Tuesday, December 30, 2008
German scientist warns of accelerating climate change
Deutsche Welle: Climate change is happening more rapidly than anyone though possible, the German government's expert, Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, warned in an interview. The threats posed by climate change are worse than those imagined by most governments, warned Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, the scientist who heads the Potsdam Institute for Research on Global Warming Effects and acts as an adviser to German Chancellor Angela Merkel on climate-change issues.
Schellnhuber warns that previous predictions about climate change and its catastrophic effects were too cautious and optimistic. "In nearly all areas, the developments are occurring more quickly than it has been assumed up until now," Schellnhuber told the Saarbruecker Zeitung newspaper in an interview published Monday, Dec. 29. "We are on our way to a destabilization of the world climate that has advanced much further than most people or their governments realize."
...For the Arctic, the global warming which has already occurred of 0.8 degrees Celsius has already stepped over the line, Schellnhuber said. If Greenland's ice cap ice melts completely, water levels will rise by seven meters (23 feet). "The current coastline will no longer exist, and that includes in Germany," he said…
The port of Hamburg around 1900
Schellnhuber warns that previous predictions about climate change and its catastrophic effects were too cautious and optimistic. "In nearly all areas, the developments are occurring more quickly than it has been assumed up until now," Schellnhuber told the Saarbruecker Zeitung newspaper in an interview published Monday, Dec. 29. "We are on our way to a destabilization of the world climate that has advanced much further than most people or their governments realize."
...For the Arctic, the global warming which has already occurred of 0.8 degrees Celsius has already stepped over the line, Schellnhuber said. If Greenland's ice cap ice melts completely, water levels will rise by seven meters (23 feet). "The current coastline will no longer exist, and that includes in Germany," he said…
The port of Hamburg around 1900
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Germany,
governance,
science
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3 comments:
cool blog
Although from different places, but this perception is consistent, which is relatively rare point!
You these things, I have read twice, for me, this is a relatively rare phenomenon!
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