Posted by Brad Johnson on 27/06/2008 at 07:23AM
In yesterday’s House Energy and Air Quality Subcommittee hearing on the
costs of climate change
inaction,
economist Sir Nicholas Stern, author of the famous Stern Review on the
Economics of Climate
Change,
warned the United States Congress that the challenge of reining in
greenhouse emissions is critical and doable. Stern advised that there is
“a 50-50 chance that worldwide temperatures would increase by an average
of 9 degrees Fahrenheit over the pre-industrial level era by 2100.”
Energy Committee chairman John Dingell (D-Mich.) noted that global
warming will bring more floods like those that have devastated Iowa and
other Midwestern states:
I would prefer to legislate with more certainty from the scientists
about the dangers we face in the future, but we do not have that
luxury. Scientists are already observing effects now from climate
change.
In contrast, Republican lawmakers emphasized energy costs and the
problem of China and India, arguing against federal mandates to limit
emissions.
Stern also met with a group of senators, and later spoke at the Center
for Global Development, saying:
I remain impressed by the degree of understanding of many people of
responsibility in the United States. At the same time, I was impressed
by the extraordinary scientific denial of some of them.
From E&E News:
Posted by on 19/06/2008 at 04:40PM
Originally posted at the Wonk Room.
The traditional media rarely
discusses extreme weather events in the context of global warming.
However, as the Wonk Room Global
Boiling
series has documented, scientists have been
warning
us for years that climate change will increase catastrophic weather
events like the California wildfires, the East Coast heatwave, and the
Midwest floods that have been taking lives and causing billions in
damage in recent days.
Today, the federal government has released a report that assembles this
knowledge in stark and unequivocal terms. “Weather and Climate Extremes
in a Changing
Climate,”
by the multi-agency U.S. Climate Change Science Program with the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the
lead,
warns that changes in extreme weather are “among the most serious
challenges to
society”
in dealing with global warming. After reporting that heat waves, severe
rainfall, and intense hurricanes have been on the rise – all linked to
manmade global warming – the authors deliver this warning about the
future:
Agenda
- S 1581 — Federal Ocean Acidification
Research And Monitoring (FOARAM) Act of 2007
- S 2307 — Global Change Research Improvement
Act of 2007
- S 2355 — Climate Change Adaptation Act
- S 2332 — Media Ownership Act of 2007
Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee
253 Russell
04/12/2007 at 02:30PM