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Monday, 1 January 2018
The climate scientist on leaving the US to work in France
The climate scientist on leaving the US to work in France – with funding
from President Macron – and why she believes Trump’s decision to pull
out of the Paris agreement will backfire on him
Camille Parmesan: ‘We are now sure of what we only suspected years ago. Policy needs to catch up with science.’
Photograph: Lloyd Russell/University of Plymouth
Camille
Parmesan, a biologist at the universities of Texas and Plymouth, is one
of the world’s most influential climate change scientists, having shown
how butterflies and other species are affected by it across all
continents. She is one of 18 US scientists moving to France to take up President Macron’s invitation of refuge after Donald Trump’s decision to cut science funding and withdraw the US from the 2015 Paris agreement. What has made you leave the US?
The impact of
Trump on climate science has been far greater than what the public
believe it has. He has not only slashed funding, but he’s gone on the
attack in any way he can with his powers as the president. University
researchers are buffered from this, but scientists working at government agencies have really felt the blow.
They have been muffled and not allowed to speak freely with the press,
they have had their reports altered to remove “climate change” from the
text, and are being told to leave climate change out of future reports
and funding proposals. This degrades the entire climate science
community. Scientists are fighting back, but Congress needs to exercise
its constitutional powers and keep the executive branch in check. This
is not a partisan issue – this is about the future of America. Are you angry?
None of us expected Trump to win.
It was a real shock. It was horrifying to have him as a candidate. He
was so extreme. Frankly, I am not just angry at the far right, extreme
Republican groups but also with [some] liberals who bought the Russian
propaganda and who are not taking responsibility. And with people who
didn’t vote. Good lord. You need to vote! It was a bit like Brexit. Many
young people did not vote. I understand they did not want a mainstream
candidate but they got Trump and Brexit.
Green man: President Macron attending the Tech for Planet
event in Paris earlier this month. Photograph: Philippe
Wojazer/AFP/Getty Images
Why go to France?
I came to the UK for family
reasons seven years ago. But I was not happy with my department at the
University of Texas. Research funding has gone down so much in the US. I
had a big collaborative grant and I wanted to continue it, but it
looked like funding was not there. Then Brexit happened, Trump got
elected and President Macron made his offer [to fund climate research].
It was perfect timing. His initiative brings me to France, which allows
me to apply for EU money.
You are now in a select club?
None
of us knew each other until we met before Christmas in Paris. We were
like giddy little teenagers, saying “Isn’t this great!” I was happy to
take five years out but some of the others have retained dual positions.
I will be moving to a small field station in the foothills of the
Pyrenees. It has fabulous facilities. It’s torture, isn’t it? What will be your research?
It will be on the
impact of climate change on wild species. To date, I have done mainly
meta-analyses of species movements, like to the poles or up mountains.
It has been important from a policy perspective. Policymakers need
big-picture numbers, like half or two thirds of species are moving. I
don’t want to do meta-analyses now. That’s done. Now I am going to do a
series of different projects, all looking at the effect of climate
change on species, and the vulnerability of systems, such as the high
Alps and mountain tops. I will be documenting the impacts because
they are relatively understudied and looking at animals carrying
diseases which may come to Europe. I did a small project linking
leishmaniasis and climate change.
Is there any difference between public attitudes to climate change in the US and UK?
Average
citizens in the UK are much better informed about issues, more
science-knowledgeable and more likely to want to see policies based on
the best science available than is the average US public. This was not
always the case. Science historically has played a strong role in US
policies and there was a bipartisan respect of scientific findings. I’ve
seen this erode over the past 30 years, and really don’t know why this
has happened. What has changed in climate research in the last few years?
We
are now seeing the impacts of climate change everywhere. None of us
thought that we would find huge changes taking place in the oceans,
which have been largely ignored. But the range shifts [migration of
plants and animals] there are 10 times that of land. Also, we are seeing
diseases coming from ocean systems, like outbreaks of vibrio poisoning
[bacteria that occur naturally in warm coastal areas]. We think of these
as being tropical but we are now seeing outbreaks in colder waters like
the Baltic and Alaska. Are you surprised?
I
am shocked at the ubiquitousness of climate change. We are seeing
change in every country and every ocean. That is what surprises
biologists. All regions studied are being impacted. Every group of
animal and plant, from the oak tree to birds, is being impacted. All
groups are showing change. We would expect to find some regions or
groups which are stable, but to date we are not. We are seeing change
happen much faster than I thought it would 10 years ago. What is the present state of climate science?
The
science of climate change, and its impacts, is at a very strong place.
Conclusions that were tentative 15-20 years ago have been firmed up and
are now well supported. Numbers that used to be presented as rough
estimates are now being given with high confidence and low error. So our
conclusions are being stated with higher and higher confidence, and
stronger wording, because all of the research we’ve been doing has
backed up nearly all of the trends and patterns we saw many years ago.
We are now sure of what we only suspected many years ago. This is great
news for the public and policymakers, because it gives them the support
to take strong action. Policy needs to catch up with science.
When do you expect the major impacts to take place?
Things
will shift to the extremely negative in the next 50 years. Climate
scientists are doing decadal projects and it starts really shifting
about 2070-2090. That is in my children’s lifetimes. They will have to
deal with it. That’s what makes me angry. Policymakers are mostly in
their 50s and they will be dead by then. The worst impacts will hit
their grandchildren. That’s what annoys me about young people not
voting. They will be the most severely impacted. Look back on 2017 and forward to 2018?
2017 was
quite hopeful. Trump’s extremism on climate change has invigorated the
populace in both Europe and the US to take action. The world refused to
let Trump derail the Paris agreement and said it would move with more
vigour. Trump has brought people together. The US withdrawal from Paris
energised groups like the mayors who are now saying “we need to get this
moving”. Both governor Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzenegger before him
in California have been very committed. The rest of the US will follow.
Then you have Michael Bloomberg, Bill Gates and other
multi-billionaires saying business will do it on its own. That has been
fabulous. Developing countries, too, are rejecting the idea of going
dirty and are going green. We’re seeing new and wonderful groups being
formed at all levels and across all sectors to take action. I think
we’ll see projects for carbon-cutting and green energy at the local and
state levels that will overwhelm anything the White House tries to do. I
think the shocks we’ll see in 2018 will be positive ones. What about the deniers?
People
like believing in fiction in the face of reality. We’ve had many
climate disasters and they haven’t woken up the minority who are still
living in a fictional universe. People want to believe this lie and I
don’t know how to get through to them. But hurricanes like Harvey and
Katrina have woken up middle-of-the-road people. It’s not that they were
denying climate change, but it was unimportant to them. These people
are beginning to understand it is impacting whole countries and regions. As a lepidopterist, is there any truth in the saying that a
butterfly beating its wings in one part of the world can set off a
tornado in another?
Metaphorically, yes. My 1996 Nature study
on Edith’s checkerspot butterflies was one of the first to document
impacts of climate change on wildlife. It was viewed by many ecologists
as the first “clear” evidence for climate change impacts because of its
very large geographic extent. It may be said to have started a storm.
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