Climate Letter #1465

Intense heat and dryness is leading to horrific wildfire conditions in Alaska this year (Inside Climate News).  “So far this year, wildfires have scorched more than 1.2 million acres in Alaska, making it one of the state’s three biggest fire years on record to this date, with high fire danger expected to persist in the weeks ahead….. fires are spreading farther north into the Arctic, burning more intensely and starting earlier in the year, in line with what climate models have long suggested…..For the year to date, the Alaska statewide average temperature was 7.9°F above average.”

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A humanitarian crisis in the Lake Chad region of central Africa (The Telegraph).  “Some 4.5million people are displaced across the Lake Chad basin which covers Niger and Nigeria as well as Chad and Cameroon…..The Lake Chad basin is described as one of the areas in the world most vulnerable to climate change…..Lake Chad itself is a fraction of its original size.”
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Global spending on clean energy is not going anywhere (Bloomberg).  This chart tells the story in half-year segments.  Everyone is getting more bang for the buck, year after year, but if is also clear that there is plenty of financial capacity available for stepping up the rate of growth if the incentives for doing so were all in place.
https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iIyChnKQ1lHc/imjOd2y3eiTc/v3/800x-1.jpg
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Putting a stiff tax on carbon would create a huge incentive for clean energy installation, but governments have been reluctant to take that step.  An article in a scientific journal helps to explain the reason in terms related to underlying public attitudes, along with how the situation might be corrected.  You can see a summary of the main ideas, including the surprising fact that the often-recommended “tax-and-dividend” strategy has only a low level of public acceptance.
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Another study has found (once again) that Americans are extremely reluctant to talk about climate change, a void that needs to be corrected (Think Progress).  “Tragically, research shows that this climate silence reinforces the dangerously wrong belief that climate change isn’t an existential threat requiring urgent action…..The more people actually understand about the science of climate change, the more they are likely to accept the scientific consensus — that climate change is real, human-caused, and a threat to human civilization.”
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The Guardian has published an editorial that provides an adept summary of the current predicament.  It complains about government paralysis in the face of a fast-growing emergency.  “Few people now believe that we can restrict the global rise in temperature to two degrees; virtually no one believes that the Paris target of 1.5 degrees is realistic; but 4 degrees, which the latest report urges we should be planning for, promises to be catastrophic.”
Carl

 

 

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