Environmental Groups Are Suing To Silence Scientists Who Wrote a Report Questioning Climate Change Alarmism
The groups are using the lawsuit to halt the Trump administration's deregulatory agenda.
In July, the Energy Department released a report challenging many of the mainstream narratives surrounding climate change. The report, which was authored by the Climate Working Group (CWG)—a team of five climate scientists and economists—was drafted to "encourage a more thoughtful and science-based conversation about climate change and energy," according to Energy Secretary Chris Wright.
"To correct course, we need open, respectful, and informed debate. That's why I'm inviting public comment on this report," the energy secretary wrote in the report's foreword. The publication has indeed opened up debate, garnering nearly 60,000 comments in the Federal Register. But it has also introduced a series of legal challenges against the agency and the CWG.
On Thursday, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts heard arguments in a lawsuit filed by two environmental groups—the Environmental Defense Fund and Union of Concerned Scientists—against the Energy Department, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the CWG.
The lawsuit argues that when forming the CWG, Wright and the Energy Department violated the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), which requires federal advisory groups to provide meeting notices and meeting notes to the public, create an approved charter of the group's mission, and "have a balanced membership in terms of 'the points of view represented and the functions to be performed by the advisory committee,'" according to the the Congressional Research Service.
Much of the lawsuit focuses on the viewpoint balance of the CWG, with the plaintiffs arguing that "all five authors are well known for holding 'contrarian views on climate science that are out of step with the mainstream'" and "none of the members represents the consensus view among climate scientists that human activities…have unequivocally caused global warming." To remedy the lawsuit, the environmental groups are demanding that the working group be disbanded, the report be vacated, and CWG members be prohibited from advising federal agencies until the defendants "comply with all requirements for the group to operate legally as an advisory committee."
The Energy Department has refuted claims that it violated the FACA, arguing that the CWG is not an advisory group under the law because it was created to "exchange facts or information" with the Energy Department, not to "make recommendations on an identified governmental policy for which specified advice was being sought." Additionally, the CWG was disbanded on September 3, in a letter sent from Wright to the group's members, rendering "most of Plaintiffs' claims…moot due to the CWG's dissolution." Even with the CWG officially being shut down, its members will continue to collaborate (outside of the federal government's scope) and update the report, according to Bloomberg.
While the environmental groups are centering their lawsuit around a violation of federal rules, their true reasoning for challenging the CWG report is to halt the EPA's reconsideration of the endangerment finding—a 2009 rule that allows the agency to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act. According to the environmental groups, the CWG was formed "because the overwhelming scientific consensus—and the federal government's own expert analyses and reports—demonstrate the lack of any scientific basis to reconsider the Endangerment Finding," which forced the federal government to "manufacture purported expert opinions upon which the Administration could rely." The Energy Department argues that the EPA also cited "numerous other sources" to justify its reconsideration. Public comments on the proposed rule are open through September 22.
The CWG's efforts have not only received legal pushback but scientific pushback as well. The report—which does not outright deny the existence of climate change, but does challenge the conclusion that it is an existential threat—garnered a robust response from "more than 85 climate experts" earlier in September. However, the partisan nature of this response and the CWG's report "show how not to do scientific assessment," writes Roger Pielke Jr., a climate scientist who was heavily cited in the CWG report.
While Pielke may be right, the legal response to vacate the report and silence its authors and their contrarian views is arguably more concerning for the future of climate change discussions. The politicization of the study also raises the question of what role, if any, the federal government should play in collecting and communicating climate science.
Then again, Wright did commission the CWG report to stimulate "informed debate" on climate change. The lawsuit may not have been what he originally had in mind, but it has kick-started conversations on the topic nonetheless.
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Suppose the lawsuit is better than what the rainbow cult activist used to silence Charlie Kirk.
Did Kirk never get sued? I can't believe that it's an either/or situation in anything but name.
So dissolved the group, remade it full of echo-chamber members, and is going to "not advise", but trade info with the Dept of Energy because that gets around the rules ? Got it.
Much of the lawsuit focuses on the viewpoint balance of the CWG, with the plaintiffs arguing that "all five authors are well known for holding 'contrarian views on climate science that are out of step with the mainstream'" and "none of the members represents the consensus view among climate scientists that human activities…have unequivocally caused global warming." To remedy the lawsuit, the environmental groups are demanding that the working group be disbanded, the report be vacated, and CWG members be prohibited from advising federal agencies until the defendants "comply with all requirements for the group to operate legally as an advisory committee."[Emphasis mine.]
The Science. It is settled. Clearly. Consensus - the penultimate in Static Magic Sciency Spells. I dare say, *unequivocally*...
Didn't TPTB at one time in history call this sort of thing, "Heresy?"
And quite recently so, as well?
This makes the public's distrust of "experts" all the more baffling, no?
I have always found the term “settled science” an oxymoron. When is science ever settled? Probably never.
Science is only as good as what we know right now. We aren’t any more right today than the flat earthers of centuries ago. We just THINK we know everything. I guess they did too.
We have the same tactics too. Excommunication of all heretics! I’m sure the climate change high priests of today would burn the heretics at the stake if they could.
The same scientists who will not actually release the data that their theories are based on without FOIA being used do not like outside views? Stunning.
I am a proud Southern Baptist. My faith has far more rigor behind it than climate "science"
By an odd coincidence, two of the dissolved " Climate Working Group's " five members are Alabama evangelicals, one having served as Rush Limbaugh's science guy and been named "Outstanding Evangelical Climate Scientist of the Year " in 2014.
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2014/07/he-maketh-me-to-lie-down-in-green.html
https://x.com/RussellSeitz/status/1966582802184294548
IMHO, the so-called climate scientists claiming their theories are settled, are guilty of promoting climate science that isn't backed by good data or reasoning, but instead are good papers to benefit the climate scientists and their customers: people in government looking to control our energy production and use, and they created fake data to support their goals of more overpriced climate study grants. Their refusal to make their data and methodologies publicly available makes their results non-scientific. Their climate models all failing in the same direction (we haven't had the promised rise in temperature, which I personally think would be a good thing) shows their theories aren't supported by science.
According to Algore, we should all be dead by now. What happened?
Last I heard, if we don't change things by 2030, it will be too late.
Any update on this or have the usual suspects moved the goal posts again?
The goal posts are now mounted on wheels.
Your opinion is in realty, far humbler than you conceive, as there is, at most,one kind of climate physics, and it doesn't give a damn about ideology, left, right, or center.
Capice ?
Go to Google or Grok and enter " find nearby science libraries" follow the directions until you find yourself in a large room filled shelves full of what are known as "journals" , containing in depressing detail, more on the materials, methods and data that give rise to scientific agreement on results than your very empty brain has thus far been able to conceive.
I see. And how many papers in how many climate science journals have you read in the past year?
"What role if any ..."
The Federal government should not play any role in climate science, funding, regulating or anything else. There should be no federal Environmental agency in the first place. The courts may have some role in adjudicating torts alleging harm due to the emissions of some human activities. The standard that should be used to determine liability is actual harm to specific people caused by the activities of other people. Don't hold your breath waiting for a sudden outbreak of sense in America! I won't ...
I agree MWAocdoc. The EPA and climate research funding are unnecessary and exist to allow the political class to control our energy production and use. You know how the EPA serves the public by the government response in East Palastine Ohio where the train derailed and they burned a toxic spill. Residents are still very unhappy with how they were treated. No doubt billions in "climate research" grants would have been better spent cleaning up the spill.
The new funded priesthood disagrees with the old funded priesthood, ergo they are wrong.
"To correct course, we need open, respectful, and informed debate. That's why I'm inviting public comment on this report," the energy secretary wrote.
Let's all just pray that a leftist doesn't shoot him in the neck.
Amen to that, Secretary Wright has already shot himself in the foot.
Classic. These folks are suing now for exactly what they did to force the global warming hoax agenda down everyone's throats!
"which requires federal advisory groups to provide meeting notices and meeting notes to the public, create an approved charter of the group's mission, and "have a balanced membership in terms of 'the points of view represented and the functions to be performed by the advisory committee,'" according to the the Congressional Research Service. "
Can I sue someone for not agreeing with my assumptions?
"with the plaintiffs arguing that "all five authors are well known for holding 'contrarian views on climate science that are out of step with the mainstream'" and "none of the members represents the consensus view among climate scientists that human activities…have unequivocally caused global warming."
They are advocating for Mob Rule, not science.
4 decades too late? Al Gore ended debate when he removed the utmost prominent experts and brought in all those in favor...
"Then again, Wright did commission the CWG report to stimulate "informed debate" on climate change. The lawsuit may not have been what he originally had in mind, but it has kick-started conversations on the topic nonetheless."
Al Gore's hypothesis that the ice caps would be gone in 10 years was proven wrong 10 years ago.
Just two more weeks
Two more weeks to flatten the ice!
Maybe in this verse of the multiverse. How do you know he wasn't correct in the other verses?
In that universe he was preaching about the benefits of co2 and how it helps the environment. He started a government initiative that burnt it all as fast as possible. The multiverse constant is that he is always wrong.
As demonstrated by "the Gore effect", the tendency of global warming events to be hit by unseasonably cold weather.
But... it's super cereal!!
The Left is using Lawsuits to Silence dissent to their Gov-Gun-Sun-God will fix the weather worshiping-religion? And in other news water is wet!
At least the left isn't using bullets to silence dissent....oh. wait.
"garnered a robust response from more than 85 climate experts"
who have large grants to "study" climate change.
The planet has not given the safe word so cut their funding.
"robust " is putting it mildly:
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/09/climate-scientists-response-to-doe-report/
Over a decade ago "Critical Review " coauthor Judith Curry, then at Georgia Tech, told Michael Mann on the record that global temperatures would flatline.
It didn't happen.
Where's the proof that the temps didn't? And where's the proof that humans have caused the temps to rise to begin with?
When assuming climate is inside a box and the sun does not play a role, how can anyone actually follow the "experts" and their lack of logic and absurd fear mongering?
Humans add 3% to CO2 for their activity. 3%. So we have actual factual evidence of approximately .5 degrees c of temp increase on the east coast of the USA. Humans account for 3%. That means humans at most are responsible for 0.15 degrees C of warming over 150 years and that is within the margins of error for the instrumentation. And of course the instrumentation and the locations of the instruments have moved which tainted the data.
"Where's the proof that the temps didn't?"
Isotope analysis - lots and lots of it , and getting more accurate all the time.
"And where's the proof that humans have caused the temps to rise to begin with?"
Poor Neut!
Why must you be thicker than an early Victorian brick?
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2014/10/climate-wars-salt-talks.html
So where's DOGE?
Here: headed by noted chemtrail luminary Marjorie Taylor Green,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFiRv1ehloc
https://x.com/RussellSeitz/status/1965969986754867646
The report was pseudoscience bullshit. It was never supposed to be an honest review of the science. Those challenging the legality of the report are in the right.
Not every issue has a valid dissenting view.
The report was a red meat PR deliverable conjured up by Secretary Wright to please Trump's coal mining, oil drilling & fracking fanbase.
Its most prestigious coauthor, former Undersecretary of Energy Steve Koonin, was nothing less than Chief Scientist of British Petroleum.
And then someone opened the front door and noted..
What F'En Climate Emergency?
Oh yeah; That 'fairy-tale' conjured up by Leftards to please Leftards 'government control' of the peoples energy fanbase.
1st it was their health. Then it was their money. Then it was their education. Then it was their retirement. But the grand prize of ultimate 'government' control was in taking-over the people's 'energy'.
Spoken like a true Tucktard:
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2022/09/pride-goeth-before-squall.html
Yeah and what report are you citing that is benefitting the garbage solar and windmill tech?
One answer. The Maldives are going to be underwater by 2020. Billions given since that statement was made in the early 1990's.
The fact that 3 new airports and many high end luxury resorts were built but no sea wall and the sea level actually reduced and never rose since the mid 1990's and The Maldives have had no negative effects due to the climate in the last 35 years should shut down the lies and end this nonsense.
This is fact. Some room full of Al Gore/John Kerry democrat globalist nut gobblers will not change this regardless if they all agree the truth is wrong.
Your new word for the day is :
isostasy.
It's as real a thing as third world grifters crying wolf to get foreign aid and the American Petroleum Institute trying to worm its way out of the consequences of the Industrial Revolution.
Except when the "consensus" itself is a product of a system that shuts down all debate for irrelevant political reasons.
Having spent a career as a bit player in academic geosciences, I can tell you that the progressive mindset allows no actual questioning of the basic premise that humans are a blight upon the earth. One of the results of this is that the pre-ordained conclusion that human CO2 production is going to destroy the planet. Anyone disagreeing with that does so at the risk of their job.
Why are you here?
My only response to this?
We've got protect our phoney balony jobs, gentleman!
Spoken like a true sausage salesman.
Geddouttahere.
"more than 85 climate experts" are they like the 51 intelligence agencies who said Hunter Biden's laptop was Russian disinformation? I think so.
This article really highlights the complicated intersection of science, politics, and law in the climate change debate. While I believe transparency and balanced viewpoints are essential, silencing scientists through lawsuits doesn’t feel like the right solution. Even if their conclusions are controversial, open discussion and peer review should guide the conversation, not legal threats. Otherwise, we risk turning climate Aquaculture
into a political battlefield instead of a pursuit of truth. The focus should be on improving the quality of debate, not narrowing it.
The lawsuit is more about process. It is illegal to stack advisory committees. There will shortly be such a lawsuit regarding Kennedy's vaccine advisory committee.
Problem Point: 'Guns' don't make science.
The plaintiffs actually have a good case here.
So this is where we're headed, if you don't agree with us, if you don't bow to our orthodoxy, you have committed heresy and soon you will be given the question.
The left have created their own orthodoxy and now believe it is right and proper to eliminate anyone who dares any heretical thoughts against their orthodoxy.
Speaking of boondoggles, here in Michigan our illustrious Governor Whitmer (WEF) wanted to cut down 400 acres of trees in Northern Michigan, to install a solar plant. How much of the funding for that boondoggle would end up in the hands of one or more of her relatives? Or does Whitmer have some investments in a solar panel factory in China?
Obama invested the US along with many countries joining in with agreements for China to build manufacturing plants and produce millions of solar panels they guaranteed would be bought and installed on homes. The Building codes have been manipulated to try and force this.
While Trump was able to stop this initially beginning his first term, Biden set the wheels in motion and paid out the billions Obama initially promised. On the hook to buy these poor tech solar modules you see increases in subsidies by governments for people to purchase and install solar onto their homes.
But those are government subsidies, so it's free money, right? It's not as if it comes out of someone's pocket. /sarc
Bill Maher has his own personal opinion about buying and installing solar panels.
Progressives fully support free speech as long as they approve of said speech.
Progressives fully support free speech ONLY IF they approve of said speech.
Which, of course, is exactly what the 1st amendment was created to avoid.
Popular speech needs no protection, after all.
Whenever the Climate Change crowd cites “scientific consensus” or “the science is settled,” they lose me. The is no “consensus” and science is never “settled.” All because you only listen to like-minded people doesn’t mean there is a consensus. The Earth has been warming and cooling for billions of years and the climate crowd has no idea why. However, they speak with certainty that ‘this time’ it is because of man and CO2. That defies logic. Sorry, not buying it.
It is, however, interesting to me that the voluminous and frequently self-contradictory regulatory morass can be used ad lib to delay the regulatory apparatus whenever those who implemented the massive bureaucracy in the first place do not approve of how their creation is being used by those currently in power. They apparently have not yet realized the meaning of "what goes around comes around!"
The is no “consensus” and science is never “settled.”
What does the word consensus mean to you? Do you think that consensus means 100% of some group of people agreeing with each other down to the finest details of one particular question? If so, then consensus would only exist in a room with one person in it.
The word has to be useful for something. There has to be some situations where a "consensus" of experts helps us make decisions. To say that this is never true in science, is to say that we can never arrive at a reliable conclusion on any scientific question, since there will always be some scientists that disagree with others about something within a given problem.
Think about something the article says:
The report—which does not outright deny the existence of climate change, but does challenge the conclusion that it is an existential threat—garnered a robust response from "more than 85 climate experts" earlier in September.
Would it be fair to say that there is thus a consensus that the climate is changing in detectable ways? I think if we look up statements by each of the 5 authors (whose names I recognized from following this topic for at least the last 25 years), each one will agree that: 1) The Earth's climate is changing in ways that we have measured. 2) Human activities contribute at least somewhat to those changes.
Scientists push and test the boundaries of knowledge constantly. That is what they do. They had to do that to get a Ph.D. They had to do that to get research papers published. Nothing in science is ever proven to be absolute truth. A state of knowledge on a particular question can get to the point where pushing and prodding on that hypothesis or theory will not yield new understanding. That happens when everything scientists have tried to do to disprove it have failed to do so, and they have run out of new or creative ways to try to disprove it. Continuing that would be wasting time. No scientist would advance their career rehashing for the nth time something that has always come out the same way.
That is when there is consensus. They all agree, because it would be fruitless to continue questioning it, because it works. Relying on that hypothesis or theory gives them the right answers when they run experiments. Science is never "settled", because they could still be wrong. Newton's laws of motion worked great, until they didn't. (They actually still work great, just not at all scales of distance, time, mass, or velocity.)
The phrase "the science is settled"? I'm skeptical that any scientist would say that without qualifying and explaining it the way I just did. I can believe that politicians and environmental activists saying it, and I wish they wouldn't. I can only recall seeing it when skeptics claim that "alarmists" say it in order to shut down debate, however.
Looking for a consensus among experts isn't a way to find truth. That isn't the goal. It is a heuristic for getting and evaluating advice that is more likely to be correct than not. Show me someone that goes to the guy promising to double his money in two weeks rather than taking the advice of the consensus of financial experts, and, in two weeks, I'll show you a guy that will have lost that money.
The Union of Unconcerned Scientists was not consulted at all. Very disappointing.
http://www.aocdoomsdaycountdown.com
While Pielke may be right, the legal response to vacate the report and silence its authors and their contrarian views is arguably more concerning for the future of climate change discussions.
If an academic journal retracts a paper it had published, then deciding whether the authors of that paper were "silence[d]" or whether the retraction was justified is dependent only on the merits of the paper itself.
If it met the same level of rigor, accuracy, readability, relevance, and objectivity that is typical for papers published by that journal, then there would be a strong suspicion that it was the conclusions that were the motivation in retracting it. To use the same word, the motivation was probably to try and "silence" the authors and their conclusions.
On the other hand, if critics of the paper had been correct in pointing out inaccuracies, errors, and bias that should have led to the paper being rejected, then the journal would be justified in retracting it in order to try and preserve its reputation. A scientist is not "silenced" if their shoddy work is retracted and taken down from digital portals for that journal or not included in any reprinting of that issue or in a collection of journal issues. The scientist could still see if a different journal will publish it, put it on the internet as free access, or whatever else they want to do with it.
The same reasoning should apply to a government report. If it holds up to scrutiny on its scientific merits, then the only question left would be whether the law was followed in its creation and publication. Those would be separate legal questions from whether it was good science, though.
How dare those scientists question the orthodoxy of environmental groups! Lawsuits are not enough. They must be silenced by what ever means necessary. No one has the right to question the environmental orthodoxy.
It's heresy, I say...heresy!
Burn them! They're witches!
While Federal witch-burning is banned by the First Amendment, the Secretary of Energy , who stands in the Presidential order of succession , is empowered to dissolve such groups as he creates if their work fails under scrutiny. The Climate Working Group was no exception.
After seven years of beating the same drum it's one of the longest running song & dance acts in the history of the lobbying industry.
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/search?q=red+team
Forget Neanderthals. Has Trump's cabinet been tested for Piltdown DNA?