Category Archives: governance

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

Australia faces its own Brexit experience

The coming election will reflect a lot of the same frustrations that drove the Brexit vote. The Paris climate summit last year was a ray of sunshine for global climate policy, getting nations to commit to tightening targets and an … Continue reading

Posted in advertising/marketing, Australian politics, bureaucracy, business interests, business, investment, employment, carbon, carbon cycle, carbon emissions and targets, climate politics, climate sensitivity, community action, contrarians, disruption, economic activity, future climate, governance, growth, human behaviour, inequality, international politics, investment, leadership, public opinion, science, social and personal issues, social mindsets | Comments Off on Australia faces its own Brexit experience

Ice melt studies say we underestimate sea level rise

If a couple of new ice studies are only partly right, we face massive disruption from sea level rise within decades. Are melting polar ice sheets as stable as we think, or have we missed something? Could we be facing … Continue reading

Posted in Antarctic, Arctic, atmospheric science, carbon, carbon emissions and targets, changes to climate, climate sensitivity, CSIRO, disruption, economic threat from climate, extreme events, future climate, glaciology, governance, ice, inertia, marine sciences, modelling, oceanography, palaeoclimatology, sea level, temperature | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Ice melt studies say we underestimate sea level rise