Fairfax - Nicole Hasham | Peter Hartcher
New Science Minister Greg Hunt has ordered a major U-turn in the
direction of the CSIRO, reviving climate research as a bedrock function
just months after the national science agency slashed climate staff and
programs.
Mr Hunt, the former environment minister, told Fairfax
Media he has instructed CSIRO's executives and board to "put the focus
back on climate science", adding: "This is not an optional component,
it's critical".
"I've issued a ministerial
directive … that we will make climate science a core activity, that we
will strengthen and build capacity," Mr Hunt said.
The 15 jobs would create a long-term platform for climate analysis and forecasting.
"This
is emphasising the importance of long-term climate science as a bedrock
function of the CSIRO … this is setting the direction for CSIRO for the
coming two decades," Mr Hunt said.
Severe cuts to CSIRO programs announced in February, including
massive proposed staff losses in climate change monitoring and
modelling, prompted criticism that the organisation had succumbed to
a right-wing agenda that Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull assumed from
Tony Abbott.
The government denied this, insisting the CSIRO was an independent statutory agency, which set its own priorities.
The
CSIRO cuts came despite the agency's own projections last
year showing Australia could be among the nations hardest hit by global
warming at the end of this century.
Justifying the decision in
February in an email to staff, CSIRO chief executive Larry Marshall said
climate change has been established and the agency's focus should move
to mitigation and adaptation.
Mr Hunt, who assumed the
Industry, Innovation and Science portfolio from Christopher Pyne, said
the fresh display of support for climate science was "a shared view of
the Prime Minister … no question", and that the directive drew on Mr
Hunt's previous environment role.
The new CSIRO strategy will be developed in consultation with the scientific community and Chief Scientist Alan Finkel.
When
the CSIRO cuts were revealed, it was initially feared that the Oceans
and Atmosphere division, which held the bulk of climate scientists,
would lose most of its 140 staff.
However, this figure was
whittled down to about 35 climate-science jobs across two key research
programs. It is understood some voluntary redundancies have already been
accepted.
The pared-back job losses came after sustained
criticism, including from top NASA scientist Brent Holben, who said
CSIRO risked undermining the world's ability to monitor and predict
climate change.
Mr Hunt has met Dr Finkel, Mr Marshall and CSIRO chairman David Thodey to discuss the new direction.
"[Climate science] will be a priority and the senior executive and the board know this now, clearly," Mr Hunt said.
A new Climate Science Centre in Hobart, announced by the CSIRO in April, will form part of the new strategy.
Mr
Hunt said he would not "outsource" the science role to his assistant
minister Craig Laundy, and indicated he would soon release a significant
science statement.
"I will be the minister for science … I want to be the chief science advocate in the government,' he said.
Dr
Finkel said in February he only learned of the cuts when they were made
public, and told Senate estimates that "Australia needs a continuous
and highly effective commitment to climate science, both to meet our
national needs and to fulfil our international commitments".
On Wednesday, he told Fairfax Media that "Australia needs a strong climate research capability".
"I
welcome the Minister's support to strengthen Australian climate science
capacity so we can respond to national and global challenges and inform
our mitigation options," he said.
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