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HEY WINGNUTS AND CULT OF DENIAL, TIME TO ABANDON YOUR ALTERNATE REALITY.

June 17 2009 at 5:16 PM

  (Login j2saret)

Wake up and study the science

 

Big Report: How Climate Change Affects the United States

Earlier this afternoon, the White House held a press conference to talk up a major new NOAA report on likely climate-change impacts in the United States. I don't know if this is a first step in a concerted new push by the Obama administration to build support for action on global warming (the White House has stayed remarkably quiet on this issue so far), but the report vividly illustrates why the country can't just ignore climate change. Impacts are alreadyoccuring, right in our backyard, and it's only getting worse.

Among the major findings: If the world continues on a business-as-usual path, allowing emissions to grow at their current pace, then the mainland United States is likely to warm an additional 7°F to 11.5°F by 2090. (There's some uncertainty around the exact figure.) In the worst case, that's a 1°F increase each decade from now until the end of the century.

One particularly eyebrow-raising slide from the presentation, I thought, looked at the number of days each year in which the local temperature will rise above 90°F. Here in Washington, D.C., we already have heinously hot summers, but there are only about 30 to 40 days each year that are actually hotter than 90°F. But by 2080, if emissions keep rising as usual, we'll be seeing hotter-than-90°F days some 90 to 100 days each year. Those miserable D.C. Augusts will essentially extend for one-quarter of the calendar year:

If that sounds ugly, consider that parts of the Southwest, South Florida, and South Texas could see more than 180 days (!) per year with temperatures over 90°F. And it's not just that this will be extremely unpleasant: More hot days could also mean more heat-related deaths, especially as the U.S. population ages. During the press conference, Tom Karl, director of the National Climatic Data Center, told reporters that current projections have heat-wave deaths in Chicago, for example, rising tenfold by century's end, although there are ways to adapt to this (planting more shade trees in the city; installing green roofs).

A few other notables: As the country heats up, there are likely to be longer dry periods coupled with more intense downpours. The North will get wetter, the South drier, although it's not exactly clear where the demarcation line lies. There's going to be a lot of stress on water resources out West. Also, if sea levels rise 3 to 4 feet by century's end, then a good chunk of Florida will find itself underwater, including the Florida Keys, Everglades National Park, much of Cape Canaveral, and the Barrier Islands. Basically, the red areas on this map:

         

The Gulf Coast is another place to fret about sea-level rise, as some 2,400 miles of major roadway and 246 miles of freight are at risk of permanent flooding in the next 50 or so years--terrible news for such a vital port area. (Six of the country's top ten freight gateways and seven of its ten large ports could face major disruptions.)

Anyway, the full NOAA report is here, including sub-reports grouped by region, so you can see how climate change could affect your specific area. The broader study dispels the notion that climate change will only impact poorer countries. As Karl put it at the press conference, a changing climate will have positive and negative effects in the United States. "But overall, most of the impacts will be negative. This is because we've designed and built our infrastructure for the climate we already have, not the climate we're going to have." What's more, even if we do curb emissions drastically and avoid the most severe temperature increases, some amount of warming is already underway, which means that adaptive measures will prove necessary no matter what.

--Bradford Plumer

Posted: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 7:58 PM with 8 comment(s)

 



"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be." -- Thomas Jefferson

We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. - Carl Sagan

I believe that every right implies a responsibility, every opportunity an obligation; every possession, a duty. - John D. Rockefeller, Jr.


    
This message has been edited by j2saret on Jun 17, 2009 5:19 PM


 
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(Login j2saret)

Re: HEY WINGNUTS AND CULT OF DENIAL, TIME TO ABANDON YOUR ALTERNATE REALITY.

June 17 2009, 5:20 PM 

Blogs / 80beats

« Scientist Smackdown: Can a Single Gene Really Predict Depression? Stickleback Fish Learn Like Humans, Despite Tiny Little Fish Brains »

Feds Say Global Warmings Effects Can Be Seen in Our Own Backyards

http://www.reddit.com/submit?url=' + encodeURIComponent(http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2009/06/17/feds-say-global-warmings-effects-can-be-seen-in-our-own-backyards/') + '&title=' + encodeURIComponent('Feds Say Global Warmings Effects Can Be Seen in Our Own Backyards'); return false" href="http://www.reddit.com/submit">submit to reddit http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=' + encodeURIComponent(http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2009/06/17/feds-say-global-warmings-effects-can-be-seen-in-our-own-backyards/') + '&t=' + encodeURIComponent('Feds Say Global Warmings Effects Can Be Seen in Our Own Backyards'), 'sharer', 'toolbar=0,status=0,width=626,height=436'); return false;" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2009/06/17/feds-say-global-warmings-effects-can-be-seen-in-our-own-backyards/" target=_blank> FarkItButton2_16x16.gif . .

heat mapA new report from the federal government loudly makes the point that global warming is already happening, and not just in the remote reaches of Alaska. This report stresses that climate change has immediate and local impacts, said Jane Lubchenco, administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It literally affects people in their backyards [Science News]. The report details the impacts to U.S. infrastructure like roads, sewage plants, and offshore oil drilling operations, and also takes note of the expected effects on sundry industries, from fishing in the northwest to maple sugar production in New England.

The report was prepared by the United States Global Change Research Program, which includes work from 13 federal agencies and the White House; the group is required to report once a decade on the state of the global environment. While the document contains little new science on global warming, experts say its a valuable synthesis of previous findings. Its not a document for scientists. Its not even a document for policymakers, said Katharine Hayhoe, a geosciences professor and one of 28 report co-authors. Its a document for every individual citizen who wants to know why they should care about climate change [Scientific American].

If emissions of carbon dioxide, the principal heat-trapping gas that causes global warming, continue to increase, the continental United States will warm by 7 to 11.5 degrees Fahrenheit by 2090, the report says. With such a temperature rise, no part of the country will be spared from drastic changes. In the Northwest, shrinking snowpacks will reduce summertime stream flow, straining water resources. In Alaska, summers will be hotter and drier, and as a result the number of wildfires and insect infestations will increase. In the Southeast, hurricanes and sea level rise will conspire to boost damages from storm surges. A large number of ecosystems, from trout-filled streams of the Northwest to coral reefs off the Florida coasts, will suffer, as will the tourism and recreation that they support, the report suggests [Science News].

The report has been in the works for several years, and an earlier draft of the document was released online last July by the Bush administration. Still, the timing of the final reports release seems fortuitous. A bill to cap U.S. carbon emissions, sponsored by Democratic Representatives Henry Waxman and Edward Markey, is making its way through Congress and could be up for a vote in the House of Representatives as soon as next week [Time]. The reports authors say, however, that it was not meant to back a specific policy proposal, but they underscored the consequences of failing to reduce carbon dioxide emissions [Reuters].

Related Content:
80beats: Business-As-Usual Will Bring a Global Warming Tipping Point in 40 Years
80beats: Global Warming Forces an Alaska Town to Relocate
80beats: Colorado River, Depleted by Climate Change, May Bring a Grand Drought
80beats: Drought + Warmer Temperatures = a Double Whammy of Tree Death
80beats: Global Warming Could Soon Land Hamster-Like Pika on the Endangered List

Image: United States Global Change Research Program. Two estimates of the number of days when temperatures reach above 100 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century. 

June 17th, 2009 4:00 PM Tags: environmental policy, global warming
by Eliza Strickland in Environment | 1 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >



"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be." -- Thomas Jefferson

We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. - Carl Sagan

I believe that every right implies a responsibility, every opportunity an obligation; every possession, a duty. - John D. Rockefeller, Jr.

 
 
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