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by gwright
4773 days ago
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The dispute has not been about 'warming' in the abstract but about 'catastrophic warming'. So while the evidence for 'warming' may be getting stronger, the evidence for 'catastrophic warming' would seem to be getting weaker. The longer we go without significant warming, the lower that growth rate will get and the weaker the argument for a catastrophic warming will be. |
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At current rates of change we are looking in near decades at changing rainfall patterns that will result in regions and countries suffering permanent drought, and others suffering regular flooding and other forms of extreme weather. Among the areas predicted to have severe and permanent drought is the southeastern USA.
Furthermore we are learning about new risks. For instance ocean acidification has put us on a possibly irreversible path towards world-wide mass extinctions of organisms that use calcium carbonate for protection. This includes coral and shellfish. Nobody knows what resulting ecosystem changes will happen, or what the consequences for commercial fisheries which are a critical food supply for populations around the world.
The only way in which these things do not qualify as "catastrophic" is in comparison to worse catastrophes that were within the realm of theoretical possibility, but which now seem less likely. For the planet as a whole, and for people on the planet, the current course bears a series of inevitable catastrophes in our future.