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Zeke Hausfather
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There has been a lot of confusion over the drivers of the Texas blackouts. While more will become clear in the coming days, neither renewables nor insufficient gas capacity were
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Much of the US is experiencing extreme cold temperatures. But we should not read too much into this when it comes to climate change; its both not an unusual day
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There has been a lot of discussion about negative emissions technologies (NETs) lately. While we need to be skeptical of assumed planetary-scale engineering and wary of moral hazard, we also
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Quite the tour-de-force from @Sammy_Roth on what would actually be needed to get California to 100% clean energy by 2045 and the somewhat-telling unwillingness to build fast and big enough
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A lot of time is wasted in oft-superficial debased about whether renewables or nuclear will be the key to decarbonization. The reality is that both will play a key role
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Theres lots to be excited about with the new Biden climate EOs. But at the same time meaningful, durable climate policy will also require legislation. In a new @TheBTI report
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Our State of the Climate 2020 is live! https://www.carbonbrief.org/state-of-the-climate-2020-ties-as-warmest-year-on-record Surface temps tied w/ 2016 as warmest Record high land temps Record ocean heat content 1st or 2nd highest tropospher
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One of the under-appreciated aspects of the Chinese 2060 net-zero target is the massive spillover effects it would have on the rest of the world. An economy as large as
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Michael Mann has new book out – The New Climate War. I've coauthored papers in the past with Mike and respect his scientific and communications work. However, in his book he
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Lets clarify something about "committed warming". A world where concentrations of CO2 and other GHGs remain constant in the atmosphere is not the same as a world where emissions go
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Fascinating new paper by @AndrewDessler and colleagues arguing committed warming might be higher than expected given historical pattern effects. Its combining a lot of different concepts together, so lets spend
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Will 2020 be the warmest year on record? Yes, but only in some datasets. Here are the odds we'd expect of a new record given data through November:NASA - 99%NOAA
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