Scientists must be free to learn to speak and to challenge Kirsty Duncan

Let me tell you about rock snot.

Since 1992, Dr. Max Bothwell,

a Government of Canada scientist,

has been studying a type of algae
that grows on rocks.

Now, the very unscientific term
for that algae is rock snot,

because as you can imagine,

it looks a lot like snot.

But scientists also call it
Didymosphenia geminata

and for decades, this algae
has been sliming up riverbeds

around the world.

The problem with this algae

is that it is a threat to salmon, to trout

and the river ecosystems it invades.

Now, it turns out Canada’s Dr. Bothwell

is actually a world expert in the field,

so it was no surprise in 2014

when a reporter contacted Dr. Bothwell

for a story on the algae.

The problem was, Dr. Bothwell
wasn’t allowed to speak to the reporter,

because the government of the day
wouldn’t let him.

110 pages of emails

and 16 government communication experts

stood in Dr. Bothwell’s way.

Why couldn’t Dr. Bothwell speak?

Well, we’ll never know for sure,

but Dr. Bothwell’s research did suggest

that climate change
may have been responsible

for the aggressive algae blooms.

But who the heck would want to stifle
climate change information, right?

Yes, you can laugh.

It’s a joke,

because it is laughable.

We know that climate change
is suppressed for all sorts of reasons.

I saw it firsthand
when I was a university professor.

We see it when countries pull out
of international climate agreements

like the Kyoto Protocol
and the Paris Accord,

and we see it when industry fails
to meet its emissions reduction targets.

But it’s not just climate change
information that’s being stifled.

So many other scientific issues
are obscured by alternate facts,

fake news and other forms of suppression.

We’ve seen it in the United Kingdom,

we’ve seen it in Russia,

we’ve seen it in the United States

and, until 2015,

right here in Canada.

In our modern technological age,

when our very survival
depends on discovery,

innovation and science,

it is critical, absolutely critical,

that our scientists are free
to undertake their work,

free to collaborate with other scientists,

free to speak to the media

and free to speak to the public.

Because after all,

science is humanity’s best effort
at uncovering the truth

about our world,

about our very existence.

Every new fact that is uncovered

adds to the growing body
of our collective knowledge.

Scientists must be free to explore

unconventional or controversial topics.

They must be free to challenge
the thinking of the day

and they must be free

to present uncomfortable
or inconvenient truths,

because that’s how scientists
push boundaries

and pushing boundaries is, after all,
what science is all about.

And here’s another point:

scientists must be free to fail,

because even a failed hypothesis
teaches us something.

And the best way I can explain that
is through one of my own adventures.

But first I’ve got
to take you back in time.

It’s the early 1900s

and Claire and Vera
are roommates in southern Ontario.

One evening during the height
of the Spanish flu pandemic,

the two attend a lecture together.

The end of the evening,
they head for home and for bed.

In the morning, Claire calls up to Vera

and says she’s going out to breakfast.

When she returns a short while later,

Vera wasn’t up.

She pulls back the covers

and makes the gruesome discovery.

Vera was dead.

When it comes to Spanish flu,

those stories are common,

of lightning speed deaths.

Well, I was a professor in my mid-20s

when I first heard those shocking facts

and the scientist in me
wanted to know why and how.

My curiosity would lead me
to a frozen land

and to lead an expedition

to uncover the cause
of the 1918 Spanish flu.

I wanted to test our current drugs against
one of history’s deadliest diseases.

I hoped we could make a flu vaccine

that would be effective against the virus

and mutation of it,

should it ever return.

And so I led a team, a research team,

of 17 men

from Canada, Norway, the United Kingdom

and the United States

to the Svalbard Islands
in the Arctic Ocean.

These islands are between
Norway and the North Pole.

We exhumed six bodies

who had died of Spanish flu
and were buried in the permafrost

and we hoped the frozen ground
would preserve the body and the virus.

Now, I know what you are all waiting for,

that big scientific payoff.

But my science story doesn’t have
that spectacular Hollywood ending.

Most don’t.

Truth is, we didn’t find the virus,

but we did develop new techniques

to safely exhume bodies

that might contain virus.

We did develop new techniques

to safely remove tissue

that might contain virus.

And we developed new safety protocols

to protect our research team
and the nearby community.

We made important contributions to science

even though the contributions we made

were not the ones originally intended.

In science, attempts fail,

results prove inconclusive

and theories don’t pan out.

In science,

research builds upon the work
and knowledge of others,

or by seeing further,

by standing on the shoulders of giants,

to paraphrase Newton.

The point is, scientists must be free

to choose what they want to explore,

what they are passionate about

and they must be free
to report their findings.

You heard me say

that respect for science
started to improve in Canada in 2015.

How did we get here?

What lessons might we have to share?

Well, it actually goes back
to my time as a professor.

I watched while agencies, governments
and industries around the world

suppressed information on climate change.

It infuriated me.

It kept me up at night.

How could politicians
twist scientific fact for partisan gain?

So I did what anyone
appalled by politics would do:

I ran for office, and I won.

(Applause)

I thought I would use my new platform

to talk about the importance of science.

It quickly became a fight
for the freedom of science.

After all, I was a scientist,
I came from the world under attack,

and I had personally felt the outrage.

I could be a voice
for those who were being silenced.

But I quickly learned
that scientists were nervous,

even afraid to talk to me.

One government scientist,
a friend of mine,

we’ll call him McPherson,

was concerned about the impact

government policies
were having on his research

and the state of science
deteriorating in Canada.

He was so concerned, he wrote to me

from his wife’s email account

because he was afraid
a phone call could be traced.

He wanted me to phone
his wife’s cell phone

so that call couldn’t be traced.

I only wish I were kidding.

It quickly brought what was happening
in Canada into sharp focus for me.

How could my friend of 20 years
be that afraid to talk to me?

So I did what I could at the time.

I listened and I shared what I learned

with my friend in Parliament,

a man who was interested
in all things environment, science,

technology, innovation.

And then the 2015 election rolled around

and our party won.

And we formed government.

And that friend of mine

is now the Prime Minister
of Canada, Justin Trudeau.

(Applause)

And he asked if I would serve
as his Minister of Science.

Together, with the rest of the government,

we are working hard to restore
science to its rightful place.

I will never forget that day
in December 2015

when I proudly stood in Parliament

and proclaimed,

“The war on science is now over.”

(Applause)

And I have worked hard
to back up those words with actions.

We’ve had many successes.

There’s still more work to do,

because we’re building this culture shift.

But we want our government scientists
to talk to the media, talk to the public.

It’ll take time, but we are committed.

After all, Canada is seen
as a beacon for science internationally.

And we want to send a message

that you do not mess
with something so fundamental,

so precious, as science.

So, for Dr. Bothwell, for Claire and Vera,

for McPherson and all those other voices,

if you see that science is being stifled,
suppressed or attacked,

speak up.

If you see that scientists
are being silenced, speak up.

We must hold our leaders to account.

Whether that is
by exercising our right to vote,

whether it is by penning
an op-ed in a newspaper

or by starting a conversation
on social media,

it is our collective voice
that will ensure the freedom of science.

And after all, science is for everyone,

and it will lead to a better,
brighter, bolder future for us all.

Thank you.

(Applause)