More "fair and balanced" climate testimony?
Greg

CLIMATE:
House Science panel to take aim at impacts to weather
Jean Chemnick, E&E reporter
Published: Monday, December 9, 2013
A House committee that has become increasingly vocal in its criticism of U.S. 
EPA climate regulations and the science they are based on will hold its second 
hearing on the relationship between climate change and weather.
On Wednesday, the Environment Subcommittee of the Science, Space, and 
Technology Committee will hold a hearing titled "A Factual Look at the 
Relationship between Climate and Weather."
"The purpose of the hearing is to examine the links between climate change and 
extreme weather events, including hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, and floods," 
the committee said in a memo on the hearing.
The panel will hear from David Titley, a former deputy undersecretary of 
Commerce for operations, who now directs the Center for Solutions to Weather 
and Climate Risk at Pennsylvania State University. He will testify alongside 
John Christy, a climatology professor at the University of Alabama, Huntsville, 
and prominent climate skeptic. Also on the panel will be Roger Pielke Jr., of 
the University of Colorado's Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, 
who studies the nexus of science and politics.
The hearing comes as Republicans on the Science panel continue a letter 
campaign panning EPA's plans to regulate heat-trapping emissions using the 
Clean Air Act.
Last week, GOP leaders of the committee fired off two letters to EPA 
Administrator Gina McCarthy. The first complained that the agency had ignored 
its own science advisers in failing to have its September proposal for new 
power plant emissions vetted by an independent panel. The other blasted the 
agency for not recording or transcribing the 11 listening sessions it held 
around the country in October and November to gather input on its existing 
power plant guidance.
The panel also asked EPA to hold listening sessions in states "most likely to 
be affected by EPA's upcoming rule, including states heavily reliant on coal 
for electric generation."
Schedule: The hearing is Wednesday, Dec. 11, at 10 a.m. in 2318 Rayburn.

Witnesses: John Christy, professor and state climatologist, University of 
Alabama, Huntsville; David Titley, director, Center for Solutions to Weather 
and Climate Risk, Pennsylvania State University; Roger Pielke Jr., professor, 
Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, University of Colorado.

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