On Feb. 12 President Donald Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency revoked the so-called “endangerment finding,” issued in 2009, asserting that “CO2 and other greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare.” This scientific finding served as the basis for limits on tailpipe emissions and power plant rules enacted under President Barack Obama and committed the United States to a national effort to arrest the kind of pollution that contributes directly to global warming.

Based on an extensive body of scientific evidence, in the EPA in 2009 singled out six greenhouse gases for the danger they pose to public health and welfare.
It is well known that Trump considers global warming a “hoax” — but it is equally well known that his opinion is ridiculous and utterly without merit. In fact, this very winter, the one in which we suffered from a robust cold spell in late January, is now just days away from becoming the warmest Northern Hemisphere winter since at least 1948-49.
This declaration derives from analysis of observations, not idle speculation or guesswork. The areal extent of air as cold as or colder than -5 degrees centigrade at about one mile above the surface is a routinely available observation, and this year’s Dec. 1-Feb. 28 period is poised to be the smallest integrated value of that measure seen in modern times. This particularly “warm” year is the 79th entry in a time series that has steadily decreased over nearly eight decades and robustly testifies to the reality of global warming.
Scientifically, the dangers posed by these gases still exist, and now those emissions are not regulated. “Revoking” a scientific conclusion borne of an impartial analysis of evidence is nothing more than asserting an alternate reality — a behavior that appears to have become so common in the current administration as to have become a malignant standard of practice. Nothing good ever comes from ignoring a problem.
Steve Ackerman and Jonathan Martin, professors in the UW-Madison department of atmospheric and oceanic sciences, are guests on WHA radio (970 AM) at noon the last Monday of each month. Send them your questions at stevea@ssec.wisc.edu or jemarti1@wisc.edu.
