The White House has begrudgingly admitted that "most of the recent global warming is very likely due to human generated increases in greenhouse gas concentrations." In a 271-page report -- court-ordered and four years late -- federal scientists have created a "one-stop shop" summary of potential climate impacts on the U.S. environment, economy, and public health. The report predicts stop-us-if-you've-heard-this-one heat waves, water shortages, and severe weather (oh my!), and notes that "many of the expected health effects are likely to fall disproportionately on the poor, the elderly, the disabled, and the uninsured." It also foresees a high-cost expansion of electricity capacity. "It basically says the America we've known we can no longer count on," says biologist Thomas Lovejoy, who reviewed the document. "It's a pretty dramatic picture of all kinds of change rippling through natural systems across the country. And all of that has implications for people."
Well, You Don't Say
White House admits humans causing climate change 9
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guade00 Posted 8:18 am
29 May 2008
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Delay And Deny Posted 8:38 am
29 May 2008
The last remaining roadblock to Grist Ecologists voting Republican has been removed!
Welcome to the G.O.P.!
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GreyFlcn Posted 1:19 am
30 May 2008
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archigeek Posted 2:55 am
30 May 2008
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usandthem Posted 4:45 am
30 May 2008
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Tasermons Partner Posted 5:44 am
30 May 2008
How 'bout a viable and workable climate plan?
That's a pretty good roadblock.
Also, this would've been much less of a roadblock had they actually released it 4 years ago...when they were supposed to.
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roncastle Posted 7:15 am
30 May 2008
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Wolverine Posted 3:50 am
01 Jun 2008
As Jerry Brown once said, the only difference between the Democrats and Republicans is the pace of destruction. While a slower paces is obviously not as bad as a faster one, neither is acceptable. That's why I vote Green, and even those people are too conservative.
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Ariell Posted 1:42 am
02 Jun 2008
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