Sure feels like a mild El Nino, but we're not in one, yet. I opened up the outlet on my pond yesterday. I normally don't close it until Jan or Feb, but it's been shut since last year. Looks like I got about another inch and a half since yesterday afternoon. I ran out of house water last night, and don't want to pump in the rain, so I'm catching rainwater.
"many fracking' Californian's will continue to kick the climate change can because of the rain coming in"
They will be dragged along, kicking and screaming, unless they get rid of the CEC.
A new study commissioned by the California Air Resources Board projects California will come in well under the 2020 carbon pollution limit established in the landmark Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32), and has the policy framework in place today to get a significant head start toward achieving the state’s long-term emission reduction goals.
The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report also concludes the state will need to expand upon its current suite of policies and targets over the next 20 to 30 years to achieve the 2050 goal of reducing emissions 80 percent below 1990 levels.
switchboard.nrdc.org
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In 2009, California adopted a statewide Climate Adaptation Strategy (CAS) that summarizes climate change impacts and recommends adaptation strategies across seven sectors: Public Health, Biodiversity and Habitat, Oceans and Coastal Resources, Water, Agriculture, Forestry, and Transportation and Energy.
California Climate Adaptation Strategy
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