Monthly Archives: January 2020

Climate Letter #1594

What is the difference between water vapor and all the other greenhouse gases, and how are they alike? For the purposes of RFC compliance, the discount brand viagra system title your PC sends in the EHLO message has to match … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1593

Why am I so interested in the effects of water vapor on Earth’s present and future temperature?  Most public discussion tends to focus on water vapor as a source of precipitation, or perhaps humidity, not so much on temperature.  That’s … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1592

Why climate science has a problem when accounting for water vapor effects. levitra cheap http://appalachianmagazine.com/2017/02/22/famine-in-south-sudan-may-kill-5-5-million-people/ All types of sex problems especially lack of sexual urge in you. online levitra try now The acidity of bile and the precipitation of the … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1591

Tracking CO2, the current picture.  Emissions are one thing, the atmospheric concentration of CO2 is another.  The latter is what really counts, and we have practically perfect measurements showing the trend month by month since 1958, as displayed on this … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1590

The Phys.org  science website, an operation of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, or AAAS, ran a series of stories today, written by associated authors, dealing with the devastating effects of climate change on the lives of people … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1589

An update on Australia’s fire season (Phys.org).  From all indications the situation is not going to get better anytime soon, and could get worse on some days.  January is normally the hottest month of the year in Australia, and the … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1588

2019 was the (close) second hottest year on record (Phys.org).  From the leading climate monitor in the EU:  “The year 2019 was the second hottest ever recorded and a virtual tie with 2016, the warmest El Nino year…..The five last … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1587

A quick look at US greenhouse gas emissions for years 2005 through 2019 (Inside Climate News).  What the charts show is a generally slow decline in overall emissions, entirely created by improvements within the electric power sector.  All other sectors … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1586

David Roberts describes the difficulties involved in reaching a target of 1.5C (Vox).  This is well worth reading, in part because he has many thoughts or ideas that go well beyond the technical difficulties that are highlighted in the animated … Continue reading

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Climate Letter #1585

Scientists say they can detect fingerprints of climate change in daily weather data (ETH Zurich).  By way of explanation, “there may well be a record low temperature in October in the US. If it is simultaneously warmer than average in … Continue reading

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