Reposted from the Washington Post
This is the Trump administration at its worst.
Trump
officials to dismantle ‘global mothership’ of climate forecasting
Russell Vought, who directs the White House Office of
Management and Budget, announced plans to split up the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, citing concerns about “climate
alarmism.”
Updated December 17, 2025
By Ruby Mellen and
Carolyn Y.
Johnson
The Trump administration said Tuesday it was breaking up one
of the world’s preeminent Earth and atmospheric research institutions, based in
Colorado, over concerns about “climate alarmism” — a move that comes amid
escalating attacks from the White House against the state’s Democratic
lawmakers.
“The National Science Foundation will be breaking up the
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado,” wrote Russell
Vought, the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget on X. “This facility
is one of the largest sources of climate alarmism in the country.”
The plan was first reported by USA Today.
The NCAR laboratory in Boulder was founded in 1960 at the
base of the Rocky Mountains to conduct research and educate future scientists.
Its resources include supercomputers, valuable datasets and high-tech research
planes.Ask The Post AIDive deeper
The announcement drew outrage and concern from scientists
and local lawmakers, who said it could imperil the country’s weather and
climate forecasting, and appeared to take officials and employees by surprise.
NCAR’s dismantling would be a major loss for scientific
research, said Kevin Trenberth, a distinguished scholar at NCAR and an honorary
academic in physics at the University of Auckland in New Zealand.
Trenberth, who joined NCAR in 1984 and officially retired in
2020, said the research center is key to advanced climate science discoveries
as well as in informing the climate models that produce the weather forecasts
we see on the nightly news.
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) said in a statement that the
state had not received information about the administration’s intentions to
dismantle NCAR.
“If true, public safety is at risk and science is being
attacked,” Polis said. “Climate change is real, but the work of NCAR goes
far beyond climate science. NCAR delivers data around severe weather events
like fires and floods that help our country save lives and property, and
prevent devastation for families.”
The action comes as Republicans have escalated their attacks
on Polis and others in the state for their handling of a case involving Tina
Peters, a former county clerk in Colorado who was convicted in state court on
felony charges related to efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.
President Donald Trump announced last week that he is pardoning Peters, who is
serving a nine-year sentence, but it is unclear whether Trump has that
authority, because she was not convicted in federal court.
In a joint statement, Colorado’s two Democratic senators,
John Hickenlooper and Michael Bennet, and Rep. Joe Neguse (D-Colorado) slammed
the move and vowed to fight back against it.
In his social media post, Vought said that “any vital
activities such as weather research will be moved to another entity or
location” — but did not specify further.Ask The Post AIDive deeper
“The Colorado governor obviously isn’t willing to work with
the president,” said a White House official, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
The official declined to cite any specifics about how Polis
is refusing to cooperate from the administration’s perspective, but denied that
the move was in response to the state’s refusal to release Peters from prison.
The facility “is not in line with the president’s agenda,”
the official added, noting that it had “been on the radar” of the
administration “for a while.”
The National Science Foundation, the federal science agency
that funds the center, was blindsided by the announcement, according to a
person familiar with NSF operations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to
avoid retribution. But they said facilities managers at NSF will need to be
involved in moving assets or capabilities.
NSF released a statement Wednesday saying the agency would
publish a letter outlining next steps. It said that the agency would transfer
the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputer, used to support Earth science research, to
another operator. It will also sell off or transfer two NSF aircraft that NCAR
manages and operates.
The agency will also “redefine the scope of modeling and
forecasting research and operations to concentrate on needs such as seasonal
weather prediction, severe storms, and space weather.”
Antonio Busalacchi, the president of the University
Corporation for Atmospheric Research, which oversees NCAR, said it was aware of
reports to break up the center but did not have “additional information about
any such plan.”
“Any plans to dismantle NSF NCAR would set back our nation’s
ability to predict, prepare for, and respond to severe weather and other
natural disasters,” Busalacchi said.
An internal email obtained by The Washington Post, sent
Tuesday night, emphasized the critical work NCAR does for “community safety and
resilience.”
Busalacchi wrote that the news had come as a shock, and the
institution had reached out to NSF for more information. “We understand that
this situation is incredibly distressing, and we ask that you all continue
doing what you have done so well all year — provide support for one another as
we navigate this turbulent time,” Busalacchi wrote.
The center is “quite literally our global mothership,”
Katharine Hayhoe, a Texas Tech University professor and chief scientist for the
Nature Conservancy, wrote
on X. “Dismantling NCAR is like taking a sledgehammer to the keystone
holding up our scientific understanding of the planet.”
NCAR plays a unique role in the scientific community by
bringing together otherwise siloed specialists to collaborate on some of the
biggest climate and weather questions of our time, Caspar Ammann, a former
research scientist at the center, said in an email.
“Without NCAR, a lot could not happen,” he said. “A lot of
research at US Universities would immediately get hampered, industry would lose
access to reliable base data.”
Ammann added that around the world, weather and climate
services use NCAR modeling and forecasting tools.
The Colorado-based center draws scientists and lecturers
from all over the world, and through its education programs has helped produce
future scientists, Trenberth said.
He said he feared not just for the discoveries and data that
would be lost if the center were to close, but for the early careers that could
also be affected or destroyed.
“If this sort of thing happens, things will go on for a
little while,” he said. “But the next generation of people who deal with
weather and science in the United States will be lost.”
Natalie Allison and Ben Noll contributed to this report.
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