Climate Letter #1530

‘Industrial heat’—a hidden emissions problem that is huge in size and hard to solve (Vox).  David Roberts does a terrific job of explaining a problem that accounts for about ten percent (!) of global CO2 emissions due to human activity.  It comes from creating the high-temperature heat required for production of products like steel, cement and petrochemicals, which largely depends on burning cheap fossil fuels.  Only a few options appear viable, and they are currently expensive.

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The opportunity for generating far more electricity from wind power in the US (Yale Climate Connections).  The author of this excellent explainer, Philip Warburg, has written a book on the subject; here we assess the highlights, and the outlook is encouraging.  “…the U.S. has scarcely begun to tap its vast wind power potential. On land, U.S. wind resources are capable of yielding about nine times the nation’s power needs.  Offshore wind – wholly unexploited to date – could meet nearly twice the nation’s electricity demand.”
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Economic costs of those extreme natural disasters that are the most extreme of all have risen dramatically (Penn State).  Researchers have made a study of the cost distribution of all natural disasters, and found an unexpected result:  “Policies based only on average annual or decadal costs do not account for the increasing impact of the most dramatic events…..Things really ramp up at the top 5% mark…..And when we get to the top 1%, damages increased approximately 20 fold between 1970 and 2010.”
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A super typhoon is striking Japan not far from Tokyo (Forbes).  The storm is especially notable for its immense size.  “The eye of the storm is 55 miles wide alone, and satellite imagery shows the entire storm is currently larger than the entire nation of Japan. Hagibis will be one of the strongest typhoons to directly hit the island nation in decades.”
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Researchers have studied the association between happiness and materialism (University of Arizona).  The conclusion:  “A new study found that people who consume less are happier than those who engage in other pro-environmental consumer behaviors, like buying environmentally friendly products…..The key is to reduce consumption and not just buy green stuff. Having less and buying less can actually make us more satisfied and happier.”  And it helps lower the overall demand for energy, a vital component for addressing climate change in the most effective manner.
Carl

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