Climate Letter #598

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Weekly CO2 report again unfavorable.  The increase was nearly 4 ppm over the same week a year ago. which means the full month of February is now sure to be well over plus-3.  There is no obvious reason for such a large increase, certainly not from immediate human activities.  The best we can hope for is that it is related to weather anomalies in key portions of Northern Hemisphere land masses, with last year being much colder than usual for the month and this year much warmer.  March and April are usually the two biggest spring months for emissions from plant decay, (partially balanced by plants still growing in the Southern Hemisphere,) so maybe we are just getting an unusually early start this year.  Note that the total increase for the previous nine years was less than 18 ppm.  We need to see annual gains fall below 2 ppm again as quickly as possible if there is to be any hope of completely stopping the upward march in a timely manner.
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A reminder that air pollution is also worsening, with devastating effects.  The author wants the need for change to get as much (or more) attention as climate change, while observing that the two often go hand in hand with respect to principal point of origin.  Also, the need for a change in attitude toward mass consumption is not overlooked.
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Cyclone Winston was the strongest ever recorded in the Southern Hemisphere.  We are regularly seeing new records for all sorts of things; here is another one.  It has been a bad past year for storms throughout the Pacific basin, mostly related to El Nino, against a background of extensive ocean warming.  The effects may soon switch over to the Atlantic with the coming of La Nina.

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Environmental damage from crude oil spills relentlessly continues.  Most of them we never hear about, like this latest in the jungles of northern Peru.  There have been at least eleven spills in this area since 2010.
Al Gore makes a case for optimism in a TED talk.  In this inspiring message Gore speaks as a businessman, certainly one who recognizes the nature of the problem, and not as a politician.  He spells out how much progress has been made toward gaining affordable alternatives to fossil fuels.
Carl

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