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UNCCD News issue 6.1
UNCCD News issue 6.1

... When the rains fail to come and drought takes away the basic prerequisites for survival, many people see only two ways out of their dilemma. Firstly, they may dispute others’ claims to scarce water resources and perhaps even take up arms. Secondly, they may decide to leave their degraded land in sea ...
Buds, Leaves, and Global Warming – the Harvard Forest Project
Buds, Leaves, and Global Warming – the Harvard Forest Project

... by E.O. Wilson and Global Weirding chapter from Hot, Flat, and Crowded by Thomas L. Friedman.  Jigsaw presentation: each group will be assigned a chapter from the report Confronting Climate Change in the U.S. Northeast, prepared by the Northeast Climate ...
Nitrogen deposition: how important is it for global
Nitrogen deposition: how important is it for global

... 4N2K and 8N2K are the same as (1–4) but a uniform increase of 2 K in atmospheric temperature forcing is imposed. In the above simulations, changes in N deposition, CO2 and climate warming are imposed as step-function changes at the start of the simulations. It should be noted that we refer to 1N as ...
Growing Season Length Analysis
Growing Season Length Analysis

... Concurrent with increases in growing season length, we found a reduction in soil carbon ...
Climate change, carbon sequestration, and forest fire protection in
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... wildland fire regimes will become more severe, with more fires, more extreme weather events, and the likelihood of increased area burned. Even if fire suppression resources are increased to cope with the changing fire conditions, suppression efforts will be challenged. Forest fires release significa ...
Climate Change Predicted Impacts on Juneau
Climate Change Predicted Impacts on Juneau

... (ppm) throughout at least the last 1,000,000 of the earth’s history. In the past 200 years, however, the burning of fossil fuels has increased atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations higher than any levels in the past 650,000 years or more (IPCC 2001; Siegenthaler et al. 2005). Atmospheric carbon ...
Towards a Strategy on Climate Change, Ecosystem Services
Towards a Strategy on Climate Change, Ecosystem Services

... mechanism6, promoting a similar approach for other land use and ecosystems and, by including ecosystem-based approaches as an integral part in the UNFCCC Framework for Adaptation Action. (See 2.1). ...
Sierra Leone Climate Action Report
Sierra Leone Climate Action Report

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Needs Assessment: Cayman Islands

... This report forms one of a suite of 16 individual needs assessments of the UK Overseas Territories (UKOTs) produced as part of the process of developing a DFID/FCO led cross HMG programme design to address climate change by promoting low carbon climate resilient development in the UKOTs. The purpose ...
Hamilton Community Climate Change Action Plan
Hamilton Community Climate Change Action Plan

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Policy Implications of Deep Decarbonization in the United States

... The authors gratefully acknowledge Dr. Jeffrey Sachs and Guido Schmidt-Traub of the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), and Dr. Daniel Lashof of NextGen Climate America, who provided financial support for the preparation of this report. The authors wish to acknowledge helpful comments ...
Nooksack Indian Tribe: Rivers and Glaciers - UO Blogs
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Social Aspects of Climate Change in Urban Areas in Low
Social Aspects of Climate Change in Urban Areas in Low

... and the quality of local government and local governance). At a global scale, the urban centres and populations facing the largest increases in climatechange related hazards are mostly in low- and middle-income nations. So too are most of the urban centres with the least adaptive capacity and the la ...
trees on the move - the National Sea Grant Library
trees on the move - the National Sea Grant Library

... consists of crops that people plant, we can expect that people will just try to plant them elsewhere or find a better crop for the new climate. With forest vegetation, it’s a different story. Trees can’t migrate very rapidly to the places where climate is favorable! In past ice ages, the changes in ...
Technological Challenges Nigeria
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... facing mankind today. Its impact has spread beyond the environment, causing serious dislocation in world economic and social development. In Africa, Nigeria and Enugu state in particular, climate change impact poses great danger on desertification, damage to infrastructure, sea-level rise, flooding ...
Building resilience to climate shocks and stresses: knowledge gap Learning paper #1
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... and periods of decades or longer.) ...
Climate Change Risk Analysis: Assessment of Future Natural
Climate Change Risk Analysis: Assessment of Future Natural

... Based on the above assessment, the following are the natural disaster threats and hazards that are likely to occur in Springfield as a result of climate change: 1) rising temperatures and heat waves, 2) increased precipitation and flooding, and 3) extreme storm events (which would also result in flo ...
Key Meteorological Indicators of Climate Change in Ireland Environmental Research Centre Report
Key Meteorological Indicators of Climate Change in Ireland Environmental Research Centre Report

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kenya national climate change policy
kenya national climate change policy

... manifestations of climate change constitute a serious threat to Kenya’s natural, built economic and physical systems, on which the country’s sustainable development and future prosperity depends. 1.1.3 Climate change is defined by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) as ...
hhidalgo_4th_symp
hhidalgo_4th_symp

... Detection of climate change is the process of identifying if an observed change is significantly different from what would be expected from natural internal climate variability (Hegerl et al. 2006). Attribution of anthropogenic climate change is the process of identifying if the observed change is: ...
To What Extent Are African Countries Vulnerable to Climate
To What Extent Are African Countries Vulnerable to Climate

... frequent event in semi-arid countries of Sub-Saharan Africa. The effects of drought are exacerbated in these regions by deep rural poverty, limited government capacity, and exposure to additional shocks (Kazianga and Udry, 2006). Such climatic risks particularly affect poor countries, and it is a gr ...
FAO, forests and climate change
FAO, forests and climate change

... and wood-based manufacturing; tenure reform; and payments for forest-related services. Encouraging SFM and optimizing its role in climate change mitigation and adaptation will often require changes in policies, strategies and practices. Delay in making such changes will increase their cost and diffi ...
Floods in the Sahel: an analysis of anomalies, Petra Tschakert
Floods in the Sahel: an analysis of anomalies, Petra Tschakert

... 2005; Reij et al. 2005). Nonetheless, impoverished land managers often view droughts as ‘normal’ (West et al. 2008) or continue to blame themselves for increasingly irregular rainfall patterns. Yet, these irregularities may well be a consequence of anthropogenic emissions, primarily from the wealthy ...
How Corporations Have Influenced the U.S. Dialogue on Climate
How Corporations Have Influenced the U.S. Dialogue on Climate

... poisoning even in the early years of manufacture, the prevailing consensus was that lead toxicity was a health concern only at those high levels of exposure (Bridbord and Hanson 2009). Until the 1960s, most research published on lead was conducted by the Kettering Laboratory, a research institution ...
The Land Use Model Intercomparison Project (LUMIP) contribution
The Land Use Model Intercomparison Project (LUMIP) contribution

... remains one of the most uncertain terms in the global carbon budget (Houghton et al., 2012). As on the biogeophysical side, models show a wide range of estimates for historic and future emissions due to LULCC (Arora and Boer, 2010; Boysen et al., 2014; Brovkin et al., 2013). When emissions of all GH ...
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Politics of global warming



The politics of global warming are complex due to numerous factors that arise from the global economy's interdependence on carbon dioxide emitting hydrocarbon energy sources and because carbon dioxide is directly implicated in global warming - making global warming a non-traditional environmental challenge:Implications to all aspects of a nation-state's economy - The vast majority of the world economy relies on energy sources or manufacturing techniques that release greenhouse gases at almost every stage of production, transportation, storage, delivery & disposal while a consensus of the world's scientists attribute global warming to the release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. This intimate linkage between global warming and economic vitality implicates almost every aspect of a nation-state's economy; Perceived lack of adequate advanced energy technologies - Fossil fuel abundance and low prices continue to put pressure on the development of adequate advanced energy technologies that can realistically replace the role of fossil fuels - as of 2010, over 91% of the worlds energy is derived from fossil fuels and non carbon-neutral technologies. Developing countries do not have cost effective access to the advanced energy technologies that they need for development (most advanced technologies has been developed by and exist in the developed world). Without adequate and cost effective post-hydrocarbon energy sources, it is unlikely the countries of the developed or developing world would accept policies that would materially affect their economic vitality or economic development prospects;Industrialization of the developing world - As developing nations industrialize their energy needs increase and since conventional energy sources produce carbon dioxide, the carbon dioxide emissions of developing countries are beginning to rise at a time when the scientific community, global governance institutions and advocacy groups are telling the world that carbon dioxide emissions should be decreasing. Without access to cost effective and abundant energy sources many developing countries see climate change as a hindrance to their unfettered economic development;Metric selection (transparency) and perceived responsibility / ability to respond - Among the countries of the world, disagreements exist over which greenhouse gas emission metrics should be used like total emissions per year, per capita emissions per year, CO2 emissions only, deforestation emissions, livestock emissions or even total historical emissions. Historically, the release of carbon dioxide has not been historically even among all nation-states and nation-states have challenges with determining who should restrict emissions and at what point of their industrial development they should be subject to such commitments;Vulnerable developing countries and developed country legacy emissions - Some developing nations blame the developed world for having created the global warming crisis because it was the developed countries that emitted most of the carbon dioxide over the twentieth century and vulnerable countries perceive that it should be the developed countries that should pay to address the challenge;Consensus-driven global governance models - The global governance institutions that evolved during the 20th century are all consensus driven deliberative forums where agreement is difficult to achieve and even when agreement is achieved it is almost impossible to enforce;Well organized and funded special-interest lobbying bodies - Special interest lobbying by well organized groups distort and amplify aspects of the challenge (environmental lobbying, energy industry lobbying, other special interest lobbying);Politicization of climate science - Although there is a consensus on the science of global warming and its likely effects - some special interests groups work to suppress the consensus while others work to amplify the alarm of global warming. All parties that engage in such acts add to the politicization of the science of global warming. The result is a clouding of the reality of the global warming problem.The focus areas for global warming politics are Adaptation, Mitigation, Finance, Technology and Losses which are well quantified and studied but the urgency of the global warming challenge combined with the implication to almost every facet of a nation-state's economic interests places significant burdens on the established largely-voluntary global institutions that have developed over the last century; institutions that have been unable to effectively reshape themselves and move fast enough to deal with this unique challenge. Rapidly developing countries who see traditional energy sources as a means to fuel their development, well funded aggressive environmental lobbying groups and an established fossil fuel energy paradigm boasting a mature and sophisticated political lobbying infrastructure all combine to make global warming politics extremely polarized. Distrust between developed and developing countries at most international conferences that seek to address the topic add to the challenges. Further adding to the complexity is the advent of the Internet and the development of media technologies like blogs and other mechanisms for disseminating information that enable the exponential growth in production and dissemination of competing points of view which make it nearly impossible for the development and dissemination of an objective view into the enormity of the subject matter and its politics.
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