The first, «The
#Frankenstorm in Climate Context,» was on the storm in the context of climate history and the science pointing to greenhouse - driven climate change.
And finally, I want to say, in a terms of broader picture,
particularly in the climate context but also the safety context, we really have to push on what the President put into his Climate Action Plan in 2013 [link]-- looking at and reducing dramatically methane leaks across the entire system from production to distribution, particularly in our cities.
Before you dive in to the resulting discussion, it's worth reading Andrew Freedman's helpful Climate Central piece, «Making Sense of the Moore
Tornado in a Climate Context,» and a Daily Beast post by Josh Dzieza.
Here's a 2009 post on «the climate
bill in climate context» with a bit more background on how American legislation relates to the need for global action, mostly in developing countries, to blunt the rising human impact on the atmosphere.
In the climate context, it's the question of resilience of energy infrastructure against, well, Sandy, and other things of that type.
Below I've pasted what Dr. Olson said he would have written if asked whether there is a better word,
in the climate context, for doom.
Also relevant is «Explaining Extreme Events of 2011
in a Climate Context,» a thorough analysis of that year by American and British government scientists, and this peer - reviewed analysis of the Texas drought and this initial government examination of Hurricane Sandy in the context of climate change.
So, you've heard a lot about the elusive notion of «clean coal»
in the climate context.
Geoengineering,
in a climate context, means trying to halt or mitigate global warming through means other than reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
,
in a climate context, means trying to halt or mitigate global warming through means other than reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
In the climate context, what criteria are used for «most highly correlated» — something meaningful like R > +0.8?
In the climate context, a variety of goals have been proposed, including those related to emissions reductions, stabilization of GHG concentrations, avoiding «dangerous» interference with climate, technology transfer and sustainable development.
What's the best way of looking at
that in a climate context?