Tag Archives: James Hansen

The crimes of free-market capitalism

We are paying a heavy price for selling off public assets decades ago. As we sleep, democracy, the rule of law and all the institutions that make up civil society are being eaten alive by the world’s most voracious beast … Continue reading

Posted in atmospheric science, Australian politics, business interests, business, investment, employment, carbon emissions and targets, carbon tax, changes to climate, climate politics, climate sensitivity, consumption, electricity networks, fossil fuels, future climate, inequality, public opinion, renewable energy, temperature | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on The crimes of free-market capitalism

Warming record gets the cold shoulder

Those who govern us are alarmingly indifferent to warming extremes   As I write this, climate monitoring organisations around the world including our own Bureau of Meteorology are assessing where 2016 sits on Earth’s 136-year temperature record. Very soon the … Continue reading

Posted in Antarctic, Arctic, Australian politics, carbon, carbon emissions and targets, changes to climate, climate politics, climate system, community action, contrarians, economic threat from climate, education, extreme events, future climate, governance, human behaviour, ice, international politics, leadership, public opinion, science, scientific method, sea level, social and personal issues, social mindsets | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Warming record gets the cold shoulder

Scientists and economists must speak with one voice

In a fractured political environment, we need economists and scientists to take a unified position on the impact of climate change. Tasmanians are rediscovering the fact that our economy depends heavily on a stable climate with a reliable rainfall – … Continue reading

Posted in Australian politics, business, investment, employment, carbon cycle, carbon emissions and targets, carbon pricing scheme, changes to climate, climate politics, climate system, disruption, divestment, economic activity, economic restructuring, economic threat from climate, electricity networks, emissions trading, extreme events, fossil fuels, hydro, investment, local economy, modelling, planetary limits, science, scientific method, Tasmanian politics | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Scientists and economists must speak with one voice