Global warming is ‘significant and direct’ threat to U.S. military – ‘Inaction is not a viable option’

By by Idrees Ali, with additional reporting by Steve Holland; editing by Yara Bayoumy and David Gregorio14 September 2016 WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The effects of climate change endanger U.S. military operations and could increase the danger of international conflict, according to three new documents endorsed by retired top U.S. military officers and former national security […]

The alarming rise of fires in the Brazilian Amazon

By Natália Girão Rodrigues de Mello8 September 2016 (mongabay.com) – From the speeding boat, the jungle was a single block of green, its shades recycled across the riverbank and reflected on the thick, black water. The steam rolling from the trees was as foamy as the tracks we were leaving. Birds cut the clouds with […]

Shell begins production at world’s deepest underwater oilfield

By Simon Bowers11 September 2016 (The Guardian) – Royal Dutch Shell has started production at the world’s deepest underwater oil and gas field, 1.8 miles beneath the sea surface in the Gulf of Mexico. The first oil pumped from the Stones field, 200 miles south of New Orleans, comes after billions of dollars of investment […]

Unravelling the myth of a carbon budget for keeping global warming below 1.5°C

By David Spratt9 September 2016 (Climate Code Red) – The 2015 Paris climate talks put the 1.5°C temperature target firmly on the policy-making table, whilst also signing off on actions consistent with 3°C or more of warming. This has prompted more discussion in the climate movement about the emissions reduction task consistent with 1.5°C, and […]

Two more outbreaks of anthrax hit northern Siberia due to thawing permafrost

31 August 2016 (Siberian Times) – The Yamalo-Nenets region has suffered not one but three separate outbreaks of lethal anthrax since 7 July 2016, with bloodsucking insects – especially gadflies and mosquitoes  – playing a key role in the spread, we can confirm. A strong new warning from scientists suggests that there is a ‘dangerous’ […]

President Obama on gobal warming: The trends are ‘terrifying’

By Julie Hirschfeld Davis, Mark Landler And Coral Davenport8 September 2016 MIDWAY ATOLL (The New York Times) – Seventy-four years ago, a naval battle off this remote spit of land in the middle of the Pacific Ocean changed the course of World War II. Last week, President Obama flew here to swim with Hawaiian monk […]

Flooding of U.S. coast, caused by global warming, has already begun – ‘Ultimately, we give up and we leave. That’s how the story ends.’

By Justin Gillis3 September 2016 NORFOLK, Virginia (The New York Times) – Huge vertical rulers are sprouting beside low spots in the streets here, so people can judge if the tidal floods that increasingly inundate their roads are too deep to drive through. Five hundred miles down the Atlantic Coast, the only road to Tybee […]

UN refugee agency: 2016 is deadliest year for refugees crossing to Europe via Central Mediterranean

2 September 2016 (UN) – The United Nations refugee agency today flagged that while the number of deaths of refugees seeking safety via the Turkey-Greece route into Europe has fallen dramatically, the use of the North Africa-Italy route has remained constant – with the latter experiencing an increase in the number of deaths, making 2016 […]

More than 48 children and 61,000 farm animals die in anomalous cold wave in Peruvian Andes – Cold to extend into northern forest

[Translation by Bing Translator.] 4 August 2016 (El Búho) – The situation is worrying in high altitude areas, due to enduring low temperatures. There are 300,000 hectares of natural pastures that have been damaged, which were intended to feed Alpaca livestock in these areas, and 18,735 head of cattle have died as a result of […]

Puget Sound has new climate refugees: white pelicans – ‘It’s like seeing aliens arrive’

By Katie Campbell29 August 2016 (KCTS9) – American white pelicans are conspicuous birds. With their long orange bills and their nine-foot wingspan, they stand out, even at a distance. Sue Ehler easily spots a squadron of them through her binoculars from over a mile away, coming in for a landing on Puget Sound’s Padilla Bay. […]

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