Climate Letter #1367

How the compounding impacts of climate change will affect different parts of the US (Climate Central).  This analysis follows up on recent studies that show how the damage from climate change differs from place to place, with reference to classification of a large number of specific threats.  It makes forecasts for 244 US cities through 2050, all of which vary according to the kinds of response that are realized which offer abatement opportunities.

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Minnesota has been singled out as a state very likely to see complete transformation within this century from climate change.  A good part of that transformation is already visible, as extensively described in this report:
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CARE has published its third annual review of the top ten countries enduring the most under-reported humanitarian crises of the past year.  Their purpose is not to place blame but mainly to fill in the gaps of awareness, a necessity behind CARE’s efforts to raise the amount of funding needed to provide assistance.  The next story will have more to say about the details of these crises, why they exist and why they are not well-reported.
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Relative to the above, The Guardian provides a more journalistic view taken from a number of sources that have done the research on underlying factors.  As expected, the role of climate change is prominent.  The lack of thorough media coverage is real and some possible reasons are offered.  One example:  “Gnassounou, who is also the ACP’s sustainable development spokesman, said that donor countries sometimes implicitly linked crisis aid to silence about climate change.”  The people living in countries that are most affected are among those who are the least responsible for causing this problem, suggesting that guilt factors are involved.
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“Why we stink at tackling climate change” (Nautilus).  David Barash is an evolutionary biologist who has written many books about the vagaries of human nature.  This essay of his digs into the deepest historical roots of a problem many of us think about but no one really understands.  He is kind of optimistic:  “I submit that everyone reading this article—primates all—have been toilet-trained. Thanks to our cultural evolution, we have cities, houses, and indoor plumbing…..An originally arboreal primate species capable of being toilet-trained should also be capable of becoming planet-trained.”  That’s fine, David, but remember that our race is rapidly aging.  In Japan, for instance, adult diapers are now said to outsell baby diapers by a wide margin.
Carl

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