0 Members and 9 Guests are viewing this topic.
in spite of bias reporter, Trump still won.
In America, the left has created talking points about a Russian-Trump conspiracy. This has been investigated since last July and there is still no smoking gun evidence. In spite of no hard evidence, ...
Quote from: puppypower on 12/05/2017 12:12:19In America, the left has created talking points about a Russian-Trump conspiracy. This has been investigated since last July and there is still no smoking gun evidence. In spite of no hard evidence, ...http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trump-russia-idUSKCN18B2MXThe rest of your post wasn't much more accurate.
Trump is a climate change enthusiast and is interested in getting Putin involved in hurrying it along.
Quote from: jeffreyH on 19/05/2017 13:03:56Trump is a climate change enthusiast and is interested in getting Putin involved in hurrying it along.Did you ever get anywhere with that challenge thingy about showing a single thing that is bad about a slightly warmer world and supporting it?
Rising sea levels could restore a number of desert cities around the Persian Gulf to their former use as sea ports.Climate change is inevitable. The problem is human inability or unwillingness to adapt to it. It is easier in the short term to pretend it isn't happening, or that we can in some way reverse it, and since the power to do anything resides with politicians, and the time horizon of politics is 5 years or less, nothing useful will be done.
Here are two recent stories (there won't be many primary literature sources that meet your criteria because they are all very narrow in scope--a whole paper might discuss a test of one part of a mechanism, or document one trend, or use a certain model to make predictions, none of which alone would meet more than one or two of your criteria. And I don't have time to do an entire lit review)For both of these examples, the mechanism is very straightforward:Climate change leads to increased temperatures at the poles, leading net melting of ice in the Arctic and Antarctic. In the first example, this leads to flooding in Norther Norway, threatening one of the world's seed banks. In the second the outcome is increased rate of sea level rise due to potential ice shelf collapse in Antarctica.1) https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/may/19/arctic-stronghold-of-worlds-seeds-flooded-after-permafrost-meltsPerhaps a simple fix (build a better seed bank somewhere else), but this might not be so straight forward. They were able to save a lot of money by depending on the antarctic cold for preservation. The whole purpose of the seed bank is to survive catastrophes, so having a power-hungry and maintenance-demanding refrigeration system might not be the best design element.2) melting ice in Antarcita threatens coastal cities: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/05/18/climate/antarctica-ice-melt-climate-change.htmlThe authors of this article do not appear to think that a few dozen cm increase in sea level over the next century is a trivial problem.I am going to circle back to talking about habitat zones shifting faster than trees can cope with, and mention mangroves. This paper (http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/030913339001400404) suggests that even a change of 15 cm by 2050 would cause irreparable damage to mangrove populations around the world. Furthermore, the loss of the trees will lead to an increased rate of erosion of coastlines, and threatens the many, many marine species (fish, turtles, shelfish etc.) that depend on mangroves for protection as juveniles. This actually represents a real threat to many of the fish that we harvest from the Caribbean and Atlantic Oceans (https://www.wavespartnership.org/en/mangrove-loss-climate-change-poses-threat-lives-and-gdp)
Quote from: alancalverd on 19/05/2017 22:47:13Rising sea levels could restore a number of desert cities around the Persian Gulf to their former use as sea ports.Climate change is inevitable. The problem is human inability or unwillingness to adapt to it. It is easier in the short term to pretend it isn't happening, or that we can in some way reverse it, and since the power to do anything resides with politicians, and the time horizon of politics is 5 years or less, nothing useful will be done. Yes, my fear is that nothing will be done. Climate change is inevitable, but I do think that there is still much that can be done to reduce the rate at which it happens, thereby decreasing the cost and increasing the feasibility of adapting.
On this one I have to support Tim.http://outreach.stakeholderforum.org/index.php/previous-editions/cop-19/190-cop19day3-disasters-security-loss-and-damage/1572-how-mangroves-help-in-reducing-flooding-and-coastal-erosion