scientists dispute government report

Leading climate scientists are slamming a recent Department of Energy report, calling it a “deeply misleading antiscientific narrative” full of cherry-picked data and outright deception.

The controversial document, which claims to weigh climate risks against energy reliability concerns, has sparked outrage among researchers who see it as a politically motivated attack on established science.

Michael Mann and colleagues didn’t mince words. They accused the DOE of recycling long-debunked climate denial arguments rather than presenting anything remotely new.

Some even compared the report’s approach to “Soviet Lysenkoism” – ouch. Not exactly a compliment in scientific circles.

Soviet Lysenkoism reborn—where political dogma tramples scientific evidence just to score ideological points.

The report makes some eyebrow-raising claims. Like suggesting wildfire peaks actually happened over a century ago. Seriously?

Climate experts quickly pointed out that pre-1980s wildfire data is about as reliable as a chocolate teapot. But that didn’t stop officials from using it anyway.

While the scientific community overwhelmingly agrees that humans are driving climate change with potentially disastrous consequences, the DOE report takes a different view.

It suggests climate projections are exaggerated and that “alarmism” is the real problem hampering energy development. Right.

Scientists warn this isn’t just about bad science. There’s legitimate concern that the administration’s stance could slash climate research funding and halt critical data collection efforts.

It’s tough to solve a problem when you’re actively dismantling the tools to measure it.

The parallels to the Bush administration’s approach to climate science haven’t gone unnoticed. Many see this as part of a disturbing pattern of political interference in scientific work.

This type of report exemplifies how climate disinformation can be used to deliberately mislead the public about scientific consensus.

The report is open for public comment, but researchers aren’t holding their breath that scientific feedback will actually be incorporated.

After all, it’s hard to have a productive conversation when one side is selectively ignoring decades of research.

The scientific community’s verdict? This report isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on.

The report was created by a Climate Working Group composed primarily of well-known climate contrarians rather than mainstream climate scientists.

Meanwhile, UK climate experts note that the economic cost of climate change is already reaching 1.1% of GDP and could triple by 2050 if meaningful action is delayed.

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