The Trump-appointed acting director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration—which plays a key role in monitoring the global climate crisis—has reportedly proposed stripping “conservation” and “climate” from NOAA’s mission statement, which scientists say “would undermine the agency’s vital work on behalf of the American people.”
During a recent Department of Commerce meeting, Rear Admiral Timothy Gallaudet—President Donald Trump selected him for NOAA’s number two spot, but he is leading the agency while the controversial pick for director is tied up in the Senate—reportedly gave a presentation in which he proposed notable alterations to NOAA’s mission statement.
The agency’s current mission statement (emphasis added):
- To understand and predict changes in , weather, oceans, and coasts;
- To share that knowledge and information with others; and
- To and manage coastal and marine ecosystems and resources.
Gallaudet’s proposal:
- To observe, understand, and predict atmospheric and ocean conditions;
- To share that knowledge and information with others; and
- To protect lives and property, empower the economy, and support homeland and national security.
The suggested cuts seem to align with the Trump administration’s broader war on science, and could signal a significant shift in the future endeavors at an agency which, as the New York Times noted, “because of its work on climate science data collection and analysis… has become one of the most important American agencies for making sense of the warming planet.”
Given NOAA’s notable contributions to climate research, the proposal was met with swift condemnation by the scientific community. Andrew Rosenberg, director of the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists—and a former NOAA scientist and senior executive—called it “shocking” and “foolhardy.”
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“Understanding the changing climate is becoming more critical by the day, as the effects of global warming mount, and it’s essential to protecting our economy and security,” Rosenberg said. “NOAA is continuously working to improve forecasts of extreme events, which are intensifying in a warming world. As we know from last year’s wildfires and hurricanes, these kind of forecasts are critical for protecting American lives and infrastructure.”
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