Climate Letter #536

Australia is on its way to another intense fire season.  October was the warmest month ever, and conditions are very dry, with a link to El Nino, all of it amplified by the underlying influence of global warming.  Many wind-driven bushfires cannot physically be stopped.

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Somaliland, suffering from its worst drought in memory, holds another ancient society whose lands are on the verge of becoming uninhabitable.  Here again the global warming amplifier has made a difference.  A rare cyclone recently added to regional destruction.
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A solar power plant that will serve one million people is ready to operate.  This landmark project is ideally situated in Morocco, was built by the Saudis.  As for the future, “It’s obvious this country should be able to export into Europe and it will.”
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Climate science.  Steven Sherwood is one of the best at explaining how things work at various levels of the atmosphere.  He also shows the kind of open mind you like to see in any scientist.  This 30-minute video interview is full of up-to-date information–highly recommended.
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US presidential candidates are graded for their knowledge of climate science.  Testing was handled in an objective way, based on a candidate’s own words, stripped of personal identity.  What saves those who flunk badly, according to many pollsters, is the fact that having correct knowledge of climate science is currently not much of a voting booth issue.  However, it may be steadily becoming more of an issue, a trend that the three Democratic candidates all seem to have become aware of and hope to exploit.
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Major policy changes have been introduced in Alberta.  None of the changes are friendly to the oil tar sands industry, which is so dominant to the province’s economy.  It follows a stunning electoral change in the governing party just a few months back.  Is this a sign of the times?
Carl

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