Climate Letter #752

David Spratt details the case for treating climate action as a real emergency.  This veteran Australian student of climate change, while not a scientist himself, is someone worth listening to.  All of the information he refers to is gathered from regular scientific studies, most of which happen to be of a type that is relatively uncompromising.  Well, why not?  That is what must be called for if one’s aim is to reduce the risk of disaster to the lowest conceivable level.  The go-slow approach that has been in effect for the past few decades is no longer acceptable, leaving little time to make amends.

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A new report from Bill McKibben, writing for New Republic.  Bill is the US counterpart of David Spratt, maybe a tiny bit more lenient in the way he does the math, but with the same objectives in mind.
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And then, for the sake of comparison, there is Donald Trump, who has emerged as the world’s leading salesman for deregulation and revitalization of the fossil fuel industry, turning a completely deaf ear to science.
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A rundown of some extreme climate-related events of 2016 in North America.  Even today there are reports of unusual flooding in a number of states.  The global list of extreme events for the year would be far greater, starting with the massive and unprecedented coral die-off.
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An analysis of how Latin-Americans in the US relate to climate change.  The differences from other groups are real, profound in magnitude, and can be explained.  Latinos constitute a both large and fast-growing segment of the population.
Carl

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