Sentences with phrase «write about global warming»

«Well, it's not really good timing to write about global warming when the summer feels cold and rainy», a journalist told me last week.
Max Boykoff, a graduate student in the department of environmental science at the University of California, Santa Cruz, says that it is odd that the Wall Street Journal would devote so much space to a story about McIntyre and McKitrick when they seldom write about global warming.
For example, you may write about global warming, its causes and effects, AND add information about the Continue reading
British poets aren't the only ones who have been writing about global warming, unsurprisingly.
Elizabeth Kolbert, author of «Field Notes from a Catastrophe» (2006) writes about global warming for The New Yorker.
As Loom readers know, George Will writing about global warming is one.
Amongst several other issues the author writes about global warming.

Not exact matches

But it wasn't until she wrote this poignant post, «Mothers Needed to Protect the Earth,» that I really started thinking harder about harnessing the power of the Green Mom blogosphere to draw attention to climate change and to advocate changes to slow the rate of global warming.
«The evidence before the committee leads to one inescapable conclusion: the Bush administration has engaged in a systematic effort to manipulate climate change science and mislead policymakers and the public about the dangers of global warming,» the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform wrote in its report on the matter in December 2007.
When our grandchildren write the history of global warming — how we discovered and debated it, and what we finally did about it — the stinkbugs that ate Maggs's tomatoes may not loom large.
- A Question of Balance: Weighing the Options on Global Warming Policies by William Nordhaus and Global Warming: Looking Beyond Kyoto by Ernesto Zedillo, two climate - change books he is writing about for The New York Review of Books
«Voters believe that there is no consensus about global warming within the scientific community,» he wrote.
Re # 4 Naomi Oreskes wrote an article in Science which reported on the papers about global warming published between 1993 and 2003.
Re: 98 Satellite data: Some weeks ago I had a discussion with my American «Deny - aleban» nephew about global warming, and I came across some points of interest, which I think somebody should take a closer look into: I wrote this to him: https://www.dropbox.com/s/b9m66ktqf28mghs/Pil1.pdf?dl=0 and the point of interest starts at page 6, where I write about the 98 - thing.
A student named Kelsea wrote her individual play about global warming; the story is told through newscasts about rising temperatures.
If you're writing a book about global warming, you might want readers to use less energy.
Interesting Link An article in the New York Times in which Faris writes about Greenland's plan to ride global warming to independence.
The global warming essays are easy to write because there is a wealth of information about the topic available in libraries as well as online.
We have written a short essay on global warming for you just to give you some ideas about the topic.
Global warming essays The global warming essays are easy to write because there is a wealth of information about the topic available in libraries as well as oGlobal warming essays The global warming essays are easy to write because there is a wealth of information about the topic available in libraries as well as oglobal warming essays are easy to write because there is a wealth of information about the topic available in libraries as well as online.
Write about the importance of informing people about the problem of global warming and their contribution to the work on solving this problem.
Last week, after I sent some of the clips and blogs about cold weather and global warming to Cass Sunstein, the University of Chicago law professor who has written much about «availability entrepreneurs» who try to shift public attitudes using dramatic events, he wrote back:
[UPDATE, 12:50 pm: Simon Lewis, of the Earth and Biosphere Institute at the University of Leeds, sent a link to a recent Guardian commentary he wrote about measuring mortality from global warming.]
It's an investigative piece I wrote about a Soviet climate modeler who worked on global warming and nuclear winter, almost undoubtedly was a spy, traveled the world with Carl Sagan pressing the nuclear - winter case for disarmament and then vanished mysteriously in Spain.
When I wrote about the American Geophysical Union's statement on global warming, I had to close out comments at 1,200.
Having read other material on the consequences and relationships of CCN's and lifetimes regarding papers that have been written, it seems that a lot of the papers coming from the Svensmark angle, so to speak, are not conclusive enough of definitive impact in the impact potentials for global warming, to jsutify the claims made by Svensmark, or the press about his, or similar, work.
I've written about a couple of recent examples of this kind of fast - motion flow of misinformation (and often disinformation), including the release of a startling paper debunking global warming that was entirely fake and designed to fool right - wing bloggers and radio hosts.
In # 8 Vinod Gupta wrote... «Please start educating the lay public about global warming in a simple (and stark) way that they can understand».
So why did I write about the weaknesses in some of the alarms being raised about global warming?
On July 23, I wrote about the rocky rollout, prior to peer review, of «Ice Melt, Sea Level Rise and Superstorms: Evidence from Paleoclimate Data, Climate Modeling, and Modern Observations that 2 °C Global Warming is Highly Dangerous.»
I've written about S.A. Andree's «Svea» expedition, which turned into a Swedish national tragedy — the article is actually about the life and career of Nils Ekholm, who was on the original crew, and who (as a scientific buddy of Arrhenius) later wrote on CO2 - mediated global warming:
In a recent column in the Boston Globe, reporter extraordinaire Alex Beam writes about some futurists in Australia and their ideas about global warming and glaciers, among other things, but not mangroves:
Noted Climatologist James K. Glassman of the American Enterprise Institute recently wrote an article for a southern California newspaper about global warming being caused by changes in the sun.
We are writing here about near one year, but world still did not toward fighting against global warming to step one big step.
When I wrote with James Kanter last year about the report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change on impacts from global warming, I made sure we noted how the consequences for humans change significantly when adaptation is taken into account (boldface added):
TreeHugger has written about the growing acknowledgement that soot pollution is a major component of global warming — contributing a shocking amount to melting of glaciers in the Himalayas is just one example.
(* I wrote about feebates in my 1992 book, «Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast.»
TreeHugger has written about the growing acknowledgement that soot pollution is a major component of global warming — contributing a shocking amount to melting of glaciers in the Himalayas is just
In Hansen Nazarenko 2004, Hansen wrote that «Our estimate for the mean soot effect on spectrally integrated albedos in the Arctic... is about one quarter of observed global warming
Updated, Feb. 8, 10:00 p.m. Given Florida's special vulnerability to rising seas and other consequences of human - driven global warming (which I first wrote about in 1988), it's not surprising that one of the first efforts to break the partisan impasse in the House around this issue has come from two lawmakers from the south end of that state — Republican Representative Carlos Curbelo and Representative Ted Deutch, a Democrat.
So here we have Rasmus writing an article about the critical differences between Climate Change and Global Warming in relation to weather and weather events.
Alluding to my line about variability excluding any global warming link beyond saying the storm is consistent with projections, Michaels wrote this:
Re # 4 Naomi Oreskes wrote an article in Science which reported on the papers about global warming published between 1993 and 2003.
They keep yapping about «thousands of scientists» contributing to the IPCC AR4, when in fact the Summary for Policymakers was written by a small coterie of believers in a strong effect of CO2 on global warming.
This year I wrote an article about how North America's amazingly variegated climate, where it's tinder dry in some places and soggy and cool elsewhere, may be one reason the country has not focused on the global warming issue as much as more compact places with more uniform climate conditions (western Europe, for instance).
Well, apparently Mr. Revkin took offense that I suggested he may not care about future generations because he emailed me to tell me so, explaining that he wrote so many articles on global warming, etc. etc..
Its time for the media to stop using the fear factor to engage the public in taking on global warming and start writing about the positive, exciting, financially beneficial future we can create.
I vote, among others, for Mike Hulme, the climate scientist who wrote «Why We Disagree About Climate Change,» and Spencer Weart, the physicist and historian who wrote «The Discovery of Global Warming
Dave Roberts over in Gristmill / Huffington Post world has once again taken me to task for writing about people who have either made a career of saying global warming is not a catastrophe (Bjorn Lomborg) or have newly embraced the issue after a career on the right (Newt Gingrich).
Sadly, much of the report has a «same as it ever was» feel, including a push for «feebates» on efficient vehicles balanced by a surcharge on gas guzzlers (something I wrote about in my 1992 book on global warming):
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