Climate Letter #587

“Secondhand Smoke,” about the mismatch between nations that produce the most greenhouse gas and those that are most vulnerable.  A new study produces data to demonstrate and confirm something we’ve all heard many times in the form of opinions.  “The number of acutely vulnerable countries will worsen by 2030 say the authors as climate change related pressures such as droughts, floods, biodiversity loss and disease mount.”  The authors view the Paris agreement as a step forward for recognition and potential remediation.

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The world’s great deserts are on the move.  The outer edges are moving toward the poles, with many millions of people in the line of fire.  Related changes are occurring that affects ocean life.  This clearly written article from the Nature journal will give you a great education in the basics of what is going on, and what scientists are still trying to figure out.  “In the worst-case scenario, the subtropics will overtake these ecologically rich outposts and the hotter, drier conditions will take a major toll.”
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A new forecast for drier climate conditions in western and central parts of the US.  California and Nevada would suffer the most.  This was determined by examining the trends of 12 basic weather patterns, three of which can be favorable to rains.  All three of those have shown increasingly adverse development over the past 30 years.  Similar conditions have happened in the distant past, and are therefore not to be blamed on what we call climate change, but today’s observed trend of overall warming is almost sure to amplify the effects.  This creates potential for a drought of “epic proportions.”
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New findings about the behavior of Greenland’s ice sheet.  The information is interesting, in part for being unexpected, but the future implications have not yet been clarified.  Greenland is a fascinating place, along with its vitally important climate role that constantly demands more knowledge.
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How maximum glaciation conditions have helped stage the removal of CO2 from the air.  Scientists have uncovered an important reason for this phenomenon, by analyzing some new discoveries in sediments taken from the Southern Ocean bed.  The evidence clears up the reasons for other mysterious data findings from 20,000 or more years ago.
Carl

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