Climate Letter #262

Climate Letter #262      October 24, 2014

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Fairly ambitious climate deal reached in Europe.  What I find neat about this is that European political leaders can apparently make such an agreement without fear of too much political backlash from voters.  Could we do the same next year?
Weather extremes in the U.S.  These are things that have all been predicted in climate science models, and now they are happening.  They all have a regional effect on agriculture, mostly harmful.  Increased evaporation from the oceans may be useful when it delivers moisture to the continents, but  increased evaporation from the soil is a happening that is hardly ever useful.
New findings about ocean acidification.  While there is general danger for almost all marine life some important species are now found to be vulnerable to previously unknown effects.  Excessive copper uptake is one that gets special attention in this report.
Climate Science:  Here is an “insider’s view” of what climate scientists are looking at and thinking about these days, with reference to the way heat is collected and distributed in the oceans.  It’s clearly written for the general reader, or anyone who wants to expand their understanding of this critical area of study that is still unfolding.
30 years of unbroken warmer-than-average months for the globe.
Carl

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