Report: Global Warming Changing
Our Lives
By: Seth
Borenstein | Associated Press
Published: January 14, 2013
WASHINGTON -- Global warming is
already changing America from sea to rising sea and is affecting how Americans
live, a massive new federally commissioned report says.
A special panel of scientists
convened by the government issued Friday a 1,146-page draft report that details
in dozens of ways how climate change is already disrupting the health, homes
and other facets of daily American life. It warns that those disruptions will
increase in the future.
"Climate change affects
everything that you do," said report co-author Susan Cutter, director of
the Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute at the University of South
Carolina. "It affects where you live, where you work and where you play
and the infrastructure that you need to do all these things. It's more than
just the polar bears."
The blunt report takes a global
environmental issue and explains what it means for different U.S. regions, for
various sectors of the economy and for future generations.
The National Climate Assessment
doesn't say what should be done about global warming. White House science
adviser John Holdren writes that it will help leaders, regulators, city
planners and even farmers figure out what to do to cope with coming changes.
And climate change is more than
hotter temperatures, the report said.
"Human-induced climate
change means much more than just hotter weather," the report says, listing
rising-seas, downpours, melting glaciers and permafrost, and worsening storms.
"These changes and other climatic changes have affected and will continue
to affect human health, water supply, agriculture, transportation, energy, and
many other aspects of society."
The report uses the word
"threat" or variations of it 198 times and versions of the word
"disrupt" another 120 times.
If someone were to list every
aspect of life changed or likely to be altered from global warming, it would
easily be more than 100, said two of the report's authors.
The report, written by team of
240 scientists, is required every four years by law. The first report was written
in 2000. No report was issued while George W. Bush was president. The next one
came out in 2009. This report, paid for by the federal government, is still a
draft and not officially a government report yet. Officials are seeking public
comments for the next three months.
This version of the report is far
more blunt and confident in its assessments than previous ones, Hayhoe said:
"The bluntness reflects the increasing confidence we have" in the
science and day-to-day realities of climate change."There is so much that
is already happening today," said study co-author Katharine Hayhoe,
director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University. "This is
no longer a future issue. It's an issue that is staring us in the face
today."
The report emphasizes that
man-made global warming is doing more than just altering the environment we
live in, it's a threat to our bodies, homes, offices, roads, airports, power
plants, water systems and farms.
"Climate change threatens
human health and well-being in many ways, including impacts from increased
extreme weather events, wildfire, decreased air quality, diseases transmitted
by insects, food and water, and threats to mental health," the report
said.
"Climate change and its
impacts threaten the well-being of urban residents in all 13 regions of the
U.S.," the report said. "Essential local and regional infrastructure
systems such as water, energy supply, and transportation will increasingly be
compromised by interrelated climate change impacts."
For example, the report details
13 airports that have runways that could be inundated by rising sea level. It
mentions that thawing Alaskan ground means 50 percent less time to drill for
oil. And overall it says up to $6.1 billion in repairs need to be made to
Alaskan roads, pipelines, sewer systems, buildings and airports to keep up with
global warming.
Sewer systems across America may
overflow more, causing damages and fouling lakes and waterways because of
climate change, the report said. The sewer overflows into Lake Michigan alone
will more than double by the year 2100, the report said.
While warmer weather may help
some crops, others will be hurt because of "weeds, diseases, insect pests
and other climate change-induced stresses," the report said. It said weeds
like kudzu do better with warmer weather and are far more likely to spread
north.
"Several populations -
including children, the elderly, the sick, the poor, tribes and other
indigenous people - are especially vulnerable to one or more aspects of climate
change," the report said.
sumber
: http://www.wunderground.com/news/global-warming-report-20130114
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