yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Does NASA have any climate change skeptics? | Michelle Thaller | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Hi Jay. So your question is how widespread is it within NASA that scientists are convinced that human activity is responsible for climate change? And this is something that is important to say very, very clearly.

I have known and worked with hundreds of earth scientists at many different locations in NASA. All of them, all of them believe that human activity is responsible for the current climate change that we see going so fast it's almost unprecedented. I want you to think about that.

One thing that I take really seriously and I'm very proud of is that NASA is not a political organization. We are scientists that work for the American people. We're funded by taxpayer's money. And what we do is we make measurements.

We have many, many different satellites that are orbiting the earth right now. They're looking at things like ice on the oceans and at the poles. They're looking for things like vegetation growth and the change of that, ocean level. Is the ocean level rising? Yeah, it turns out that it is.

So we have many scientists all over the planet studying all of the different ramifications of climate change. We understand the causes. There actually is no scientific controversy about that. Humans are releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and this is warming our planet.

Now what scientists are researching currently, and they don't all agree about, is what are the most important components of driving climate change. Is it carbon dioxide? Could it be something else like methane? When methane gets released, that's an even more powerful greenhouse gas.

We don't agree on how quickly things like the ocean level will rise. People have different estimates for how quickly that will happen. So there still is scientific controversy about what the most important aspects of climate change are and how quickly it will go in the future, but there is no scientific disagreement within NASA that humans are causing climate change.

Now I started this off by saying that one of the things I'm very proud of is that NASA is not political. And what that means for me is that I cannot advocate for any specific solution to climate change. That's not my job. That's up to policymakers.

People might suggest things like having more solar energy or cutting carbon emissions or things like that, but at NASA we really understand that's not us. That's up to the American people, our leaders, and leaders around the world.

What we do is provide the facts to everybody on the planet. All of our data is actually free to any government, any person, any scientist all over the world that wants to use it. So we all know what's causing climate change. We can't tell you what to do about it, but we can say it's time to do something about it.

More Articles

View All
How a young Bill Clinton made waves during his presidential campaign | Rewind the '90s
(Crowd cheering) NARRATOR: It’s 1992, President George H.W. Bush is up for re-election. With a squeaky clean image, he’s had some of the highest approval ratings of any president. Then, a political bad boy joins the race. (Jazzy saxophone music) AJ BENZ…
3 books to read to become successful!
Three standout books that really have an impression on me. One by Tony Robbins, it’s called Life. It’s such an easy-to-read book about every single kind of advancement in the medical field. Easy to understand everything for longevity, anti-aging, how to …
A Submarine Assault | WW2 Hell Under the Sea
July 31st, 1944. With Commander Lawson Ramage fixated on another target in Japanese convoy MI-11, below deck, battle helmsman Chet Stanton has made the decision to evade an escort that threatens to ram the American submarine. The crew of USS Parche wait t…
Khan Academy Best Practices for Middle School
Hey everyone, this is Jeremy Shifling with Khan Academy. Thanks so much for joining us this afternoon. Um, you’re in for a very special treat today because we have Khan Academy ambassador and all-star middle teacher Shalom with us today, um, who’s been us…
$20,000,000 private jet tour
If you have $20 million, this is one of the best planes you can get. This is the Pror 500. Steve, should we take a look inside? Sure, let’s go. We’re here on the Pror 500, one of Ember’s latest and greatest new aircraft. Steve, how is this different fr…
Ray Dalio & Deepak Chopra on Life and Death
[Music] I’m Deepak Chopra, and I trained as an internist, medical doctor, endocrinologist, and neuroendocrinologist. My current journey is exploring consciousness and what we call reality. If you don’t know who Ray Dalio is, then you’re probably asleep. …