Climate Letter #702

More commentary on the cloud study.  (See previous reviews in CL #697 and 700.)   Robert Fanney has added some cogent quotes plus observations of his own, highlighting the exceptional importance of the study.  Several top scientists show acceptance of the way the study was made, and tell us what it means with respect to the accuracy of models projecting future warming.  The scheduled arrival date for 2C has just moved closer.

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TIME Magazine reports on why the loss of biodiversity is such a grave concern.  (See CL #701 for the main report.)  This is a subject that clearly deserves broad public attention.  As with sea level change, one of the main consequences of global warming is happening on a meaningful scale, now being propelled by naturally unstoppable forces, but is barely noticed.  Thanks to TIME for this good reference.
http://time.com/4404981/biodiversity-study-human-welfare/
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Stopping climate change will take more than an end to burning fossil fuels.  This article makes an undeniable case that something must also be done about other greenhouse gas emissions that result from human activity and have been rapidly growing.  It also ventures into a more controversial but certainly meaningful subject, about the need to restrain the kind of economic growth that uses up natural resources while accomplishing little that serves genuine human needs.
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An analysis of global population trends.  Overpopulation has about the same effect as overconsumption, but is less subject to any sort of intentional control.  This article draws on several sources of data to compile an interesting story.
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An up-to-date report on the falling price of solar power.  This is another addition to an exciting series of reports from Joe Romm.  The numbers continue to amaze, and there is no end in sight.
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Climate paleoscience.  A new theory about the death of the dinosaurs.  It could have happened quickly and globally as a result of the volume of airborne soot released by the burning of a vast amount of oil at the location where the asteroid hit, blocking out the sun for years.  Curiously, the story has nothing to say about how much CO2 was emitted from the same source, possibly enough to heat things up for a thousand years or so?  The ocean water is known to have warmed up considerably at about that same time (see CL #694).
http://phys.org/news/2016-07-oil-dinosaurs.html
Carl

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