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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 5:22:19 PM
From: Land Shark  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1583613
 
That’s Walmart property... they’re not representative of California and are well known for being heartless greedy bastards. FEMA is federal and under FatRump’s control. Surely you’re not that stupid



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 5:47:00 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583613
 
The blood in the California fires are with all the Republican CRIMINAL climate change deniers and POS trump... AND THAT'S A FACT!!!!!!!



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 5:59:39 PM
From: sylvester802 Recommendations

Recommended By
Land Shark
Wharf Rat

  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1583613
 
OOPS! Major Trump administration climate report says damages are ‘intensifying across the country’
Scientists are more certain than ever that climate change is already affecting the United States — and that it is going to be very expensive.

washingtonpost.com

By Brady Dennis and
Chris Mooney
November 23 at 4:49 PM

The federal government on Friday released a long-awaited report with an unmistakable message: The effects of climate change, including deadly wildfires, increasingly debilitating hurricanes and heat waves, are already battering the United States, and the danger of more such catastrophes is worsening.

......................



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 6:02:16 PM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
Land Shark

  Respond to of 1583613
 
OOPS! Climate change will shrink US economy and kill thousands, Trump government report warns
By Jen Christensen and Michael Nedelman, CNN
Updated 3:53 PM ET, Fri November 23, 2018
cnn.com
(CNN)A new US government report delivers a dire warning about climate change and its devastating impacts, saying the economy could lose hundreds of billions of dollars -- or, in the worst-case scenario, more than 10% of its GDP -- by the end of the century.

The federally mandated study was supposed to come out in December but was released by the Trump administration on Friday, at a time when many Americans are on a long holiday weekend, distracted by family and shopping.
David Easterling, director of the Technical Support Unit at the NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, emphasized that there was "no external interference in the report's development." He added that the climate change the Earth is experiencing is unlike any other.
"The global average temperature is much higher and is rising more rapidly than anything modern civilization has experienced, and this warming trend can only be explained by human activities," Easterling said.

Fighting the Elements Episode 3: From the Ashes
This summer’s Mendocino Complex fires raged from July 27 to September 18 burning a total of 459,123 acres in Northern California.

Coming from the US Global Change Research Program, a team of 13 federal agencies, the Fourth National Climate Assessment was put together with the help of 1,000 people, including 300 leading scientists, roughly half from outside the government.

It's the second of two volumes. The first, released in November 2017, concluded that there is "no convincing alternative explanation" for the changing climate other than "human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse gases."




Dimming the sun: The answer to global warming?

The report's findings run counter to President Donald Trump's consistent message that climate change is a hoax.
On Wednesday, Trump tweeted, " Whatever happened to Global Warming?" as some Americans faced the coldest Thanksgiving i n over a century.
But the science explained in these and other federal government reports is clear: Climate change is not disproved by the extreme weather of one day or a week; it's demonstrated by long-term trends. Humans are living with the warmest temperatures in modern history. Even if the best-case scenario were to happen and greenhouse gas emissions were to drop to nothing, the world is on track to warm 1.1 degrees Fahrenheit.
As of now, not a single G20 country is meeting climate targets, research shows.
Without significant reductions in greenhouse emissions, the annual average global temperature could increase 9 degrees Fahrenheit (5 Celsius) or more by the end of this century, compared with preindustrial temperatures, the report says.
The expense
The costs of climate change could reach hundreds of billions of dollars annually, according to the report. The Southeast alone will probably lose over a half a billion labor hours by 2100 due to extreme heat.
Farmers will face extremely tough times. The quality and quantity of their crops will decline across the country due to higher temperatures, drought and flooding. In parts of the Midwest, farms will be able to produce less than 75% of the corn they produce today, and the southern part of the region could lose more than 25% of its soybean yield.
Heat stress could cause average dairy production to fall between 0.60% and 1.35% over the next 12 years -- having already cost the industry $1.2 billion from heat stress in 2010.




The health hazards from wildfires can linger

When it comes to shellfish there will be a $230 million loss by the end of the century due to ocean acidification, which is already killing off shellfish and corals. Red tides, or algae bloom that deplete oxygen in the water and can kill sea life -- like those that triggered a state of emergency in Florida in August -- will become more frequent.
Impacts on our health
Higher temperatures will also kill more people, the report says. The Midwest alone, which is predicted to have the largest increase in extreme temperature, will see an additional 2,000 premature deaths per year by 2090.
There will be more mosquito- and tickborne diseases like Zika, dengue and chikungunya. West Nile cases are expected to more than double by 2050 due to increasing temperatures.




3 things businesses can do to win the climate change fight

Expect asthma and allergies to be worse due to climate change.
No one's health is immune from climate change, the report concludes. People will be exposed to more foodborne and waterborne diseases. Particularly vulnerable to higher temperatures in the summer, children, the elderly, the poor and communities of color will be at a much greater risk for illness and death.
Heat and flooding
Wildfire seasons -- already longer and more destructive than before -- could burn up to six times more forest area annually by 2050 in parts of the United States. Burned areas in Southwestern California alone could double by 2050.
Dependable and safe water for the Hawaii, the Caribbean and others are threatened by these rising temperatures.




How climate change will affect your health

Along the US coasts, public infrastructure and $1 trillion in national wealth held in real estate are threatened by rising sea levels, flooding and storm surges.
Energy systems will be taxed, meaning more blackouts and power failures, and the potential loss in some sectors could reach hundreds of billions of dollars per year by the end of the century, the report said.
The number of days over 100 degrees Fahrenheit will multiply; Chicago, where these days are rare, could start to resemble Phoenix or Las Vegas, with up to two months worth of these scorching-hot days.
Sea levels have already gone up 7 to 8 inches since 1900. Almost half that rise has been since 1993, a rate of rise greater than during any century in the past 2,800 years. Some countries are already seeing land underwater.
By midcentury, it's likely that the Arctic will lose all sea ice in late summer, and that could lead to more permafrost thaw, according to the report. As the permafrost thaws, more carbon dioxide and methane would be released, amplifying human-induced warming, "possibly significantly."
What can be done
The report was created to inform policy-makers and makes no specific recommendations on how to remedy the problem. However, it suggests that if the United States immediately reduced its fossil fuel use and greenhouse gas emissions, it could save thousands of lives and generate billions of dollars in benefits for the country.




As global temperatures rise, so will mental health issues, study says

The Defense Department is trying to understand what risk climate change poses to security. But the Trump administration has signaled that the country will pull out of international initiatives like the Paris climate accord, aimed at lowering global temperatures, claiming that these treaties have been unfair for the US economy.
A report from the UN in October urged all governments to take "rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society" to avoid disaster from climate change. That report predicted that the Earth will reach the crucial threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels by as early as 2030. It also suggested the world faces a risk of extreme drought, wildfires, floods and food shortages for hundreds of millions of people.
Time for action
Reactions to the new report have been strong across the scientific community.
"If we're going to run this country like a business, it's time to address climate as the threat multiplier we know it is before more lives are lost," said Robert Bullard, an environmental scientistat Texas Southern University.
"In Houston, communities of color have endured back to back major weather events without the acknowledgment from Washington that climate change is the cause. We've known for years that it's true and it's important to our organizing and our local policy efforts that information like this is not only considered, but believed and acted upon."

Scientists who have been raising the alarm about the negative consequences of climate change for years welcomed the findings.

"The findings in the Trump administration's NCA report show how the health and daily lives of Americans are becoming more and more interrupted because of climate change," said Beverly Wright, founding director of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice and a professor at Dillard University. "We challenge the administration to finally begin using this information to rebuild and strengthen the communities in the direct path of the atrocities wrought by the fossil fuel industry and decades of poor policies that have neglected our concerns. The science is undeniable, let's fix it."

CNN's Brandon Miller, Gregory Wallace, Kevin Flower and Rene Marsh contributed to this report.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 6:04:38 PM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
Land Shark

  Respond to of 1583613
 
OOPS! Federal report sounds alarm on growing impact of climate change
BY EMILY BIRNBAUM - 11/23/18 02:00 PM EST 4,595
6,676
thehill.com

Federal report sounds alarm on growing impact of climate change
Autoplay: On | Off

A new climate report from the federal government released Friday warns that current global and regional efforts to stave off the devastating effects of climate change are insufficient.

The report, the first of its kind released under the Trump administration, finds that climate change is expected to interrupt the way people live day-to-day as it ravages infrastructure, impacts human health, poses challenges to the global economy and threatens the world's energy supply.

The Global Change Research Act of 1990 mandates that the federal government release a report about global warming and climate change every four years. This report, the Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4), is the latest fulfillment of that mandate. It is the counterpart to the Climate Science Special Report, which was released last year.

The damning report, which analyzes the effects of climate change by U.S. region, comes as President Trump has continued to cast doubt on the scientific consensus that global warming and climate change are caused by human activity. Trump on Wednesday seemed to scoff at the idea of global warming, tweeting:

The report states emphatically: Global warming exists and it is a threat to humankind's survival.

"Global average temperature has increased by about 1.8 [degrees] from 1901 to 2016, and observational evidence does not support any credible natural explanations for this amount of warming," the report reads. "Instead, the evidence consistently points to human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse or heat-trapping gases, as the dominant cause."

"The warming trend observed over the past century can only be explained by the effects that human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse gases, have had on the climate," the Fourth National Climate Assessment reads.


The report was originally set for release next month, but it was released this week to the surprise of those invested in its rollout.

Many criticized the report for its new release date: Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is typically ones of the slowest news days of the year as people spend time with family and go shopping. Some scientists and environmental activists said the timing of its release could bury the report's dire findings.

“It’s an absolute disgrace to bury the truth about climate impacts in a year that saw hundreds of Americans die during devastating climate-fueled megafires, hurricanes, floods, and algal blooms," said National Wildlife Federation President Collin O’Mara in a statement.

David Easterling, director of the National Centers for Environmental Information Technical Support Unit, during a phone call with reporters said the release date was moved up because the program responsible for it felt it "would be a topic of discussion" at two international conferences coming up.

"We wanted to get this out sufficiently in advance of those meetings to ensure that folks have a chance to review it," Easterling said.

Easterling declined to answer questions from reporters who asked if the White House weighed in on the report's release date. Easterling and Burkett repeatedly said they did not want to use the phone call to discuss what prompted the report's early release.

Burkett and the other scientists on the line declined to answer questions about the contradictions between the report's findings and the White House's climate-skeptical messaging.

"This report has not been altered or revised in any way" according to "political considerations," Burckett said, redirecting all questions about the president and White House.

The report finds that the global average temperature is at its highest temperature in history, sea levels have continued to rise, and extreme events have intensified and will continue to increase in frequency.


Released shortly after the wildfires ravaging areas of Northern California were determined to be the deadliest and most destructive in the state's history, the report predicts that wildfire seasons could incinerate up to six times more forest area every year by 2050 in some parts of the U.S. The report was written before the devastating "Camp Fire" took place.

The report also finds that flooding is expected to intensify along the U.S. coasts, where infrastructure and real estate is at risk of severe devastation.

Climate change is could cost the country up to hundreds of billions of dollars annually.

More than 300 federal and nonfederal experts participated in creating the assessment, which is based on scientific research and on-the-ground discussions with those impacted by climate change.

The report emphasizes that those most impacted by the intensifying storms and weather patterns caused by global warming will be poor and marginalized communities.

"Risks are often highest for those that are already vulnerable, including low-income communities, some communities of color, children, and the elderly," it reads, citing multiple scientific studies. "Climate change threatens to exacerbate existing social and economic inequalities that result in higher exposure and sensitivity to extreme weather and climate-related events and other changes."

While most of the information in the report is already known by climate scientists, the report's intention is to propose solutions and possible actions for policymakers.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1101264)11/23/2018 6:11:01 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1583613
 
And what POS trump is doing about the American human blood and DESTRUCTION from Climate Change??? ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!!!!! That POS is 1000% a CORRUPT CRIMINAL and an American TRAITOR!!!! Proves yet again that Kathy Griffin was right all alone...