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<font size="+1"><i>September 2, 2018</i></font><br>
<br>
[video]<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/federal-court-of-appeals-quashes-trans-mountain-pipeline-approval-process/110370/">Alberta
exits climate plan until pipeline back on track</a><br>
Friday, August 31, 2018, 9:20 AM - Alberta will pull out of Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau's national climate change plan until
construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion gets back on
track, Premier Rachel Notley said Thursday after the Federal Court
of Appeal quashed approvals for the project.<br>
"As important as climate action is to our province's future I have
also always said that taking the next step, in signing on to the
federal climate plan, can't happen without the Trans Mountain
pipeline,"...<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/federal-court-of-appeals-quashes-trans-mountain-pipeline-approval-process/110370/">https://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/federal-court-of-appeals-quashes-trans-mountain-pipeline-approval-process/110370/</a></font><br>
- - - - -<br>
[BC pipeline rejected]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://vancouversun.com/business/energy/five-things-to-know-about-todays-trans-mountain-pipeline-court-ruling">Five
things about the Trans Mountain pipeline ruling</a></b><br>
The Federal Court of Appeal has quashed the approval of the
$9.3-billion Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion. Here's what you
need to know.<br>
LORI CULBERT - August 30, 2018<br>
The Federal Court of Appeal on Thursday released its
long-anticipated decision on the Kinder Morgan Trans Canada
pipeline. The ruling pleased environmentalists and other
anti-pipeline protesters, and shocked proponents of the project such
as business and trade organizations. Here are five key details:<br>
- The pipeline is owned by U.S. and Canada-based Kinder Morgan Ltd.,
but the federal Liberal government announced in the spring it's
plans to buy Trans Mountain and Kinder Morgan Canada's core assets
for $4.5 billion to ensure the oilsands pipeline expansion gets
built...<br>
-The court decision was clear that Ottawa must re-do its
consultations with First Nations before the project can be
considered for approval again..<br>
-Premier John Horgan said Thursday that the ruling vindicates the
criticisms that the National Energy Board approval process was
flawed because, in part, marine traffic was not adequately
considered...<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://vancouversun.com/business/energy/five-things-to-know-about-todays-trans-mountain-pipeline-court-ruling">https://vancouversun.com/business/energy/five-things-to-know-about-todays-trans-mountain-pipeline-court-ruling</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.climatechangenews.com/2018/08/24/ousted-australian-pm-government-cannot-address-climate-change/">Ousted
Australian PM: This government cannot address climate change</a></b><br>
Published on 24/08/2018, 9:36am<br>
Turnbull says party is captured by ideologues with views not based
in 'engineering and economics'. He is replaced by treasurer who
brought lump of coal to parliament<br>
By Karl Mathiesen<br>
Australia's governing party cannot agree a climate policy because of
anti-science forces within, the outgoing prime minister said just
moments after being deposed in a party room coup on Friday.<br>
Malcolm Turnbull will be replaced by Scott Morrison, his treasurer,
who defeated challenger Peter Dutton 45 votes to 40 for the
leadership of the governing right-wing Liberal party.<br>
One of the most dramatic weeks in Australia's political history
began with Turnbull's admission that he could not pass his signature
energy reform - the National Energy Guarantee (Neg). Rebels in his
party, led by former prime minister and arch conservative Tony
Abbott, had refused to back a policy that would have set -
relatively weak - emissions targets for the power sector.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://www.climatechangenews.com/2018/08/24/ousted-australian-pm-government-cannot-address-climate-change/">http://www.climatechangenews.com/2018/08/24/ousted-australian-pm-government-cannot-address-climate-change/</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[Climate Diplomacy journal]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.climate-diplomacy.org/publications">Climate
Change - A Global Security and Humanitarian Challenge</a></b><br>
The European Security and Defence Union Journal<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.daten.behoerdenspiegel.eu/esdu_30.pdf">QUICK
ACCESS</a> PDF <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://www.daten.behoerdenspiegel.eu/esdu_30.pdf">http://www.daten.behoerdenspiegel.eu/esdu_30.pdf</a><br>
The latest issue of the European Security and Defence Union Journal
looks into the security challenges brought by climate-related
impacts. The issue addresses climate change as a risk multiplier in
fragile contexts. Environmental stress, the weaponization of water,
monitoring technologies and the role of armed forces are some of the
topics.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.climate-diplomacy.org/publications">https://www.climate-diplomacy.org/publications</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[ of course]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-looming-health-crisis-in-the-aftermath-of-the-california-wildfires">The
Looming Health Crisis in the Aftermath of the California
Wildfires</a></b><br>
The summer of wildfires is only the beginning-expect a wave of
asthma, lung disease, and heart attacks, even in areas further east.<br>
Tanya Basu - 08.31.18 <br>
"I felt like I was drowning," Crosbie recalled.<br>
Days later, she still couldn't breathe properly and went to the
doctor, who used a spirometer to measure how well she could inhale
and exhale.<br>
The result was shocking: Crosbie had lost 20 percent of her lung
capacity, even though she was a non-smoker, physically active, and
otherwise healthy. Simply inhaling and exhaling fire-tinged air had
crippled her breathing.<br>
The United States is now in the midst of its worst wildfire season
ever, with record-breaking, deadly flames ripping across the West.
The Carr and Mendocino Complex fires have burned swaths of northern
California to ash. Parts of Oregon and Washington state have been
ablaze, while the Cascades and British Columbia have active
wildfires.<br>
The fires pose a risk not just to lives and property in their path
but to people much further away. That's because wildfires shoot
plumes of smoke into the atmosphere carried away by a combination of
jet streams and eastward winds.<br>
According to experts, people as far away as Montana and Idaho are
inhaling particulates, or nearly invisible bits of liquids or
solids-burnt debris from wildfires, for instance-that can have
detrimental health effects.<br>
Particulate matter is categorized by size. A PM 10, for example,
means the particulate is 10 microns in diameter, or ten millionths
of a meter. That's one-fifth the width of a human hair.<br>
The smaller the particulate, the more dangerous. And the wildfires
are producing really small matter.<br>
"The smallest we've tracked is PM 2.5, or less than 2.5 microns in
diameter," said Tracey Holloway, a professor in the Department of
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, where she also leads NASA's Health and Air
Quality Applied Sciences Team, or HAQAST.<br>
"They are super small and can penetrate deeper into lungs and cause
more damage," Holloway said. "The bigger particles can settle out
from gravity but the 2.5s can stay for days and get transported"-all
the way up your nose or mouth into the crevices of your lungs.<br>
And that can be bad for your health. Jia Coco Liu, an environmental
epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University who studies how air
pollution affects health, said her research shows that wildfire days
can bring levels of PM 2.5 that are 10 times the concentration of
non-wildfire days, with "high proportions of organic carbon,
elemental carbon, [and] ... small proportions of metals."<br>
These are pushed forward by what she calls "smoke waves," or
"intense wildfire smoke pollution episodes," which have high levels
of PM 2.5 and last at least two days...<br>
- - - - -<br>
Respiratory effects were clear-asthma, difficulty breathing-but was
the cardiac system at risk, too?<br>
He says it was. Five months of data and over a million ER visits
showed clear associations between a five-day exposure to wildfires
and heart attacks, particularly for those over the age of 65.<br>
That may sound elementary, but Wettstein said it's far from simple.<br>
"It's a complex physiological process by which someone has a heart
attack or stroke," he said. "There has to be plaque in the heart,
and there has to be an increase in blood pressure and inflammation
that could cause this plaque to rupture. Smoke itself is
accelerating the timeline. Exposure to high levels of smoke at a
particular time might make these events happen, or happen sooner."<br>
Liu's research found that females are more likely to fall sick after
being affected by smoke waves than males are, and that children are
potentially more vulnerable than adults. "A possible reason for
these results is that women have smaller lung volumes and maximal
expiratory flow rates compared to men," she said, explaining that
would make females more likely to be affected by PM 2.5s.<br>
Because heart attacks are fairly rare under the age of 18, children
were left out of the study design, though Wettstein said there is no
reason to think that wildfires don't affect kids' cardiovascular
health, as well. Kids also don't visit the ER as much as adults do,
but that doesn't mean they are not experiencing symptoms that
deserve medical treatment...<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-looming-health-crisis-in-the-aftermath-of-the-california-wildfires">https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-looming-health-crisis-in-the-aftermath-of-the-california-wildfires</a></font><br>
- - - -<br>
[Heart study]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/JAHA.117.007492">Cardiovascular
and Cerebrovascular Emergency Department Visits Associated With
Wildfire Smoke Exposure in California in 2015</a></b><br>
Zachary S. Wettstein , Sumi Hoshiko , Jahan Fahimi , Robert J.
Harrison , Wayne E. Cascio , and Ana G. Rappold<br>
Journal of the American Heart Association. 2018;7:e007492<br>
<b>Abstract</b><br>
Wildfire smoke is known to exacerbate respiratory conditions;
however, evidence for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events has
been inconsistent, despite biological plausibility.<br>
<b>Methods and Results</b><br>
A population‐based epidemiologic analysis was conducted for daily
cardiovascular and cerebrovascular emergency department (ED) visits
and wildfire smoke exposure in 2015 among adults in 8 California air
basins. A quasi‐Poisson regression model was used for zip code‐level
counts of ED visits, adjusting for heat index, day of week,
seasonality, and population. Satellite‐imaged smoke plumes were
classified as light, medium, or dense based on model‐estimated
concentrations of fine particulate matter. Relative risk was
determined for smoky days for lag days 0 to 4. Rates of ED visits by
age‐ and sex‐stratified groups were also examined. Rates of
all‐cause cardiovascular ED visits were elevated across all lags,
with the greatest increase on dense smoke days and among those aged
≥65 years at lag 0 (relative risk 1.15, 95% confidence interval
[1.09, 1.22]). All‐cause cerebrovascular visits were associated with
smoke, especially among those 65 years and older, (1.22 [1.00,
1.49], dense smoke, lag 1). Respiratory conditions were also
increased, as anticipated (1.18 [1.08, 1.28], adults >65 years,
dense smoke, lag 1). No association was found for the control
condition, acute appendicitis. Elevated risks for individual
diagnoses included myocardial infarction, ischemic heart disease,
heart failure, dysrhythmia, pulmonary embolism, ischemic stroke, and
transient ischemic attack.<br>
<b>Conclusions</b><br>
Analysis of an extensive wildfire season found smoke exposure to be
associated with cardiovascular and cerebrovascular ED visits for all
adults, particularly for those over aged 65 years.<br>
- - - - -<br>
[air pollution]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.cancer.org/latest-news/world-health-organization-outdoor-air-pollution-causes-cancer.html">World
Health Organization: Outdoor Air Pollution Causes Cancer</a></b><br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.cancer.org/latest-news/world-health-organization-outdoor-air-pollution-causes-cancer.html">https://www.cancer.org/latest-news/world-health-organization-outdoor-air-pollution-causes-cancer.html</a></font><br>
- - - - -<br>
[get the App]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.epa.gov/air-research/smoke-sense-study-citizen-science-project-using-mobile-app">Smoke
Sense Study: A Citizen Science Project Using a Mobile App</a></b><br>
Download the Smoke Sense App today.<br>
EPA researchers are conducting a citizen science study called Smoke
Sense to: <br>
-Determine the extent to which exposure to wildland fire smoke
affects health and productivity<br>
-Develop health risk communication strategies that protect public
health during smoke days<br>
Individuals who want to contribute to science can participate in the
study by using the Smoke Sense app, a publicly available mobile
application on Google Play Store and App Store. <br>
- - - -<br>
Important Information for Smoke Sense App Users Concerning an
Upgrade<br>
The Smoke Sense research team has used feedback from the 2017 pilot
season participants to make updates to the app. A new version will
be released as soon as the updates and the necessary testing is
complete.<br>
If you have downloaded the app on your mobile device, you will see
an update notification. New users can download the current app and
get a notification as well when the update is completed. Please
note, the current app that is available for download has limited
functionality while the updates are in progress.<br>
Updates that you can look forward to include:<br>
<blockquote>Your current air quality dashboard will display
concentrations of fine particulate matter and ozone with the time
stamp of last measurement.<br>
Incorporated EPA health behavior messages on the Dashboard.<br>
Access to the most current information about individual fires.<br>
Hourly forecasts of smoke and ozone across the continental US.<br>
Educational component called Smoke Smarts to test your knowledge
of wildfire smoke exposure.<br>
Upgraded graphics.<br>
Streamlined user tutorials and information buttons.<br>
</blockquote>
Additional information about the new features will be made available
here when the updated Smoke Sense App is released.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.epa.gov/air-research/smoke-sense-study-citizen-science-project-using-mobile-app">https://www.epa.gov/air-research/smoke-sense-study-citizen-science-project-using-mobile-app</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[video: aspirations]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true" href="https://youtu.be/x4b1qha5X3k">Sustaining
peace in a warming climate - lessons learned</a></b><br>
adelphi, Berlin - Aug 29, 2018<br>
How can peace and security be achieved and sustained in times of a
warming climate? Which are core things that development,
humanitarian and peacebuilding initiatives must consider and how can
solutions be scaled? In brief, what works? <br>
In this video, international experts share insights on what they
have learned through fieldwork and research. The connection between
climate change and peacebuilding is becoming ever more evident, but
conflict dynamics depend on specific regional contexts. Therefore
programmes need to address local drivers of conflict and climate
change impacts jointly in order to cross sectoral lines and be more
holistic. <br>
The video includes interviews with: Henk-Jan Brinkman (UNPBS), Larry
Attree (Saferworld), Mohamed Yahya (UNDP), Rachel Slater (ODI),
Robert Ricigliano (Omidyar Group) and Alexandre Marc (World Bank),
and Janani Vivekananda (adelphi).<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://youtu.be/x4b1qha5X3k">https://youtu.be/x4b1qha5X3k</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
FOOD AND FARMING <br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/rising-co2-levels-could-push-hundreds-of-millions-into-malnutrition-by-2050">Rising
CO2 levels could push 'hundreds of millions' into malnutrition
by 2050</a></b><br>
27 August 2018<br>
An additional 290 million people could face malnutrition by 2050 if
little is done to stop the rise of greenhouse gas emissions, a study
finds.<br>
The increased presence of CO2 in the atmosphere could cause staple
crops to produce smaller amounts of nutrients such as zinc, iron and
protein, the researchers say.<br>
Using international datasets of food consumption, the study
estimates that these changes could cause an additional 175 million
people to be zinc deficient and an additional 122 million people to
be protein deficient by 2050.<br>
The findings show that malnutrition is most likely to affect parts
of the world that are already grappling with food insecurity, such
as India, parts of North Africa and the Middle East, the lead author
tells Carbon Brief.<br>
Growing problems<br>
Climate change is known to threaten food security by increasing the
chances of extreme weather events such as heatwaves and drought -
which can cause crop failures.<br>
However, climate change could also threaten food security by
worsening malnutrition.<br>
Across the world, humans get the majority of the key nutrients they
need from plants. Crops, including cereals, grains and beans,
provide humans with 63% of their protein, which is needed to build
new body tissue.<br>
Plants also provide humans with 81% of their iron, a nutrient that
facilitates the flow of blood around the body, and 63% of their
zinc, a nutrient that helps fight off disease. (Other sources of
these nutrients include meat and dairy.)<br>
However, recent experiments show that, when food crops are exposed
to high levels of CO2, they tend to produce lower amounts of these
three key nutrients.<br>
The reason why this happens is still not well understood, says Dr
Matthew Smith, a researcher in environmental health from Harvard
University and lead author of the new study published in Nature
Climate Change. He tells Carbon Brief:<br>
<blockquote> "The prevailing theory for many years has been that
higher CO2 causes a faster growth rate [in crops] - which favours
carbohydrates rather than other nutrients important for human
health that cannot be taken up quickly enough by the roots."<br>
</blockquote>
However, there is also evidence that suggests not all nutrients
decrease under higher CO2, notes Smith, meaning the extent of the
impact is still an "open question".<br>
At present, more than two billion people are estimated to be
deficient in one or more of these nutrients. If crops become less
nutritious, these people are likely to face more severe
deficiencies, the researchers say, with serious impacts for their
health.<br>
Severe iron deficiency, for example, is associated with anemia, a
condition where the body lacks enough red blood cells to carry
adequate oxygen to body tissue. The condition causes weakness and
tiredness and, in extreme cases, can affect the heart and lungs.<br>
Severe zinc deficiency can be fatal if left untreated, while severe
protein deficiency can lead to kwashiorkor - a condition causing
swelling under the skin that can also be fatal...<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/rising-co2-levels-could-push-hundreds-of-millions-into-malnutrition-by-2050">https://www.carbonbrief.org/rising-co2-levels-could-push-hundreds-of-millions-into-malnutrition-by-2050</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[DW is a German public broadcast service] <br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2r9PxN3Hwg">How are we
impacting our planet? - Adapting to climate change - DW
Documentary</a></b><br>
DW Documentary Published on Aug 31, 2018<br>
The impact of human activity on our planet has surpassed all natural
and geological forces. What could climate change adaptation look
like? <br>
[Online until: 29.09.2018]<br>
<blockquote>Our domination of the Earth has had dramatic
consequences. A geological era, the Holocene, is coming to an end.
It's being replaced by something completely new: the Anthropocene.
Man-made greenhouse gas emissions, the acidification of the
oceans, the exploitation of resources, and deforestation are
changing the face of the Earth forever. Human activity is altering
the Earth's ecosystems and impacting the climate. Tens of
thousands of species are threatened with extinction. Eventually,
humankind itself may be on the endangered list. Yet we steadfastly
ignore the warning signs, as if climate change were a fiction.
Societies have been threatened by climate change before. Some
found solutions, others collapsed. The challenge we face today is
the same as in the past: Can we adapt? Will climate change force
us to re-evaluate our way of life? Once we no longer deny that our
actions affect future life on this planet, we can finally deal
with the implications of what we have wrought. Human societies
have always had to cope with climate change. Although they had not
caused it themselves, they had no choice but to react and adjust.
So how did the Mayans and Vikings deal with changing weather
conditions, and what can we learn from them today? Geologists
working in the field of stratigraphy - the study of geological
strata - have observed that in the future, the combination of
species extinction, global migrations of species and the
widespread displacement of natural vegetation by agricultural
monocultures will be seen as unmistakable characteristics of our
age. An expert group set up by the International Stratigraphic
Commission (ICS) has examined human, climatic, biological and
geochemical footprints in sediments and ice cores. They now
believe that a functionally and stratigraphically distinct era of
geological time emerged in the mid-20th century, which they call
the Anthropocene. In millions of years, the geological footprint
of humankind will still be visible on Earth.<br>
</blockquote>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2r9PxN3Hwg">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2r9PxN3Hwg</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[lobsters are called "bugs"]<br>
<b><a
href="http://www.salemnews.com/news/state_news/waters-off-new-england-warming-at-record-pace/article_ba128e58-eaa1-57ab-a67f-42e95929225b.html">Waters
off New England warming at record pace </a></b><br>
By Patrick Whittle <br>
PORTLAND, Maine - The waters off of New England are already warming
faster than most of the world's oceans, and they are nearing the end
of one of the hottest summers in their history.<br>
That is the takeaway from an analysis of summer sea surface
temperatures in the Gulf of Maine by a marine scientist with the
Gulf of Maine Research Institute in Portland. The average sea
surface temperature in the gulf was nearly 5 degrees Fahrenheit
above the long-term average during one 10-day stretch in August,
said the scientist, Andy Pershing, who released the work Thursday.<br>
<br>
Aug. 8 was the second warmest day in recorded history in the gulf,
and there were other sustained stretches this summer that were a few
degrees higher than the average from 1982 to 2011, Pershing said. He
characterized this year as "especially warm" even for a body of
water that he and other scientists previously identified as warming
faster than 99 percent of the global ocean.<br>
<br>
"We're seeing really unusual conditions all over the planet this
year. Wildfires and heatwaves. Unusual conditions. The Gulf of Maine
is part of that story," Pershing said.<br>
<br>
The Gulf of Maine is a body of water that resembles a dent in the
coastal Northeast, and it touches Maine, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts and Atlantic Canada. It's the nerve center of the U.S.
lobster fishing industry, an important feeding ground for rare North
Atlantic right whales and a piece of ocean that has attracted much
attention in recent years because of its rapid warming.<br>
<br>
The gulf warmed at a rate of about 0.1 degrees Fahrenheit over the
past 30 years, which is more than three times the global average,
Pershing said. That rate has jumped to more than seven times the
global average in the past 15 years, he said.<br>
<br>
The warming of the gulf is happening at a time when the center of
the U.S. lobster population appears to be tracking northward.
America's lobster catch is still high, but rising temperatures
threaten to "continue to disrupt the marine ecosystem in this
region," said John Bruno, a marine ecologist with the University of
North Carolina who was not involved in Pershing's work.<br>
<br>
"Warming in the GOM has been pushing out native species like cod,
kelp and lobster, and fostering populations of species typically
found in the Carolinas," Bruno said. "Although it's an extreme
example, it mirrors what we're seeing across most of the world."<br>
<br>
The gulf has seen temperatures above the 90th percentile for more
than five consecutive days this year, which constitutes a "marine
heatwave," Pershing said. It has set 10 daily temperature records
this summer after setting 18 over the winter, he said.<br>
- - - -<br>
It's symptomatic of warming oceans all over the world, Runge said.<br>
"There are very large, not regional, drivers for this change," he
said. "Until we work on the global drivers of warming, I don't see
any way to stop this."<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://www.salemnews.com/news/state_news/waters-off-new-england-warming-at-record-pace/article_ba128e58-eaa1-57ab-a67f-42e95929225b.html">http://www.salemnews.com/news/state_news/waters-off-new-england-warming-at-record-pace/article_ba128e58-eaa1-57ab-a67f-42e95929225b.html</a></font><br>
<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="September%202,%202005:%20Climate%20scientist%20Stephen%20Schneider%20appears%20on%20%22Real%20Time%20with%20Bill%20Maher%22%20to%20discuss%20climate%20change%27s%20role%20in%20Hurricane%20Katrina.,,http://youtu.be/H9mWZZ2U6EQ"><br>
</a><font size="+1"><b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="September%202,%202005:%20Climate%20scientist%20Stephen%20Schneider%20appears%20on%20%22Real%20Time%20with%20Bill%20Maher%22%20to%20discuss%20climate%20change%27s%20role%20in%20Hurricane%20Katrina.,,http://youtu.be/H9mWZZ2U6EQ">This
Day in Climate History - September 2, 2005</a> - from D.R.
Tucker</b></font><br>
September 2, 2005: Climate scientist Stephen Schneider appears on
"Real Time with Bill Maher" to discuss climate change's role in
Hurricane Katrina.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://youtu.be/H9mWZZ2U6EQ">http://youtu.be/H9mWZZ2U6EQ</a><br>
<br>
<br>
<font size="+1"><i>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br>
</i></font><font size="+1"><i><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://pairlist10.pair.net/pipermail/theclimate.vote/2017-October/date.html">Archive
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