Climate Letter #482

Pricing carbon to curb emissions.  “Literally putting a price on carbon pollution and other greenhouse gasses is the best approach for nurturing the rapid growth of renewable energy and reducing emissions.”  There is a constant flow of similar recommendations, making a point that is almost certainly true.  When the day comes that people really become frightened and want to get serious about making changes this will indeed happen, and be of great help.  Before that day, unfortunately, the odds are much lower.

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Climate change has a message for Labor Day.  A number of studies have been performed showing how worker productivity declines when temperatures rise past a certain point.  It’s something we can easily grasp intuitively.  The loss of productivity numbers look high enough to make a considerable difference in economic modeling, depending on location and the chosen climate scenario.
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More argument that the2C guardrail limit is too high, as made by Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.  These are not climate scientists, but they know something about the earmarks of scientific validity, and how to tailor the message when the threat of doomsday scenarios is in view.
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An efficient new way to provide heating in electric cars.  This is important in cold climates because passenger heating can consume up to half of available battery power in severe conditions.
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A comparison of this year’s El Nino buildup to the one that started in 1997.  A brief animated video shows ocean surface temperature anomalies day by day from January into August.  It provides a good sign of the strength expected to come.

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A new theory of what caused Earth’s first mass extinction.  An interesting bit of paleo history, placing the blame on newly-evolved animals and how they changed the environment.
Carl

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