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Climate change is here and action needed now

Doc

Bottoms Up
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
Open up your wallets ....its coming down the tracks fast. :angry:


Climate change is here and action needed now, new White House report says
By Kevin Liptak, Jethro Mullen and Tom Cohen, CNN

Washington (CNN) -- Climate change is here and will only worsen. Get used to more flooding, wildfires and drought, depending on where you live. Cities and states across America already are spending lots of money to respond.

Those are the take-home messages of a new White House report released Tuesday that is part of President Barack Obama's second-term effort to prepare the nation for the impacts of a changing climate such as rising sea levels and increasingly erratic weather.

The National Climate Assessment update said evidence of human-made climate change "continues to strengthen" and that "Americans are noticing changes all around them."

"Climate change is not a distant threat," said John Holdren, who directs the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. "It already is affecting every region of the country and key sectors of the economy."

Read the National Climate Assessment

The Obama administration wants the report to ignite awareness of the need for government and communities to respond now to climate change in the face of a relentless campaign backed by the fossil fuel industry that challenges whether it is real or caused by human activity such as increased carbon emissions from power plants, factories and cars.

In a statement coinciding with the report's publication, the White House said the findings "underscore the need for urgent action to combat the threats from climate change, protect American citizens and communities today, and build a sustainable future for our kids and grandkids."

John Podesta, a Democratic operative who now counsels the President, told reporters that Obama will kick off a broad campaign to publicize the report by speaking with meteorologists later Tuesday.

Obama also will hold other climate change-themed events in coming days, and Podesta said Cabinet members and other administration officials would be "fanning out" across the country to spread the word about how climate change impacts specific regions.

Republican critics immediately pounced on new report as a political tool for Obama to try to impose a regulatory agenda that would hurt the economy.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky mocked what he described as the hypocritical stance of "liberal elites" who demand strong action on climate change while failing to reduce their own carbon footprint.

"Even if we were to enact the kind of national energy regulations the President seems to want so badly, it would be unlikely to meaningfully impact global emissions anyway unless other major industrial nations do the same thing," McConnell said in arguing against proposals to reduce industrial pollution.

He called the debate "cynical" because Obama knew that "much of the pain of imposing such regulations would be borne by our own middle class."

To Podesta and Holdren, the reality of climate change will win out over opponents of new energy policies to combat it.

"Public awareness has been going up and will continue to go up," Holdren told reporters, predicting increased public support for government action to reduce U.S. carbon emissions and for America to take a leadership role on climate change in the international arena.

Recent polling indicates most Americans believe human activities cause climate change, but also shows the issue is less important to the public than the economy and other topics.

A Gallup poll in March found that 34% of respondents think climate change, called global warming in the poll, posed a "serious threat" to their way of life, compared to 64% who responded "no." At the same time, more than 60% of respondents believed global warming was happening or would happen in their lifetime.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/06/politics/white-house-climate-energy/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

 

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
I think they are trying to create a DISTRACTION to take media attention off of Benghazi.

I don't think it will work THIS TIME.

The media is actually asking questions again. WTF, maybe FOX was right to stick with the Benghazi story. Can't blame this on BUSH.
 

Danang Sailor

nullius in verba
GOLD Site Supporter
The climate is changing, eh? Isn't that normal? Last year's polar ice caps were bigger than they have been recently, even though Al Gore told us they would be completely gone.

I think you're right about the distraction, Bob; this is ho-hum "news"at best.
 

RedRocker

Active member
I'd like to know exactly what these fools plan to do to change the environment?
Apparently they can control the weather.
 

Doc

Bottoms Up
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
I'd like to know exactly what these fools plan to do to change the environment?
Apparently they can control the weather.

I really do not think they believe they can control it, but they do believe they can tax and charge us in the guise of attempting to fix what is not broken. CNN bought it. Headlines on their webpage right now:

:yum: Their prediction is that in a few hundred years the ice cap might melt. Isn't that convenient? None of them will be around to see whether they are right or wrong. :yum: They must think we are suckers. :pat:

================
Ice melt in part of Antarctica 'appears unstoppable,' NASA says

(CNN) -- The complete melting of a major section of west Antarctica's ice sheet appears inevitable, and the process could lead to higher end-of-century global sea levels than previously anticipated, researchers said Monday.

Warm ocean currents and geographic peculiarities helped kick off a chain reaction at the Amundsen Sea-area glaciers, melting them faster than previously realized and pushing them "past the point of no return," NASA glaciologist Eric Rignot told reporters by phone Monday.

The glacial retreat there "appears unstoppable," said Rignot, lead author of a joint NASA-University of California Irvine paper that used 40 years of satellite data and aircraft studies.

NASA says the region has enough ice to raise global sea levels by 4 feet. Estimated conservatively, it still could take several centuries for that portion to melt into the ocean, Rignot said.


But the melting could have an impact this century, said Sridhar Anandakrishnan, geosciences professor at Pennsylvania State University.

The United Nations' most recent climate change report estimates sea levels could rise from about 1 foot to 3 feet by 2100, levels that could displace tens of millions of people from coastal areas around the world.

Yet that estimate largely didn't take into account melting from west Antarctica, because few studies for that area had been completed, Anandakrishnan said.

"So as this paper and others come out, the (U.N.) numbers for 2100 will almost certainly" lean closer to 3 feet, he said.

Why scientists think it's unstoppable

The rate at which the area's ice is melting has increased 77% since 1973, and the reasons are several, researchers said.

The ice sheet there, unlike that in much of east Antarctica, is attached to a bed below sea level. That means ocean currents can deliver warm water at glaciers' base, or grounding lines -- places where the ice attaches to the bed, NASA said.

10 Countries Most as risk:
10th most at risk: Ethiopia
9th most at risk: Philippines
8th most at risk: Cambodia
7th most at risk: DR Congo
6th most at risk: Nigeria
5th most at risk: South Sudan
4th most at risk: Haiti
3rd most at risk: Sierra Leone
2nd most at risk: Guinea-Bissau
Most at risk: Bangladesh

more: http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/12/us/nasa-antarctica-ice-melt/index.html?hpt=hp_t1
 

waybomb

Well-known member
GOLD Site Supporter
I loved the climate change this weekend.

Sat on the dock on Sunday early evening with my wife, a bottle or Epica Cabernet, and a Macanudo Prince of Wales. That stogie lasted 3.5 hours!

It was wonderfully warm evening. And as of mid week last week - it was to be a horrible weekend for smoking stogies on the dock.

I got Friday with an Alec Bradley Mundial, Saturday with a Nica Puro, and Sunday with the Macanudo.

Of course, the climate changed to day and rained all day.
And it will change tomorrow with lows around 40. And then in a few weeks it will change again and be in the 80s. And I bet it really changes next February when it'll be close to zero.

Bah Humbug. And these dumb phuks believe these idiots.
 
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