Sometime during the night of Oct. 16,The Pursuit of Lust 2018, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) eliminated more than 80 climate change web pages -- many of the last vestiges to the agency's online recognition of climate change.
The deletions -- caught by the watchdog group Environmental Data and Governance Initiative (EDGI) -- show a growing disparity between how the regulation-focused EPA increasingly masks globally-agreed upon climate science from the public, while agencies like NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) continue to promote reliable climate research.
Of note, both the EPA and NASA are sprawling federal agencies directly answerable to the office of the president. Yet, while NASA maintains a slew of informative, diligently updated, and visually-rich climate change websites, the EPA's sites have been gradually obscured, and now eliminated.
For the current EPA -- which candidly aims to perpetuate a 150-year-old energy system that emits prodigious amounts of heat-trapping greenhouse gases -- removing this material is a necessary precaution.
The EPA can't simultaneously promote and deny climate science.
"They're protecting themselves from scrutiny -- an uninformed public is key to shielding them from scrutiny," Joe Goffman, a former EPA senior counsel in the Office of Air and Radiation, said in an interview.
The EPA has done a commendable job of furtively deleting climate information, particularly anything once readable on the government site "www.epa.gov/climatechange."
"There's no indication now that there was even a climate change website," Eric Nost, the EDGI report's lead author, said in an interview.
For about a year and a half, since April 2017, visiting the EPA's climate sites would lead to a page that read, in bold highlighted letters: "This page is being updated."
Now, the pages simply don't exist. Instead, they read: "We want to help you find what you're looking for."
SEE ALSO: This scientist keeps winning money from people who bet against climate change"The significance is that we were expecting these updates to take place over the last year and a half," said Nost. "What this most recent change demonstrates is that’s [updates] probably not going to happen."
The EPA did not respond to multiple attempts for comment about why the public webpages were deleted and if they might return.
The fact that NASA's climate webpages are still teeming with updated data about all things climate change-related, however, is little surprising.
However, the reason for that difference might be more obvious than it seems.
NASA is a research agency, emphasized Stan Meiburg, the former Acting Deputy Administrator of the EPA, in an interview. It largely exists to perform science. Conversely, he noted that the EPA -- which is responsible for protecting human health and the environment -- is primarily a regulatory agency, writing and enforcing environmental rules.
For example, it introduced the Clean Air Act in the 1970s, all but ridding the U.S. of high-levels of smog-ridden air (though smog is still alive and well in certain areas, notably in California).
But under the current administration, the EPA's directive has been to deny the reality that human-created carbon emissions -- likely at their highest levels in some 15 million years -- need to be reined in, or regulated.
"It’s sad, but straightforward," Meiburg, who is now the director of Graduate Studies in Sustainability at Wake Forest University, said of the EPA's deleted websites.
"It’s a consistent reflection of the position the administration has taken about the lack of need to address greenhouse gas emissions," added Meiburg.
"It’s sad, but straightforward"
"From that perspective, the less said about climate change, the better," added Goffman, now the executive director of Harvard Law School’s Environmental Law Program.
Curiously, the EPA still has some climate-related information available online -- so it's not all gone. For instance, there's an explanation of greenhouse gas sources and a 2016 report, prepared before the Trump administration took office, called "Climate Change Indicators in the United States."
NASA's continued efforts to provide the public with easily-accessible information about how the warming globe is stoking climate change has been buttressed by the agency's chief, Administrator Jim Bridenstine.
Bridenstine is the lone Trump administration official to publicly accept that human emissions are largely responsible for stoking climate change over the last century. (We're actually 100 percent responsible).
"All we want to do at NASA, is make sure that we are providing the absolute best science so that policy makers can make good decisions," Bridenstine told Axios' Andrew Freedman this summer.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This ethos, coming from the NASA's chief, gives NASA scientists and communicators leeway to continue promoting good climate science.
"It provides space for scientists to lay out the facts as they see them," said Meiburg.
"Since NASA is not a policy-action agency, they’re free to spread that knowledge without enduring any risk," noted Goffman.
NASA climate scientist Gavin Schmidt recently went on television to offer a succinct break-down of the recent damning United Nations climate report. (The interview, in which Schmidt emphasizes the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, can be watched on NASA's website.)
But no such video would ever exist on the modern-day EPA website. Right now, the environmental agency hopes to enforce a slew of new rules that would, among a variety of things, significantly roll back fuel-efficiency standards for new vehicles and replace Obama's Clean Power Plan.
"If that video had appeared on the EPA website, it would have undercut the argument for freezing tailpipe exhaust standards," said Goffman.
Fortunately for the public, NASA and NOAA -- not burdened by the EPA's climate-denying regulatory agenda -- have continued to provide accessible, reliable climate science.
For anyone seeking to understand the threats posed by an increasingly unstable climate, departing from the temperate conditions under which modern civilization has flourished, the current EPA is simply an unreliable, and nearly non-existent, source.
"Better go to NASA," said Meiburg.
Camel blocking traffic doesn't care about your afternoon plansICE abolished its own Twitter account by mistake'Lego Star Wars Holiday Special' review: Don't call it a comebackA beginner's guide to urban foragingGoogle Photos is ending unlimited storage and people are not happyFacebook Messenger's 'vanish mode' makes messages disappearDick Gregory, Comedian and Civil Right figure, dead at 84Lucky travelers got to view the total eclipse from an airplaneWhite supremacist rally ends early in Boston as counterHow to change your background on Google Meet, and why you shouldYes, Donald Trump just retweeted a bot to rant about the 'fake news media'Instagram redesigns home screen to showcase Reels, ShoppingUK politicians hold a tearful vigil for a clock because they clearly have nothing better to doWaze brings Amazon Music into its appSnapchat astrology features let you test compatibility with friendsThree TikTok creators may have just saved the app from Trump’s shutdown orderApple addresses macOS privacy concerns, says better controls are coming in 2021Google says it 'may' delete your files if you don't log in enoughNetflix's 'Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House Of Fun' is a total Australian blastThe cost of protecting Trump is turning the Secret Service pro bono Samsung 'exclusive' on Fortnite for Android lasts just 3 days Magic Leap's first mixed reality headset is finally here for $2,295 Weird Al Yankovic joined Weezer on stage for a cover of Toto's 'Africa' Kanye West defends his support for Trump in Jimmy Kimmel interview Samsung unveils the stylish Galaxy Watch, with an emphasis on fitness The story behind that 'Game of Thrones' reference in 'Disenchantment' Horrified Brits want to leave the country after the UK voted to Brexit Aziz Ansari slams Trump in op 'Insatiable' review: 22 horrible things just from the pilot Twitter is worried about what Brexit means for the United States Lindsay Lohan blesses Twitter with her opinions about Brexit Dude transforms girlfriend's dog Police officers pop the question during London Pride parade There is nothing more relatable than this squirrel eating a hot Cheeto 5 apps that'll give your Instagram photos a dope lo Hands on with Android 9 Pie: Now ready for Pixels and Essential Phone Calm down, Britain. Brexit won't touch your chocolate Kanye West hops into bed with 11 other celebs for NSFW 'Famous' video Things got weird on Twitter this week Diabolical people are putting fake power outlet stickers on walls
1.6332s , 10158.1796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Pursuit of Lust】,Defense Information Network