Climate Letter #288

December 3, 2014

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What’s happening in the Arctic? Please open the reanalyzer site to see the range of temperature anomalies: http://cci-reanalyzer.org/DailySummary/#
The bright red means up to 35 degrees F above normal, magenta the same amount below. These are truly extreme numbers. The Arctic Ocean region has looked like this for several days now. (Every day the image you see at this site will be changed.) While sea ice extent is not now affected there are all sorts of weather repercussions far to the south in all directions, giving signs of extraordinary imbalance in the reality of climate change development.
Robert Fanney goes into some of the details in a recent post, as of Dec. 1:
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Antarctic melting rate triples in one decade. This new study, which covers one fast-melting region, appears close to being definitive. That is an awesome rate of change. This post contains a good bit of other information related to polar region melting and the prospect of much higher sea levels ahead.
Glaciers in the Andes are also in serious decline. “At the end of the 1980s, Ecuador had 92 square kilometers (35.5 square miles) of glaciers. By 2010, that area had shrunk to 42 square kilometers. This year, it is expected to fall to 38 square kilometers.” Nearby regions have seen similar losses. The threat to needed water supplies is real.
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How Republican followers are divided on environment issues. This poll shows that denialism is most prevalent in the Tea Party minority, while the majority hold views more like those of Independents. Party leaders have adopted the Tea Party position, perhaps because this is an issue that excites the Tea Party much more than it does all types of moderates, and their always fragile voting loyalty is needed. What will happen when more people become excited by this issue for the right reasons?
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A significant technological achievement. This represents a major advance for the production of “supercapacitors.” (Never mind the irony of the CO2 contribution.) Read this to see what supercapacitors are and what they can do. The list of things they can do to radically boost the effectiveness of many kinds of renewable energy devices is just amazing.
Carl

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