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NOAA Is in Danger - The Atlantic

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jbb  •  4 months ago  •  28 comments

By:   Zoe Schlanger (The Atlantic)

NOAA Is in Danger - The Atlantic
Project 2025 would all but dissolve the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Project 2025 would all but dissolve the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

By Zoe SchlangerIllustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.July 16, 2024, 8:31 AM

Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (NOA) using AI narration.

In the United States, as in most other countries, weather forecasts are a freely accessible government amenity. The National Weather Service issues alerts and predictions, warning of hurricanes and excessive heat and rainfall, all at the total cost to American taxpayers of roughly $4 per person per year. Anyone with a TV, smartphone, radio, or newspaper can know what tomorrow's weather will look like, whether a hurricane is heading toward their town, or if a drought has been forecast for the next season. Even if they get that news from a privately owned app or TV station, much of the underlying weather data are courtesy of meteorologists working for the federal government.

Charging for popular services that were previously free isn't generally a winning political strategy. But hard-right policy makers appear poised to try to do just that should Republicans gain power in the next term. Project 2025—a nearly 900-page book of policy proposals published by the conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation—states that an incoming administration should all but dissolve the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, under which the National Weather Service operates. Donald Trump has attempted to distance himself from Project 2025, but given that it was largely written by veterans of his first administration, the document is widely seen as a blueprint for a second Trump term.

NOAA "should be dismantled and many of its functions eliminated, sent to other agencies, privatized, or placed under the control of states and territories," Project 2025 reads. The proposals roughly amount to two main avenues of attack. First, it suggests that the NWS should eliminate its public-facing forecasts, focus on data gathering, and otherwise "fully commercialize its forecasting operations," which the authors of the plan imply will improve, not limit, forecasts for all Americans. Then, NOAA's scientific-research arm, which studies things such as Arctic-ice dynamics and how greenhouse gases behave (and which the document calls "the source of much of NOAA's climate alarmism"), should be aggressively shrunk. "The preponderance of its climate-change research should be disbanded," the document says. It further notes that scientific agencies such as NOAA are "vulnerable to obstructionism of an Administration's aims," so appointees should be screened to ensure that their views are "wholly in sync" with the president's.

The U.S. is, without question, experiencing a summer of brutal weather. In just the past week, a record-breaking hurricane brought major flooding and power outages to Texas amid an extreme-heat advisory. More than a dozen tornadoes ripped through multiple states. Catastrophic flash flooding barreled through wildfire burn scars in New Mexico. Large parts of the West roasted in life-threatening temperatures. Facing any of this without the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration would be mayhem. And future years are likely to be worse.

Read: Hurricane Beryl is a terrifying omen

The NWS serves as a crucial point of contact in a weather crisis, alerting the public when forecasts turn dangerous and advising emergency managers on the best plan of action. So far in 2024, the NWS has issued some 13,000 severe-thunderstorm warnings, 2,000 tornado warnings, and 1,800 flash-flood warnings, plus almost 3,000 river-flood warnings, according to JoAnn Becker, a meteorologist and the president of the union that represents NWS employees.

NOAA is also home to the National Hurricane Center, which tracks storms, and the Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, whose pilots fly "hurricane hunter" planes directly into cyclones to measure their wind speed and hone the agency's predictions. NOAA even predicts space weather. Just this past May, it forecast a severe geomagnetic storm with the potential to threaten power grids and satellites. (The most consequential outages never came to pass, but the solar storm did throw off farmers' GPS-guided tractors for a while.)

Privatizing the weather is not a new conservative aim. Nearly two decades ago, when the National Weather Service updated its website to be more user-friendly, Barry Myers, then executive vice president of AccuWeather, complained to the press that "we work very hard every day competing with other companies, and we also have to compete with the government." In 2005, after meeting with a representative from AccuWeather, then-Senator Rick Santorum introduced a bill calling for the NWS to cease competition with the private sector, and reserve its forecasts for commercial providers. The bill never made it out of committee. But in 2017, Trump picked Myers to lead NOAA. (Myers withdrew his nomination after waiting two years for Senate confirmation.)

Funding for many of NOAA's programs could plummet in 2025, and the agency already suffers from occasional telecommunications breakdowns, including a recent alert-system outage amid flooding in the Midwest. It is also subject to political pressures: In 2019, the agency backed then-President Trump's false claim (accompanied by a seemingly Sharpie-altered map) that Hurricane Dorian was headed for Alabama. Private companies might be better funded and, theoretically, less subject to political whims. They can also use supercomputing power to hone NOAA's data into hyperlocal predictions, perhaps for an area as small as a football stadium. Some, including AccuWeather, use their own proprietary algorithms to interpret NWS data and produce forecasts that they claim have superior accuracy. (Remember, though: Without NWS data, none of this would happen.)

Read: NOAA politicized the weather report

But this is not the vision that Project 2025 lays out. It proposes a dramatically defunded NOAA whose husk is nonetheless hyper-responsive to the administration's politics. And commercializing the agency's underlying data risks creating a system of tiered services. One could imagine a future where private outfits charge subscriptions for their weather reports, and only some municipalities are able to pay for the best forecasts. Private companies are also subject to commercial conflicts of interest; do we want flood-risk predictions sponsored by a flood-insurance company, or heat advisories from an air-conditioning conglomerate?

The NWS also has perks that a private system would be hard-pressed to replicate, including a partnership with the World Meteorological Organization, which allows the U.S. access to a suite of other countries' weather models. International collaboration proved crucial in 2012, when Hurricane Sandy was still churning in the Atlantic Ocean. Initially, the American model predicted, incorrectly, that the storm would turn away from the East Coast. But the European model accurately forecast a collision course, which bought emergency managers in the U.S. crucial time to prepare before Sandy made ferocious landfall in New Jersey.

Violent storms like Sandy make clear that America's national security is only as strong as our ability to accurately predict the weather, especially as natural disasters and extreme weather rise in our warming climate. In fact, NOAA's existence is one of the reasons we know that the climate really is warming. The agency is home to one of the most significant repositories of climate data on Earth, which includes information on shifting atmospheric conditions and the health of coastal fisheries, plus hundreds of thousands of years' worth of ice-core and tree-ring data. Scientists around the globe use all of this information.Its collection is proof of human-induced global warming. It's fitting, then, that the agency would be a target of hard-right activists and the Heritage Foundation, which has received fossil-fuel funding.

Democrats have seized on Project 2025 as an anti-Trump talking point. The Democratic National Convention is running ads urging voters to simply "Google it," presumably in the hopes that voters will be alarmed by proposals to eliminate the Department of Education and limit access to emergency contraceptives. But Project 2025's robust sections on how the next administration could whittle away climate-change research have also caught the attention of lawmakers. "Every non-billionaire American should dread this plan," Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, who has been raising alarms about NOAA's fate since Trump first took office, told me in an email.

Read: The open plot to dismantle the federal government

The politicization of the weather exasperates JoAnn Becker. Most of her colleagues in meteorology, she said, are living their childhood dreams, which have nothing to do with politics. In 1976, when Becker was a little girl, Typhoon Pamela left much of her native Guam without power for months, and reshaped her life. She wanted to be part of a team that gave people a chance to prepare for something like that. "We're not pushing an agenda. We're looking objectively at the changes in our climate overall," Becker said.

The solution to weather-related polarization, though, is not to eliminate the means by which the United States understands the climate. An ever-growing number of American lives now depend on the country's ability to respond quickly to weather emergencies. Eliminating or privatizing climate information won't eliminate the effects of climate change. It will only make them more deadly.

Zoe Schlanger is a staff writer at The Atlantic.


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jrDiscussion - desc
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JBB
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JBB    4 months ago

original

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
1.1  Igknorantzruls  replied to  JBB @1    4 months ago

all as he garners support from those who think it can't happen here,

there are reasons Trump should be made out as for who he is, and why he should inject fear

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1.2  devangelical  replied to  JBB @1    4 months ago
NOAA's climate alarmism

well, they can't have all that scientific data coming between unbridled capitalism and their wealthy benefactors...

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2  Just Jim NC TttH    4 months ago

What a bunch of chicken little bullshit. Be afraid, be very afraid................LMMFAO

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.1  George  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2    4 months ago

Is that before or after he ends democracy? Takes away African Americans rights to vote and kills all the puppies?

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
2.2  Igknorantzruls  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2    4 months ago
chicken little bullshit.

do you deny Trumps hand in 'Sharpie"ing the forecast while denying climate change while throwing paper towelsatthe deluge of information directly supporting what the want to be aborting one , thinks we need not recognize and easier when not smack dab in front of our reading eyes, as he is all for abolishing renewables and green, as he's demonstrated as much to the point of obscene he was telling Big Oil if given a Billion he'll make regulations go their way, and he surely will, as is his and the stated 2025 planned agendas, and funny how chicken little was so wrong about the last administration where a 'man' couldnever be deemed strong, yet, an attempted 'strongman' did appear and did attempt to take our democracy away , but whether or not weather does foretell the future for US, I can assure you, it has shown who Trump truly is, but youre too brave to not save face, as are too many in disgrace, so do enjoy your stated denial, just be wary when in the cake, there is no file, to grind away at what Bill did Barr from happening, while enabling so much other, for in his place will now be a yes woman or man, as thus is the 2025/Trump plan, 

N what ever could go wrong...? 

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2.2.1  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  Igknorantzruls @2.2    4 months ago

[] Your commentary is an embarrassment to the site.

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.2.2  George  replied to  Igknorantzruls @2.2    4 months ago

When you can’t debate what someone actually said, make an argument for them that they never said, then argue against it. It’s intellectually dishonest but if that is all you have left then that is what you have to do I guess.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.2.3  JohnRussell  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2.2.1    4 months ago

He still makes more sense than 99% of the conservatives here. 

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2.2.4  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  JohnRussell @2.2.3    4 months ago

Debatable................EXTREMELY debatable

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2.2.5  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2.2.1    4 months ago

[]

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
2.2.6  Igknorantzruls  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2.2.1    4 months ago

[]

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2.2.7  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  Igknorantzruls @2.2.6    4 months ago

YAWNN..................

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2.8  Trout Giggles  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2.2.1    4 months ago

Some of us love his commentary. He's our Poet Laureate

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
2.2.9  Igknorantzruls  replied to  George @2.2.2    4 months ago
It’s intellectually dishonest but if that is all you have left then that is what you have to do I guess.

all i have left..?

Be careful what you ask for, as just possibly, i might have a tad more...

 
 
 
Just Jim NC TttH
Professor Principal
2.2.10  Just Jim NC TttH  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.2.8    4 months ago

Obviously easily entertained.

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.2.11  George  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.2.8    4 months ago
He's our Poet Laureate

You forgot the sarcasm tag.....I hope.

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.2.12  George  replied to  Igknorantzruls @2.2.6    4 months ago
why dont you have me shot

That is more of a Biden thing obviously. 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2.13  Trout Giggles  replied to  Just Jim NC TttH @2.2.10    4 months ago

Yep! I'm simple

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
2.2.14  Right Down the Center  replied to  JohnRussell @2.2.3    4 months ago

jrSmiley_10_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.2.15  Hallux  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.2.8    4 months ago
Some of us love his commentary. He's our Poet Laureate

There certainly are flashes of e. e. cummings. (how to write his name is up to some really boring debate).

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
3  devangelical    4 months ago

project 2025 now makes a revolver with a box of hollow points the perfect 2024 xmas gift for all the women in your life...

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
4  Nerm_L    4 months ago

Well, this certainly isn't new or novel.  Lawyers have been sponging off the government since the country was founded.  Justice ain't a free service, ya know.  It's necessary to use a middleman to access the law, pay our taxes, convince our politicians to represent us, and obtain government permission to do just about anything.  Did you know that it is legal for a private entity to patent government funded research?  How long has taxpayers been subsidizing for profit healthcare?  Ronald Reagan called the play but, man oh man, Bill Clinton ran with the ball.  Public/private partnerships have been a centerpiece of Democrat politics since Al Gore gutted the Federal service to score political points.

How many people actually get their weather reports from the National Weather Service?  Most people use some sort of middleman broadcaster or app that scrapes advertising dollars and pushes subscription scams.  If you don't recognize this website then you haven't been getting weather reports from NWS.    

The NOAA Aviation Weather Center provides weather data that directly contributes to climate change.    People can't fly the friendly skies without emitting pollutants at the worst possible place in the atmosphere.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
4.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  Nerm_L @4    4 months ago

original

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
4.1.1  Right Down the Center  replied to  JBB @4.1    4 months ago

A core belief that Biden is mentally capable to be president.

 
 
 
Nerm_L
Professor Expert
4.1.2  Nerm_L  replied to  JBB @4.1    4 months ago
You mean this kind of cognitive dissonance?
1185750539788681216-png__700.jpg
 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
5  Trout Giggles    4 months ago

Wait until Mar-A-Lago  is destroyed by a Cat 5 Hurricane, Wouldn't it be ironic if it were named Donald?

Anyway....they will change their tunes

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
6  Greg Jones    4 months ago

"The preponderance of its climate-change research should be disbanded,"

That's true, it's mostly cherry picked and fudged data that leads to erroneous computer projections to what might happen far into the future.

 
 

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