Climate Letter #395

Monthly CO2 report. Again, the year-over-year increase for the month is almost exactly 2 ppm, continuing a pace that has been in effect for this entire century. At least there is no sign of acceleration, but at this steady rate the dreaded 450 ppm mark remains intact for the year 2040.

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The unresolved problem of coal gas production in China. Here is the whole sad story, told by the Washington Post. The outcome will be of major importance for global CO2 emissions. It has even greater importance locally for its environmental effects. The frustrating part, as usual, is that a combination of powerful interests who don’t care about such things are behind this venture and are difficult to dislodge. There is nothing the outside world can do about it, other than to step up the criticism.
A tragic side-effect of Arctic sea-ice melting. Studies show a drastic loss in the fat contained in zooplankton, at the base of the food chain, due to the warmer temperature waters. The entire ecosystem is suffering as a result.
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Oceanic low-oxygen dead zones continue to expand. These occur mostly in coastal regions exposed to high-nutrient river run-offs, worsened by warmer than usual waters. Here again, marine ecosystems suffer greatly. Lately it has been observed that some of these zones create sizeable gyres that remain intact and move out into the open ocean, doing yet more damage to marine life..

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One more story about warm ocean water and its effect on marine ecosystems. We mustn’t overlook “the blob” that sits off most of the west coast of North America. The video in this post describes how it was formed, why it endures, and many of the consequences.
Carl

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