Weather forecasters, many of whom see climate change as a
natural, cyclical phenomenon, are split over whether they
have a responsibility to educate their viewers on the link
between human activity and the change in the Earth's
climates.
Only 19 percent of US meteorologists saw human influences as
the sole driver of climate change in a 2011 survey. And some,
like the Weather Channel's founder John Coleman are vocal in
their opposition.
"It is the greatest scam in history," wrote Coleman, one of
the first meteorologists to publicly express doubts about
climate change, on his blog in 2007. "I am amazed, appalled
and highly offended by it. Global Warming; it is a SCAM."
The climate change controversy has split the American
Meteorological Society, whose members are Americans' prime
source of news about weather and climate
In its last official view issued in 2007, the AMS
acknowledged that global warming is occurring and that human
activities exacerbate it, especially the burning of fossil
fuels and the release of the climate-warming gas, carbon
dioxide.
Research since 2007 has only solidified climate science
findings, said AMS Executive Director Keith Seitter. AMS
members who disagree, he said, are in a minority, though an
often outspoken one.
"There are some extremely vocal people who are arguing on
that issue, but I think the science has continued to become
more clear, not less so," Seitter said by telephone from
Boston.
The controversy has held up the society's updated view on
climate change but Seitter said expects the new AMS statement
to hew closely to its position in 2007 and include updated
scientific findings.
An online grassroots campaign called "Forecast the Facts"
said the society needs to go beyond a strong statement on
climate change and require that its members "report the
current scientific consensus on climate change."
"As it stands right now, it is considered within the realm of
acceptable discourse for media outlets, corporations and
politicians to deny climate change and to stand in the way of
much needed action," Daniel Souweine, who heads the campaign,
said in an email.
Forecast the Facts is supported by the non-profit
environmental groups League of Conservation Voters and
350.org, and has gotten 14,000 signatures for its petition to
the AMS, Souweine said.
They will be hard-pressed to convince forecasters like Bob
Breck, a weatherman at Fox Channel 8 in New Orleans who is
vocal in his skepticism over climate change.
"AMS has long been dominated by people in academia, which is
ok, they're the PhDs ... except those of us who I consider
operational meteorologists, we were basically ignored," Breck
said by telephone. "I believe in global warming cycles and we
have been in a warming cycle. What I don't believe is that
the driver of this current warming cycle is carbon dioxide."
Most weathermen and women have degrees in meteorology - the
study of how Earth's atmosphere behaves in the short term -
but few have studied climate science, which examines the
wider system where weather occurs.
But meteorologists advise Americans every day, and that makes
them powerful shapers of public opinion. Most don't mention
global warming in their weathercasts, but many also blog, and
that is often where the skepticism surfaces.
Most US meteorologists - 82 percent in a 2011 survey - are
convinced that climate is changing, but many say it's
changing because of natural causes, or human and natural
causes combined.
That contrasts with about 95 percent of climate scientists
who are convinced that climate change is occurring and that
human activities, particularly the burning of fossil fuels,
are a key driver of it. This tallies with the U.N.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which reported
with 90 percent certainty in 2007 on the causes and effects
of climate change.
To Edward Maibach, director of the Center for Climate Change
Communication at George Mason University, that split shows
that efforts like Forecast the Facts are misguided.
"It presumes that AMS is part of the problem, and I actually
think the AMS is doing really, really solid work to help
their weathercaster members expand the way they currently
define their day job to include climate education as part of
their role," Maibach said.
Maibach, who tracks meteorologists' attitudes on climate
change, said skeptics in the group believe their concerns are
being ignored.
"They feel their views and their concerns about the science
are not being taken seriously," Maibach said. "It's pretty
easy to understand how one gets to a place of anger when they
feel dismissed and disrespected."
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