Climate Letter #298

Greenland follow-up. This post contains two short videos that greatly help to explain graphically the type of melting now being observed on Greenland’s ice sheet. They tie in nicely with the two studies reported on here yesterday.

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Results from a huge UN-sponsored poll. There were 7 million responses, from all over the globe, each of whom made six picks from a list of 16 categories about how to have a better world. Fixing the climate problem came in dead last. How different groups voted is well-analyzed and worth a good look.
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Here is another extensive poll of the same general type from just the U.S., by Pew, dated last January. It is consistent with the one reported here yesterday, but with some extra data. This one covers 20 categories of interest to voters. Overall protection of the environment is well down the list at #12, while dealing specifically with global warming comes in at #19. This poll will be updated again next month, so we will look for any sign of movement when it appears..
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Questioning the 2C temperature limit. “Yet even as the 2C target has become a touchstone for the climate talks, scientific theory and real-world observations have begun to raise serious questions about whether the target is stringent enough.” There is a major review underway, with results expected before the conference in Paris. It seems that no one is quite ready for a recommendation that would tighten up the target, but we still need to hear about it. One of the leading concerns relates to recent upward revisions in sea level projections. The cost of sea level rise can be calculated more realistically than that of most other effects, which are of a more sporadic type.
Carl

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