Public opinion continues to shift
toward concern about climate change.
Not exact matches
2008: A month before Exxon's annual meeting, heirs to the Rockefeller oil fortune held a press conference to publicly express their
concern about the company's attitude
toward climate change and other issues.
2008: A month before Exxon's annual meeting, heirs to the Rockefeller oil fortune held a press conference to publicly express their
concern about the company's attitude
toward climate change and other issues.
Even just acknowledging more openly the incredible magnitude of the deep structural uncertainties that are involved in
climate -
change analysis — and explaining better to policymakers that the artificial crispness conveyed by conventional IAM - based CBAs [Integrated Assessment Model — Cost Benefit Analyses] here is especially and unusually misleading compared with more ordinary non-
climate-
change CBA situations — might go a long way
toward elevating the level of public discourse
concerning what to do
about global warming.
Some earlier
Climate Science Watch posts discussing the National Assessment include those of August 28 (Sen. Kerry calls for new National
Climate Change Assessment), January 4 (
Toward a Second U.S. National
Climate Change Assessment), June 8, 2005 (Censorship and Secrecy: Politicizing the
Climate Change Science Program), and June 2, 2005 (On Issues of
Concern About the Governance and Direction of the
Climate Change Science Program).