homehome Home chatchat Notifications


The Science Communicator Who Might End the War Between Climate Change Science and Religion

Texas Professor Katharine Hayhoe is among the American Geophysical Union’s 2014 award-winners for science communication, announced on July 3. This is only the third time AGU has given an award for science communicaton, and they hope that she could help end – or at the very least quench – the war between religion and climate change […]

livia rusu
July 3, 2014 @ 7:20 pm

share Share

Texas Professor Katharine Hayhoe is among the American Geophysical Union’s 2014 award-winners for science communication, announced on July 3. This is only the third time AGU has given an award for science communicaton, and they hope that she could help end – or at the very least quench – the war between religion and climate change science.

“She’s someone who has been tireless in having the public understand climate change and climate change science. She excels at connecting with people in ways they can understand about why climate change science is important to them and their everyday lives,” says AGU executive director Christine McEntee. “She’s great at creating a two-way dialogue.”

Hayhoe is an active climate scientist – and a Christian as well. Her credentials are rock solid: she is the director of the South Central Climate Science Center, she worked on some of the IPCC reports, has an impressive number of published articles and constantly advises officials on preparing for heat, drought, and other effects of the changing climate.

But for most people, she’s not known for that. She’s known because, along with her husband (an Evangelical pastor) she’s trying to bridge the apparently irreconcilable worlds of science and religion – when it comes to climate change at least. The fact that they are both conservative Christians helps reach the many believers and tries to convince them to act and stop global warming.

They’re using the Bible to try and convince people to act. Now, normally, I’m not a fan of quoting from the Bible, but if it helps get things done, and if it convinces people to act against global warming, I’m all for it. What they’re using is an excerpt from Genesis 2:15 about God’s creation — “watch over and care for it”. They use this as a reference for sustainability: “our uses of the Earth must be designed to conserve and renew the Earth rather than to deplete or destroy it.” Awesome! But they’re doing even more.

Hayhoe and her husband recently published a book called A Climate for Change  – which explains things in a way that Christians can relate to, rather than antagonizing them. This gets the job done, and as a result of their efforts, more people understand that climage change is happening, and we are causing it – and furthermore, that we should take action to try and preserve it. To me, the AGU award is well deserved.

But even she admits that among the masses, there are sometimes people which simply refuse to listen to arguments.

“It would take an act of God to change their minds,” she says dryly.

 

share Share

Climate Change May Have Killed More Than 16,000 People in Europe This Summer

Researchers warn that preventable heat-related deaths will continue to rise with continued fossil fuel emissions.

Scientists Just Found Arctic Algae That Can Move in Ice at –15°C

The algae at the bottom of the world are alive, mobile, and rewriting biology’s rulebook.

Climate Change Triggered European Revolutions That Changed the Course of History

Severe volcanic eruptions may have set the stage for several revolutions.

Hundreds of Americans Begged the EPA Not to Roll Back Climate Protections and Almost No One Listened

Public speaks out against EPA plan to rescind Endangerment Finding.

Shark Teeth Are Supposed to be Nearly Indestructible but Climate Change is Starting to Corrode Them

Sharks could suffer from climate change in ways that people hadn't previously considered.

Heatwaves Don't Just kill People. They Also Make Us Older

Every year's worth of heatwaves could add about two weeks of aging to your body

Parked Dark-Colored Cars Are Like Mini Heat Islands That Make City Streets Several Degrees Hotter

The color of your car may be heating your street—and your city

Island Nation Tuvalu Set to Become the First Country Lost to Climate Change. More Than 80% of the Population Apply to Relocate to Australia Under World's First 'Climate Visa'

Tuvalu will likely become the first nation to vanish because of climate change.

White House Wants to Destroy NASA Satellites Tracking Climate Change and Plant Health

Eliminating funds or scaling down the operations of Earth-observing satellites could be catastrophic.

Coastal Flooding Is Much Worse Than Official Records Show — and No One’s Measuring It

There were big flaws in how we estimated floods in coastal communities.