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Many of the Climate Impacts Predicted in the Last National Climate Assessment, in 2014, Are No Longer Theoretical (nytimes.com)

This year's report contains many of the same findings cited in the previous National Climate Assessment, published in 2014. From a report: More and more of the predicted impacts of global warming are now becoming a reality. For instance, the 2014 assessment forecast that coastal cities would see more flooding in the coming years as sea levels rose. That's no longer theoretical: Scientists have now documented a record number of "nuisance flooding" events during high tides in cities like Miami and Charleston, S.C.

"High tide flooding is now posing daily risks to businesses, neighborhoods, infrastructure, transportation, and ecosystems in the Southeast," the report says. As the oceans have warmed, disruptions in United States fisheries, long predicted, are now underway. In 2012, record ocean temperatures caused lobster catches in Maine to peak a month earlier than usual, and the distribution chain was unprepared.

2 of 346 comments (clear)

  1. So, it's time to do something by PPH · · Score: 1, Troll

    We have a few tricks up our sleeve. Seed the upper atmosphere with sulfates, dump iron in the ocean to increase carbon sequestration, feed seaweed to cows, replace CO2 producing power generation with nuclear?

    No? Doesn't fit some preconceived agenda? Then global warming must not be that important if we are throwing options off the table that lightly. Come back when it's a problem.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:So, it's time to do something by melted · · Score: 1, Troll

      Ah, the good old fashioned "X, ???, Profit" canard:

      1. Make manufacturing more expensive, ruin the economies worldwide (developing and not) by taxing energy, and throw the poor back into poverty
      2. ???
      3. Profit

      It is not enough to merely point out problems. Any idiot can do that. Suggest real, actual solutions. And no, taxing CO2 and methane is not a viable solution, if you care about the economy, standard of living, etc, the cure is worse than the disease. And fixing problems here when China and India shit all over the Paris accords is not a viable solution either.