Senator Inhofe: Thank you, Madame Chairman. I’ve, you know, sat here for years now listening to this, and I know the distinguished Senator from Vermont wants so badly to believe that the science is settled and that anthropogenic gases cause global warming. And the science is not settled. I mean, Phil Jones is the scientist at IPCC, he’s the top guy, he was the one at East Anglia that came up with – it’s kind of the clearing house for all the scientists. He is the one who is under investigation right now, and he said two weeks ago, “I don’t believe the vast majority of the climate scientists think the debate is over.” This is a clear statement, by the guy who’s in charge of all this stuff. So, you know, you can want to believe something so badly that you just go ahead and believe it, and I guess that’s alright. Now, because of the short time, I want to ask two questions that require just a yes or no answer, or I don’t know, or I don’t want to answer – I don’t care either way. One of your quotes Madame Administrator was that the EPA’s view was “the scientific assessments of the IPCC represent the best reference material for determining the general state of knowledge on the scientific and technical issues of climate science.” Do you still agree with that statement?

Senator Inhofe: “I believe…” Where’s that chart? This is the chart where we were showing during the last hearing – one of the last hearings, we had about 40 hearings on this – that the US action alone will not impact the CO2 levels. Your quote was, “I believe the central parts of the EPA chart,” this chart right here, “are that the US action alone would not impact world CO2 levels.” Now, that’s a statement I think we all agree on, and it complicates this. Because when you talk to normal people, I’m talking about people outside of Washington, and you point out to them, that even if we were willing to pass some kind of cap-and-trade legislation, or do it legislatively or do it through the Administration, that it’s going to cost all the jobs – people will deny this on the other side, but MIT, the Wharton school, CRA, all of them agree – that this would constitute something like a 3-400 billion dollar tax increase on the American people, that it would destroy our economy, and with all of that in mind, I would just say this – I’m going to save this for the second round of questions, but I want you to be thinking about it. How in the world can we justify doing something administratively that the Congress overwhelmingly rejected, that the United States Senate did, and saying defiantly, “We don’t care what you say, Congress, we are going to go ahead and do it under the Clean Air Act, we’re going to make the endangerment finding,” in spite of the fact that the endangerment finding by your own admission is due to the science from the IPCC. Now, that’s what I’m going to be talking about in the next round of questions.

Administrator Jackson: Do you want me to answer now? Or wait til the next round?

Senator Inhofe: Sure.

Senator Boxer: I think you should answer the questions.

Administrator Jackson: I will be brief, and we will talk about it in the next round, Senator. But, just to be clear, the Supreme Court, the law of the land, found that greenhouse gases are a pollutant, they ordered EPA to make a determination as to whether they…
Senator Inhofe: I'd like to respond to a couple of things that have been said by some of my good Democrat friends. First of all, Senator Merkley talked about reducing our dependence on foreign oil to run this machine called America. We can do it. We can do it over night. Right now, we are the largest, we have the largest recoverable reserves of coal, natural gas, and oil of any country out there, including China, including Russia. The problem is political. We're the only country in the world whose Congress won't allow us to explore our own resources. That can be done. That's an easy thing. I would say to my good friend, Senator Whitehouse, you weren't in here when we were talking about the science, initially. And I would only say, we can argue about this as long as you want to argue about it, and people who have said the science is settled, the science is settled, the science is settled, and they say it over and over again, hoping that if they say it enough times, they'll believe it. And yet, the guy who's in charge of all the science with IPCC, Doctor Phil Jones, Doctor Phil Jones says, "I don't believe the vast majority of climate scientists think the debate is over." That's a very simple thing. That's the guy who's in charge of the IPCC.

Posted by: David Lungren David_Lungren@epw.senate.gov

 

Senator Inhofe: …That’s my question.

Administrator Jackson: I have a two word answer – I disagree.  But, just let me respond to three things, Senator, and I’m happy to do additional things for the record if that’s necessary.  I do not agree that the IPCC has been totally discredited in any way.  In fact, I think it’s important to understand that the IPCC is a body that follows impartial and open and objective assessments.  Yes, they have had concerns about email, I do not defend the conduct of those who sent those emails.  There is peer review, which is part of the IPCC process.  There are numerous, numerous groups of teams and independent researchers all a part of coming up with IPCC findings, such that even the IPCC has said, “Wow, we need to investigate and ensure that our scientists are held to a standard of scientific conduct that we can be proud of.  We stand behind our findings.”  And so, I can’t agree with you there.  I’m sure you’re not surprised.  I don’t agree with you on the job killing. I actually believe as the President does that we have to have a foundation for growth in this country, and that Americans want clean energy and see the value of investing in a future for generations to come.  And if we want to make that investment, we have to change from being totally dependent on fossil-based power without controls for carbon, without a price for carbon, and we have to do that.  And I have to tell you that it strikes me when I hear about these doom-and-gloom forecasts for economic ruin that you know, the Clean Air Act Amendments predicted a quiet death for business across the country, that’s what we were told.  A cap-and-trade program, a program to reduce pollution through market incentives, and what really happened is that the US economy grew by 64% even as acid rain pollution was cut by 50%.  There are ways to make smart environmental investments and policy.  I commit to you, sir, that I would do nothing less.  As I sit in the chair, it is too important to our country, economically but also environmentally.  But to sit here and say that these policies and a move towards clean energy won’t be good for jobs in this country, I simply can’t agree.

Senator Inhofe: You know, I would appreciate it if I were the one who was saying this, but this is MIT, the Wharton school, they talk about the economic destruction of our country.  And then of course, the comment you made I do appreciate, except that is the reason why I quoted all the, the Atlantic, the Guardian, all these newspapers, all these publications, who are now saying that the science wasn’t right.  So, it’s not me saying it, I’m quoting others, because I don’t have the credibility – I understand that, but certainly when the whole nation turns around and people say – this should be a wake-up call, we’re basing this major step, this endangerment on science that we know now is flawed.  And that’s the reason I quote other sources, so I don’t have to quote myself. 

Administrator Jackson: Well, I think we have to quote sources like the National Academies of Science.  I think we have to talk about the…

Senator Inhofe: What about the IPCC, isn’t that a pretty good source?

Administrator Jackson: Well, we just talked about the IPCC, and said that I absolutely agree you can look into emails and any allegations that come up, but that, you know, science can be a bit messy, the dust will settle, but I have not at this point seen anything that changes my belief that the endangerment finding is not only on sound ground but will stand up to scrutiny and challenge.

Senator Inhofe: And the IPCC said the science is not settled.  Thank you, Madame Chairman.  

WASHINGTON - The Senate voted narrowly Monday to advance a jobs bill to boost highway spending and give tax breaks to small businesses.

Senate Democratic leaders needed 60 votes to clear a procedural hurdle on the bill, and they got help from five Republicans to score a 62-30 victory.

Oklahoma Sens. Tom Coburn, R-Muskogee, and Jim Inhofe, R-Tulsa, voted against it. Once the Senate gives final approval to the bill, the House will have to concur.

"This is going to create jobs," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada.
Hello, I'm Senator Jim Inhofe, the Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works. I want to give you a sneak-peek into a major new Senate report on my Committee's investigation into the scandal commonly known as Climategate.

What emerges from our review of the emails and documents, which span a 13-year period from 1996 through November 2009, is much more than, as EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson put it, scientists who "lack interpersonal skills." Rather, the emails show the world's leading climate scientists discussing, among other things:

Obstructing the release of damaging data and information;
Manipulating data to reach preconceived conclusions;
threatening journal editors who published work questioning the climate science "consensus"; and
Assuming activist roles to influence the political process.

Excerpts of New Senate Climategate Report

Tuesday February 23, 2010

Posted by Matt Dempsey matt_dempsey@epw.senate.gov

Excerpts of New Senate Climategate Report

www.epw.senate.gov/inhofe

INTRODUCTION

The emails (and the data and computer code released to the public) were written by the world's top climate scientists, many of whom had been lead authors and contributing lead authors of various sections of the IPCC reports and were thus intimately involved in writing and editing the IPCC's science assessments.  This is no small matter.  As noted science historian Naomi Oreskes wrote, the "scientific consensus" of climate change "is clearly expressed in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change."  According to one top Obama Administration official, the IPCC is "the gold standard for authoritative scientific information on climate change because of the rigorous way in which they are prepared, reviewed, and approved...

These scientists work at the most prestigious and influential climate research institutions in the world.  For example, Dr. Phil Jones was director of the CRU until he was forced to temporarily resign because of his role in the scandal.  According to the Congressional Research Service (CRS), CRU is "among the renowned research centers in the world" on key aspects of climate change research.  It also has "contributed to the scientific assessments of climate change conducted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)."  CRU's CRUTEM3 is one of the key datasets of surface temperatures utilized by the IPCC in its Fourth Assessment Report...

 The IPCC's work serves as the key basis for climate policy decisions made by governments throughout the world, including here in the United States...

In short, the utility and probity of the IPCC process and its results are crucial to policymaking with respect to climate change here in the United States. 

SECTION 1: Inside the Email Trail

As noted, the CRU controversy features emails from the world's leading climate scientists-emails that show disturbing practices contrary to the practice of objective science and potentially federal law... 

The emails also raise a fundamental question: What, if any, are the boundaries between science and activism?  Wherever one draws the line, many scientists confront, and engage in, the political process at some level.   As the National Academy of Sciences wrote in "On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct in Research," "science and technology have become such integral parts of society that scientists can no longer isolate themselves from societal concerns."...

Along with apparently hiding data and information, the scientists complained that mainstream scientific journals were publishing work by so-called "skeptics" who disagreed with their views about the causes of climate change...

These emails do not read as a group of scientists in full agreement about the fundamental issues in paleoclimatology.  Rather, they put the lie to the notion that the science is "settled," and that key facets of the climate science debate are no longer in dispute.   As one pulls back the veil, and gets beneath the "nice, tidy story," one sees serious disagreement over the extent of 20th century warming and whether it was anomalous over the past millennium.  As Phil Jones admitted to the BBC recently, "There is much debate over whether the Medieval Warm Period was global in extent or not." "Of course," he continued, "if the MWP was shown to be global in extent and as warm or warmer than today (based on an equivalent coverage over the NH and SH) then obviously the late-20th century warmth would not be unprecedented."

SECTION 2: Inside the IPCC "Consensus"

The scientists involved here played key roles in shaping and editing the very IPCC reports adduced as dispositive proof of a scientific consensus on catastrophic global warming.  The emails and documents reveal, among other things, an insular world of scientists working within the IPCC to generate reports that reflected their biased conclusions on the causes of climate change. In this section, we describe the IPCC in more detail, and try to explain its somewhat opaque inner workings.  We also show the links between this controversy and the IPCC, specifically by identifying the scientists in the CRU scandal who exercised great influence over the IPCC assessment reports. 

SECTION 3: Legal and Policy Issues in the CRU Controversy

The released CRU emails and documents display potentially unethical, and illegal, behavior.  The scientists appear to discuss manipulating data to get their preferred results.  On several occasions they appear to discuss subverting the scientific peer review process to ensure that skeptical papers had no access to publication.  Moreover, there are emails discussing unjustified changes to data by federal employees and federal grantees. 

These and other issues raise questions about the lawful use of federal funds and potential ethical misconduct.  Discussed below are brief descriptions of the statutes and regulations that the Minority Staff believe are implicated in this scandal.  In our investigation, we are examining the emails and documents and determining whether any violations of these federal laws and policies occurred.

SECTION 4: Endangerment Finding and EPA Reliance on IPCC Science

As we noted in the introduction, the significance of the CRU scandal potentially affects domestic climate change policy.  We are investigating the extent to which the CRU scandal reveals flaws in the IPCC's Assessment Reports, as many of the scientists at the center of this scandal drafted and edited those reports (for more on this point, see Section 2).  In turn, we are examining whether flaws in the IPCC's work weaken or undermine EPA's "Endangerment and Cause or Contribute Findings for Greenhouse Gases Under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act."