Climate Letter #802

New information about the status of Antarctic ice shelves.  The most dramatic bit shows a photo of the widening rift on Larsen C that will soon produce an iceberg the size of Delaware.  The story also has an interesting graph of the melt-rate situation for of all the shelves around the continent.

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A new study adds to our knowledge about the release of CO2 from permafrost.  This is a descriptive type of story.  For a look at the kind of numbers that get involved there was another story reported here last week (CL #800) that leaves no room for doubt about the magnitude or the immediacy of the contribution from these thawing soils.
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An expert talks about how jellyfish are taking over the oceans.  Lisa-ann Gershwin actually loves jellyfish but knows very well how troublesome they are.  They thrive on added warmth and other ways we are messing up the oceans.
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How global temperature is affected by El Nino.  There have been some misleading news reports about the extent of El Nino’s effect in 2015-16.  This analyst shows how to properly sort things out, with variations in volcanic events and solar radiation added in for good measure.
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Representatives from 90 of the world’s megacities are meeting this week in Mexico City to discuss plans for climate action.  They have the ability to do things that may serve to accelerate national policies, and apparently the will to be aggressive is quite strong.  “With 80 percent of world emissions emanating from urban areas, action at the city level can add up to significant reductions….”
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Thumbs down on solar roads.  They are actually being built—with public money—and get plenty of publicity, but full disclosure of economic reality is finally catching up with them.

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