Conservative members of Congress called on climate change deniers at hearing on endangered species

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

The climate crisis has become a top issue among Democrats running for president. But many Republican lawmakers are still resistant to the science showing global heating is a serious, manmade problem.

When Democrats in control of the House scheduled a hearing for international scientists to explain their warnings that humans are critically wounding biodiversity on Wednesday, conservative members of Congress called on career climate science deniers to testify alongside them.

While a small but growing number of moderate conservatives acknowledge the urgency of the manmade problem, many Republican members of the House of Representatives in leadership positions do not.

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Republicans on a natural resources subcommittee called two prominent science deniers to criticize a landmark report that 1m species are at risk of extinction – largely because of humans, including because of rising temperatures from fossil fuel use and other unsustainable activities.

The conservatives invited Marc Morano, who founded a website to question climate science, and Patrick Moore, the chairman of the CO2 Coalition – which falsely argues that more carbon is good for the planet.

The panel’s chairman and top Democrat, California’s Jared Huffman, accused the two of “trolling” the scientists who helped spearhead the report for the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).

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“I don’t know what inspires someone to make a career out of trolling scientists,” Huffman said, referring to the witnesses as being from “the shadowy corners of these junior varsity thinktanks”.

The hearing highlighted what recent polling confirms: climate change is more politically polarizing in the US than even abortion. More Democrats are seeing climate action as a top necessity, but conservative Republicans are not.

Morano was formerly communications director for the GOP senator James Inhofe but now refers to himself as an investigative journalist. He said the report’s claims that societal transformation is needed to protect and restore nature are “the latest UN appeal” for “more money and more regulatory control of the economy and people’s lives”.

Moore said humans putting carbon dioxide into the environment “are the salvation of life on Earth”.

And Tom McClintock, the panel’s ranking Republican from California, insisted inaccurately that there was “a vigorous debate in the scientific community over how human activity compares with vastly more powerful natural influencers that have driven climate change for four-and-a-half billion years”.

The scientists testifying defended the integrity of the report. They said they received and addressed 15,000 expert comments in an open review process.

“What we wanted to do was to find out what do we know and what don’t we know? Where is there unanimous agreement about what’s happening, where are there differences of opinion?” said Robert Watson, the past chair of IPBES. “It’s the most heavily peer-reviewed document ever.”

Jacob Malcom, conservation innovation director at the not-for-profit Defenders of Wildlife, said “the damage we have done and are doing is almost unimaginable.

“The top threats to biodiversity are a result of humans living unsustainably,” he said, from “ongoing land and sea degradation” to “direct exploitation” from hunting and fishing, and climate change.

“Natural systems cannot sustain this level of change,” Malcom said.