Climate Letter #962

A closer look at Schroders’ Climate Progress Dashboard (see yesterday’s Climate Letter).  I can now show you a little more about what this asset management firm has in mind and what is in the dashboard itself.  There are twelve real-world indicators, each of which is evaluated in terms of a temperature projection.  The whole chart will be updated quarterly, based on a host of observations.  This is a wonderful project, a great way to measure fundamental progress and perhaps even inspire more of it.

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What extreme heat does to the human body, right now and as projected in the future.  This excellent article from the New Republic magazine describes the latest that science has to say on this subject, and much more.  Unlike many of the awful effects of climate change, overheating is not about economic losses or other challenges that societies must try to adapt to.  It is about life or death on a given day, with possibly nowhere for an individual to hide.
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How rising temperatures are causing the extinction of wild dogs in Africa.  The dogs had already lost 93% of their historic range because of human encroachment.  Now it is just too hot for hunting over longer periods of the day, and their pups are not surviving.
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Temperatures so far in 2017 are hotter than scientists expected, from Joe Romm.  Following a major El Nino event one would hope for a much bigger pullback.  The third chart down in this post is the one that should be closely studied and understood, as it shows a trend that causes great concern about what the remainder of the year will look like.
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Evidence of a new type of methane output has been found in the Arctic.  Seeps that originate from oil and gas deposits deep within the Earth are passing through thawing layers of permafrost that previously held them back.  The amount of greenhouse gas addition via this feedback is potentially meaningful.
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A government-employed scientist tells his story, and talks about others like himself, as jobs get shuffled around or eliminated in the new administration.

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