Climate Letter #432

Record wildfire season in Alaska.  Over 1.8 million acres have burned in June, up from the old record of 1.2 million.  Over 300 fires are still active.  Other seaboard states and Northwest Canada are also heavily besieged.

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India at the crossroads.  This post features a description of what is now happening to India, starting with a long list of cities being choked by pollution.  You will learn much more from the video report from Keith Schneider, a seasoned reporter who is very close to the situation, and obviously very passionate in his love for the country.  He has a solution that I find utterly rational if not compelling.
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The science behind greenhouse gas got its start in 1767   Historian John Perlin tells the fascinating story in an interview.
Part two of the Perlin interview, equally fascinating.
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Climate science.  How clouds affect global climate.  The author of this personal story is heavily involved in researching this most difficult problem of climate science.  Not too many conclusions are ready to be drawn, with one main exception, and that is, “What we have not found is a sign that clouds are re-organizing themselves in some way as to lessen the net temperature rise.”  That deflates one of the main hopes of the contrarian crowd.
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An economist looks at misguided investments in Australia.  Australia, unlike all but a few other countries, has been restricting the development of renewable energy industries while investing heavily in the export potential of its abundant coal resources.  “Hopes that other countries would not take action to reduce the costs of climate change has contributed to the misjudgments that caused overinvestment in Australian resources production capacity over the past four years,” Garnaut noted.  Those markets are fading and the result is already costly to the nation, while better opportunities are being missed.
Carl

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