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The Washington Times Online Edition

New federal office for global warming

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke says the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Service office, which will study and report on global warming, will help federal agencies and businesses prepare for and cope with global changes. (Associated Press)Commerce Secretary Gary Locke says the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Service office, which will study and report on global warming, will help federal agencies and businesses prepare for and cope with global changes. (Associated Press)

Amid the growing fight over the accuracy of climate data, President Obama is seeking to have the federal government put its imprimatur on the science by calling for the creation of a new federal office to study and report on global warming.

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Service office would help federal agencies and businesses prepare for and cope with global changes, similar to how industries have used data from the 140-year-old National Weather Service to create new technologies and provide services.

“This service will be a vital part of our growing body of knowledge on climate change, and will be held to the highest standards of scientific integrity and transparency,” said Rep. Edward J. Markey, Massachusetts Democrat and chairman of the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming.

The NOAA Climate Service office, which requires requires congressional committee approval, has been under development for years and is not designed to stem controversies over the accuracy of climate data, according to NOAA officials. It will cull existing data and programs from various Commerce offices under one roof.

But the proposed office does fall in line with the administration’s effort to act on climate change in Congress and on the world stage. In Congress, the push for capping emissions of carbon dioxide, which some scientists say is causing global warming, has stalled in the Senate.

World leaders, spurred by Mr. Obama, failed to craft a cohesive response to climate changes at the United Nations’ Copenhagen conference in December. They did come up with a non-binding deal that leaders called a “first step” to stemming greenhouse gas emissions.

Developing countries such as China have resisted efforts to cap their emissions as their industries grow more quickly and emit more than developed countries such as the United States.

Mr. Locke said changes to the Earth’s temperatures threaten to melt polar ice caps, raise sea levels, threaten farmers’ crops and change weather patterns. Last month, the National Climatic Data Center reported that the decade that ended in 2009 was the warmest on record worldwide, surpassing the 1990s. Many scientists believe human activity has played a substantial role in the changes.

But others question the legitimacy of that research. The United Nations’ climate talks were overshadowed by the revelation of documents that purportedly showed several prominent researchers selected data that supported their theory that humans caused climate change.

Several other researchers discredited the so-called climategate e-mails, but the episode underlined the doubt that some in the research community and the public have over climate change.

The Sierra Club, a grassroots environmental group, praised the NOAA announcement as a sign the Obama administration has “returned science to its proper role in the decisionmaking process.”

“Many agencies across the federal government are already doing great work and consolidating efforts will only improve access to this important information,” executive director Carl Pope said.

Mr. Locke hopes to have the program established by Oct. 1.

In the meantime, the NOAA has already established a Web portal where all of the government’s climate data will be stored in one place: Climate.gov.

“More and more individuals — community planners, farmers, public health officials and small-business owners are seeking reliable, user-friendly climate data and information,” said NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco. “We envision this climate portal as the first step toward making the wealth of climate information at NOAA available in one easy-to-use resource.”

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