ensure our nation's environmental and economic resilience."

For Tim Lueker, who spent his career with the atmospheric measurement program launched by the Scripps Institute, that is cold comfort.

The Trump administration "is not making these cuts to save money. It's so transparent what's going on," he said.

At 67, he is worried about a full-scale attack on climate science, with the government ordering the NOAA to identify funding for projects that mention the terms "climate crisis," "clean energy," "environmental quality," or "pollution."

"The idea of saving money... is kind of silly when you consider how much one fighter plane costs compared to the annual funding of NOAA Climate Research."

F.Chaudhary--DT