Climate Letter #1308

A summary of the new US government National Climate Assessment.  It has been gathering quite a bit of attention, partly because it runs contrary to actual Administration policies and the politicized claims that support them.

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–VOX has issued a more editorialized view of the report that contains a number of extra insights plus some interesting links and sidelights that are worth checking out.
–Also, keep in mind the fact that the writers of the report were careful to base their findings on a body of scientific evidence that is considered quite conservative by the community.  Many scientists would have used even stronger language in places.
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Bill  Gates is one person who fully accepts the realities behind climate change and wants to widen out the plans and programs needed for pulling it back.  “Gates is imploring people to realize that addressing climate change means changing the fundamental way our lives are run, which ultimately means the entire global economy.”  His personal activities and spending are mostly guided toward projects of an unconventional sort.  This story is based on an interview with Axios that was aired on HBO.
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Why it is so hard for the world to quit burning coal (New York Times).  Production and consumption of coal as a source of carbon emissions stubbornly refuses to decline, yet nothing is more fundamental to successful climate action.  This story focuses on events in Asia that are especially disturbing, and seemingly intractable.
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How the world’s highest glaciers are melting and receding, a photo essay from the Nepali Times.  “Visitors returning to the Everest region after many years will notice changes in the landscape: large lakes where there were none; glacial ice replaced by ponds, boulders and sand; the snowline moving up the mountains; and glaciers that have receded and shrunk.”
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What the climate change crisis is like below the ocean surfaces (Reuters).  Although the overall effects are different, the heat we are adding to the oceans disrupts life down there as much as life above the global surface is disrupted by the rise in air temperatures, all of it coming from the same source.  This post provides a series of sharp reviews of what is happening to marine life, with a focus on specific examples.
Carl

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