THE THREATS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
Much of what is written about climate change gives the impression that it
will lead to a few more floods, droughts and hurricanes, that changes will be very slow and, for people living in
cold climates, it could mean some nice warm weather. It is also often suggested
that climate change will mainly affect poor people and this, regrettably, may
lead some of the richer people to conclude that they need not worry.
The real threats of climate change are much more serious than
how they are usually described.
Some of the reasons are summarised in Climate change: it's worse than you think (HTML or MS Word
(A4) or MS Word (US letter)),
issued by the Campaign
against Climate Change. A different analysis that points to the same conclusion is at www.green-innovations.asn.au/how-far-how-fast-greenhouse-case.htm.
The Royal Society has published a Guide to facts and
fictions about climate change (275 Kb PDF, 2005-03-09), correcting
disinformation about climate change that has been energetically spread about by
lobby groups funded by ExxonMobile and other purveyors of fossil fuels.
The World Resources Institute has reviewed discoveries about the
world's climate in scientific papers published in 2005. "Taken collectively, they
suggest that the world may well have moved past a key physical tipping point."
James Hansen of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies writes that Huge sea level rises are coming—unless we act now (see also Environmental Research Letters 2, 2007).
There are also two sobering reports by the BBC: "Greenland
ice swells ocean rise" and "Siberia's
rapid thaw causes alarm", and an article on the latter subject from the
Guardian: "Warming
hits 'tipping point'".
Here
are some other articles on the same theme:
And George Monbiot on biased reporting in the
media (April 2004).
For more information: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Guardian Special Report on Climate Change (2003), BBC
pages on 'Gobal Warning'.
Last updated:
2008-05-04
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