Climate Letter #318

Pope: Man Has ‘Slapped Nature in the Face’ I believe this Pope is going to make a difference in the climate debate this year. He is being quoted on the subject quite regularly in the media, and is planning to publish a major encyclical this summer that is sure to get a lot of attention. He is saying things in the right way, and not just the Catholic way, with emphasis on the entire environment and not just climate. Also, he speaks more as an ordinary human observer—and as a believer in science, no less—than as some kind of authoritative messenger from God. His approach reminds me of exactly what many of the Indian tribal elders have long said about the need to protect nature. At this moment the major corporate deniers seem ready to take him on. (See the last paragraph in this link, from IBD, the tone of which sounds rather desperate.) My guess is they will soon be backing off.

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Scientific research at its finest. Also, what you have here is a fine piece of writing from Scientific American. There are no dramatic conclusions, but plenty of hints about what may come of it. Reading this will get you very close to what these researchers are doing, and what they are like, in fascinating detail.. This is a subject of great interest concerning the future stability of the Antarctic ice sheet, and Greenland’s as well..
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The rising cost of natural catastrophes. This post has two revelations. The first provides a quick look at the nimbers from a major reinsurance underwriter concerning the steadily rising global trend of high-cost natural catastrophes, which reached a new peak in 2914. The company needs an explanation, ruling out everything except the possible effects of climate change. The best explanation for those effects seems to be found in studies of “Arctic amplification,” as presented in this post.
Carl

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