President Donald Trump. (photo: Getty)
10 August 17
The US Department of Agriculture has forbidden the use of the words ‘climate change’. This say-no-evil policy is doomed to fail
n
a bold new strategy unveiled on Monday in the Guardian, the US
Department of Agriculture – guardians of the planet’s richest farmlands –
has decided to combat the threat of global warming by forbidding the use of the words.
Under guidance from the agency’s director of soil
health, Bianca Moebius-Clune, a list of phrases to be avoided includes
“climate change” and “climate change adaptation”, to be replaced by
“weather extremes” and “resilience to weather extremes”.
Also blacklisted is the scary locution “reduce
greenhouse gases” – and here, the agency’s linguists have done an even
better job of camouflage: the new and approved term is “increase
nutrient use efficiency”.
The effectiveness of this approach – based on the
well-known principle that what you can’t say won’t hurt you – has
previously been tested at the state level, making use of the “policy
laboratories” provided by America’s federalist system.
In 2012, for instance, the North Carolina general
assembly voted to prevent communities from planning for sea level rise.
Early analysis suggests this legislation has been ineffective: Hurricane
Matthew, in 2016, for instance drove storm surge from the Atlantic
ocean to historic levels along the Cape Fear river. Total damage from
the storm was estimated at $4.8bn.
Further south, the Florida government forbade its employees to use the term climate change
in 2014 – one government official, answering questions before the
legislature, repeatedly used the phrase “the issue you mentioned
earlier” in a successful effort to avoid using the taboo words.
It is true that the next year “unprecedented” coral
bleaching blamed on rising temperatures destroyed vast swaths of the
state’s reefs: from Key Biscayne to Fort Lauderdale, a survey found that
“about two-thirds were dead or reduced to less than half of their live
tissue”. Still, it’s possible that they simply need to increase their
nutrient use efficiency.
At the federal level, the new policy has yet to show
clear-cut success either. As the say-no-evil policy has rolled out in
the early months of the Trump presidency, it coincided with the onset of
a truly dramatic “flash drought” across much of the nation’s wheat
belt.
As the Farm Journal website pointed out earlier last
week: “Crops in the Dakotas and Montana are baking on an anvil of severe
drought and extreme heat, as bone-dry conditions force growers and
ranchers to make difficult decisions regarding cattle, corn and wheat.”
In typically negative journalistic fashion, the Farm
Journal reported that “abandoned acres, fields with zero emergence,
stunted crops, anemic yields, wheat rolled into hay, and early herd
culls comprise a tapestry of disaster for many producers”.
Which is why it’s good news for the new strategy that
the USDA has filled its vacant position of chief scientist with someone
who knows the power of words.
In fact, Sam Clovis, the new chief scientist, is not actually a scientist of the kind that does science,
or has degrees in science, but instead formerly served in the demanding
task of rightwing radio host (where he pointed out that followers of
former president Obama were “Maoists”). He has actually used the words
“climate change” in the past, but only to dismiss it as “junk science”.
Under his guidance the new policy should soon yield
results, which is timely since recent research (carried out, it must be
said, by scientist scientists at MIT) showed that “climate change could
deplete some US water basins and dramatically reduce crop yields in some
areas by 2050”.
But probably not if we don’t talk about it.
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