Quote:
Originally Posted by cycleguy55
“At the time of Kyoto, if someone talked about climate change, they were talking about something that was abstract in the future,” said Marcia McNutt, the former U.S. Geological Survey director who was picked to run the National Academies of Sciences. “Now, we’re talking about changing climate, something that’s happening now. You can point to event after event that is happening in the here and now that is a direct result of changing climate.”
“I am quite stunned by how much the Earth has changed since 1997,” Princeton University’s Bill Anderegg said in an email. “In many cases (e.g. Arctic sea ice loss, forest die-off due to drought), the speed of climate change is proceeding even faster than we thought it would two decades ago.”
Eighteen years ago, the discussion was far more about average temperatures, not the freakish extremes. Now, scientists and others realize it is in the more frequent extremes that people are truly experiencing climate change.
Witness the “large downpours, floods, mudslides, the deeper and longer droughts, rising sea levels from the melting ice, forest fires,” former Vice President Al Gore, who helped negotiate the 1997 agreement, told The Associated Press. “There’s a long list of events that people can see and feel viscerally right now. Every night on the television news is like a nature hike through the Book of Revelation.”
Studies have shown that man-made climate change contributed in a number of recent weather disasters. Among those that climate scientists highlight as most significant: the 2003 European heat wave that killed 70,000 people in the deadliest such disaster in a century; Hurricane Sandy, worsened by sea level rise, which caused more than $67 billion in damage and claimed 159 lives; the 2010 Russian heat wave that left more than 55,000 dead; the drought still gripping California; and Typhoon Haiyan, which killed more than 6,000 in the Philippines in 2013.
There's more, lots more, at From Kyoto to Paris: How the world’s climate has changed in 18 years - National | Globalnews.ca
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Really??? You're going to quote Al Gore?? Who's next Kermit the frog?
Yet another" studies have shown" series of bull..it factoids.
You want some facts? Read the major piece in Sat. WSJ that was co authored by a member of the IPCC. It covers a wealth of information on, for instance, the reliance on less than accurate modeling, how many embellish the most aggressive predictions rather than the most probable, the utter lack of accuracy on model based formulations, and the fact that AGAINST MANY IPCC SCIENTISTS, their recent publication was based more on politics not science.
It was real confidence inspiring.
It also posed the interesting question , yet unanswered, as to why, on several occaisions, the planet was warmer over the last 10,000 years with far less Co2.