The climate threat is not a good job: confront his denial with scientific evidence

Copyright © HT Digital Streams Limit all rights reserved. What Trump calls a ‘con -work’ is a real climate crisis that only ignores us at a great danger. The planet is dangerously close to the Paris pact goal of the Paris Treaty. (IStockphoto) Summary Trump calls the climate threat a ‘closer’ at the UN, and reveals just how serious denial of it has become. Our best hope for a global consensus is to provide proof of the disaster we face. Again and again, if necessary. Don’t let denial push us closer to Doom. Every now and then you come to a voucher that feels strong enough to cut the noise and change the plan. Zeke Haus sense, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth, recently produced a clear illustration of how fast the planet we inhabit is warming up because of the greenhouse gases pumping people into the atmosphere. It is a map, published in its substat newsletter called Climate Brink, and the part of the world’s country has broken down that has experienced the hottest month in every decade since the 1870s. It reveals that very few of our land surface experienced such records before the 20th century. In contrast, about 78% of it set temperature records in the 21st century. And 38% set records in the 2020s – despite the fact that the decade was only halfway. It fits well with another map that is a lot of eye opening of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). It shows the change in the average global surface temperature over the past 145 years. It has risen more or less gradually over the past five decades, which recently beat 1.3 ° Celsius (about 2.3 ° Fahrenheit) above the average for the period from 1951 to 1980. We come dangerously close to the Paris agreement of the planet to limit the NASA base. Haus sense’s graphics directly refute at least two major talk points that use climate change changes to slow down the action and burn the world longer burning fossil fuels. First, they give the lie to the central made fact in this recent diatribe of US President Donald Trump, the world’s ‘Denier-in-Chief’, which was recently delivered to the United Nations General Assembly: ‘If you look years ago, in the 1920s and the 1930s, they said:’ Global refrigeration will kill the world. We have to do something. “Then they said that global warming will kill the world, but then it just mentions that they can miss climate change, because if it is higher or lower, there is climate change. [Emphasis added] The maps show that the world may have cooled down decades after the thirties (more on this issue later), but since the 1970s gradually became warmer. If there is anything, over the past 100 years has been the hottest in recorded human history, as you can see in another striking map published in 2023 by Andrew Desler, a climate scientist at Texas A&M University and Haus sense’s co-author at The Climate Brink. It has been following world temperatures since the latest Ice Age and projects them thousands of years in the future to show how we turn an ice age of planetary cooling into a geological eye. It takes an epochal output of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to achieve such a achievement. The second climate change-Denier Bromide This maps address is the myth that the world was actually warmer in the 1930s, as Trump’s Department of Energy recently proposed in its 141-page effort to refute established climate science, an attempt that was delayed as a failure. It is true that the US land mass was extremely hot during the so-called Dust Bowl decade, when the heatwave intensity in the lower 48 states of America was the highest on record, according to the environmental protection agency data. In fact, Haus sense’s chart shows that about 3% of the 1930s temperature records still stand. This includes parts of the US. But it was just a local disorder, not a global trend. America’s Dust Bowl climate was a product of bad farming practices and bad timing. Land syrup agricultural practices have reduced land cover, which strengthened the drought and heat, just in time for a long-standing rise in the ocean temperatures to strengthen both. The combination raised excess heat that came to Europe. Meanwhile, the rest of the world has continued to be as cool as ever. The localized heat quickly disappeared as soon as the ocean cooled, and we stopped abusing land in America. Now that the heat has returned to the US and the rest of the world after decades of humanity, the atmosphere fills with heat-catching gases. At the rate we go, the Dust Bowl -era will look like a cool interim compared to. It is a global trend and cherry picking data to deny its reality is a tactic we mean to distract us from the work we need to do to stop it. Waving over cards like this is only the beginning. © Bloomberg The author is a Bloomberg manner editor and columnist who covers climate change. Catch all the business news, market news, news reports and latest news updates on Live Mint. Download the Mint News app to get daily market updates. More Topics #Climate Change #Global Warming #Donald Trump Read Next Story

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