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Showing Original Post only (View all)New York Times Opinion: Time to Panic (climate change) [View all]
Time to PanicNew York Times Opinion, David Wallace-Wells, 2/16/19
The age of climate panic is here. Last summer, a heat wave baked the entire Northern Hemisphere, killing dozens from Quebec to Japan. Some of the most destructive wildfires in California history turned more than a million acres to ash, along the way melting the tires and the sneakers of those trying to escape the flames. Pacific hurricanes forced three million people in China to flee and wiped away almost all of Hawaiis East Island.
We are living today in a world that has warmed by just one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) since the late 1800s, when records began on a global scale. We are adding planet-warming carbon dioxide to the atmosphere at a rate faster than at any point in human history since the beginning of industrialization.
In October, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released what has become known as its Doomsday report a deafening, piercing smoke alarm going off in the kitchen, as one United Nations official described it detailing climate effects at 1.5 and two degrees Celsius of warming (2.7 and 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). At the opening of a major United Nations conference two months later, David Attenborough, the mellifluous voice of the BBCs Planet Earth and now an environmental conscience for the English-speaking world, put it even more bleakly: If we dont take action, he said, the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.
Scientists have felt this way for a while. But they have not often talked like it. For decades, there were few things with a worse reputation than alarmism among those studying climate change.
We are living today in a world that has warmed by just one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) since the late 1800s, when records began on a global scale. We are adding planet-warming carbon dioxide to the atmosphere at a rate faster than at any point in human history since the beginning of industrialization.
In October, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released what has become known as its Doomsday report a deafening, piercing smoke alarm going off in the kitchen, as one United Nations official described it detailing climate effects at 1.5 and two degrees Celsius of warming (2.7 and 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). At the opening of a major United Nations conference two months later, David Attenborough, the mellifluous voice of the BBCs Planet Earth and now an environmental conscience for the English-speaking world, put it even more bleakly: If we dont take action, he said, the collapse of our civilizations and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon.
Scientists have felt this way for a while. But they have not often talked like it. For decades, there were few things with a worse reputation than alarmism among those studying climate change.
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I have also been following the climate change discussion for the last 20 years.
airplaneman
Feb 2019
#15
It gets worse. Insect populations are crashing, amphibian populations are plummeting, coral reefs..
rwsanders
Feb 2019
#7
Unfortunately, today's identity politics can't deal with an issue like this which is
jalan48
Feb 2019
#12