NASA: Yes, it's freezing cold. No, that doesn't mean climate change is a hoax.
As temperatures across the continental United States plummeted this week as a polar vortex descended across the country, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration made sure to remind Americans that the Arctic outburst does not mean that climate change isn't happening.
news.yahoo.comCan people’s individual actions make a difference in how much carbon dioxide is emitted on an international scale?
International organizations like the United Nations have called on individuals to limit their carbon footprint and live more sustainably, along with governments and corporations.
chicagotribune.comMichael Mann on the prequel/sequel novel "Heat 2," and going deep on the life of cities
The director behind the acclaimed Los Angeles heist drama "Heat" and the upcoming "Ferrari" (now in production in Italy) talks about his fascination with cities, and his new novel, "Heat 2," which translates his cinematic obsessions to the printed page.
cbsnews.comJennifer Lopez and 'Halftime' kick off Tribeca Festival
The Jennifer Lopez documentary “Halftime” is kicking off the 21st Tribeca Festival on Wednesday, launching the annual New York event with an intimate behind-the-scenes portrait of the singer-actor filmed during the tumultuous year she turned 50, co-headlined the Super Bowl and narrowly missed out on an Oscar nomination.
No obituary for Earth: Scientists fight climate doom talk
Climate change is going to get worse, but as gloomy as the latest scientific reports are, including today’s from the United Nations, scientist after scientist stresses that curbing global warming is not hopeless. The science says it is not game over for planet Earth or humanity. University of Maine climate scientist Jacquelyn Gill noticed in 2018 fewer people telling her climate change isn’t real and more “people that we now call doomers that you know believe that nothing can be done.”
news.yahoo.comNorthwest "heat dome" shows the extreme impacts of climate change
The dangerous heat wave enveloping the Pacific Northwest is shattering weather records by such large margins that it is making even climate scientists uneasy. Why it matters: Infrastructure, including heating and cooling, is built according to expectations of a "normal" climate. Human-caused climate change is quickly redefining that normal, while dramatically raising the likelihood of events that simply have no precedent. Stay on top of the latest market trends and economic insights with Axios M
news.yahoo.comVaccinated faithful throng Jerusalem church for Holy Fire
Hundreds of Christian worshippers made use of Israel’s easing of coronavirus restrictions Saturday, packing a Jerusalem church revered as the site of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection for an ancient fire ceremony a day before Orthodox Easter. The faithful gathered at The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, waiting for clergymen to emerge with the Holy Fire from the Edicule, a chamber built on the site where Christians believe Jesus was buried and rose from the dead after being crucified. As bells rang and the top clerics from different Orthodox denominations appeared, the worshippers scrambled to light their candles and pass the fire on.
news.yahoo.comBye Alpha, Eta: Greek alphabet ditched for hurricane names
(NOAA via AP)With named storms coming earlier and more often in warmer waters, the Atlantic hurricane season is going through some changes with meteorologists ditching the Greek alphabet during busy years. The Greek alphabet had only been used twice in 2005 and nine times last year in a record-shattering hurricane season. AdMeanwhile, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration is recalculating just what constitutes an average hurricane season. STARTING EARLIERMIT hurricane researcher Kerry Emanuel said “this whole idea of hurricane season should be revisited." So a warming world means the new normal is busy hurricane seasons just like the last 30 years.
Humans, not nature, are the cause of changes in Atlantic hurricane cycles, new study finds
"But I was wrong about the existence of an internal AMO oscillation when I coined the term 20 years ago," he said. To determine this, the researchers used state-of-the-art climate models to test two scenarios for pre-industrial times to look back over the past thousand years. "It means that we can more convincingly now conclude that the increases in Atlantic hurricane activity are tied to warming that is human-caused, not natural, in nature," explains Mann. And in recent decades, there is robust evidence that Atlantic hurricane seasons are getting worse. This has recently prompted the World Meteorological Organization to contemplate starting the Atlantic hurricane season earlier, on May 15th rather than June 1st.
cbsnews.comHumans, not nature, are the cause of changes in Atlantic hurricane cycles, new study finds
"But I was wrong about the existence of an internal AMO oscillation when I coined the term 20 years ago," he said. To determine this, the researchers used state-of-the-art climate models to test two scenarios for pre-industrial times to look back over the past thousand years. "It means that we can more convincingly now conclude that the increases in Atlantic hurricane activity are tied to warming that is human-caused, not natural, in nature," explains Mann. And in recent decades, there is robust evidence that Atlantic hurricane seasons are getting worse. This has recently prompted the World Meteorological Organization to contemplate starting the Atlantic hurricane season earlier, on May 15th rather than June 1st.
cbsnews.comU.S. must go ‘well beyond Paris commitments’ to avert catastrophic global warming, warns scientist
Scientist Michael Mann argued that the United States must go "well beyond those Paris commitments" as President Joe Biden rejoined the Paris Climate Agreement Friday. The move to reenter the Paris Climate Agreement was a departure from the Trump administration's climate policy. He formally notified the United Nations in 2019, and the U.S. left the Paris Agreement the following year after a waiting period. Homeland Security Advisor Liz Sherwood-Randall even underscored the danger of climate change during a White House press briefing on Thursday. Mann explained that climate change could be a factor contributing to the anguish in Texas amid freezing temperatures.
cnbc.comChristopher Plummer got a third act worth singing about
FILE - Christopher Plummer arrives at the Oscars on March 4, 2018, in Los Angeles. Plummer, the dashing award-winning actor who played Captain von Trapp in the film The Sound of Music and at 82 became the oldest Academy Award winner in history, has died. Plummer, the dashing award-winning actor who played Captain von Trapp in the film The Sound of Music and at 82 became the oldest Academy Award winner in history, has died. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File)It’s one of the great Hollywood ironies that Christopher Plummer didn’t like the film that made him a legend. Please.”Born in Toronto in 1929, Plummer was the great grandson of Canadian Prime Minister John Abbott and fell for the theater at a young age.
Oscar winner, ‘Sound of Music’ star Christopher Plummer dies
FILE - Christopher Plummer poses for a portrait on July 25, 2013, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Plummer, the dashing award-winning actor who played Captain von Trapp in the film The Sound of Music and at 82 became the oldest Academy Award winner in history, has died. Plummer died Friday morning at his home in Connecticut with his wife, Elaine Taylor, by his side, said Lou Pitt, his longtime friend and manager. The role catapulted Plummer to stardom, but he never took to leading men parts, despite his silver hair, good looks and ever-so-slight English accent. That choice that was officially validated in the best possible way for the film — a supporting Oscar nomination for Plummer, his third. Plummer married his third wife, dancer Taylor, in 1970, and credited her with helping him overcome a drinking problem.
Paul Crutzen, who shared Nobel for ozone work, has died
FILE - In this file photo dated December 10 1995, showing Dutch Professor Paul J. Crutzen, left, receiving the Nobel prize for chemistry from Swedish King Carl XVI Gustaf, at the Concert Hall in Stockholm, Sweden. According to a statement from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany, Dutch scientist Paul J. Crutzen, who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his work understanding the ozone hole, died Thursday Jan. 28, 2021, at the age of 87. (AP photo/Eric Roxfelt, FILE)BERLIN – Paul J. Crutzen, a Dutch scientist who won the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his work understanding the ozone hole and is credited with coining the term Anthropocene to describe the geological era shaped by mankind, has died. “Paul Crutzen was a pioneer in many ways,” Martin Stratmann, the president of the Max Planck Society, said in a statement. According to the Nobel Institute, Crutzen got a job as a programmer at Stockholm University's Department for Meteorology despite having no programming experience.
Are Biden's actions on climate change enough to make a difference?
Are Biden's actions on climate change enough to make a difference? President Biden has signed several executive orders aimed at combating climate change. But will his policies do enough? Climate scientist Michael Mann, author of "The New Climate War," joined CBSN's Tanya Rivero to discuss.
cbsnews.comAre Biden's actions on climate change enough to make a difference?
Are Biden's actions on climate change enough to make a difference? President Biden has signed several executive orders aimed at combating climate change. But will his policies do enough? Climate scientist Michael Mann, author of "The New Climate War," joins CBSN's Tanya Rivero to discuss.
cbsnews.comHot again: 2020 sets yet another global temperature record
Earth’s rising fever hit or neared record hot temperature levels in 2020, global weather groups reported Thursday. “We’re expecting it to get hotter and that’s exactly what happened.”NOAA said 2020 averaged 58.77 degrees (14.88 degrees Celsius), a few hundredths of a degree behind 2016. Japan’s weather agency put 2020 as warmer than 2016, but a separate calculation by Japanese scientists put 2020 as a close third behind 2016 and 2019. Earth has now warmed 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.2 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times and is adding another 0.2 degrees Celsius (0.36 Fahrenheit) a decade. Schmidt said fewer cooling aerosols could be responsible for .09 to .18 degrees (.05 to .1 degrees Celsius) warming for the year.
The record-shattering 2020 hurricane season, explained
Like so many other aspects of 2020, the Atlantic hurricane season hurled one shocking event after another, pushing the limits of what meteorologists thought was possible. The 2020 Atlantic Hurricane Season to date: pic.twitter.com/kY7nb3A1ea — Tomer Burg (@burgwx) November 17, 2020And there's still time for more storms. 2020 hurricane season! To date, the total ACE for the 2020 hurricane season is 178, nowhere near the record of 245 set in 2005. The 2020 Atlantic #hurricane season has now produced 178 ACE (Accumulated Cyclone Energy).
cbsnews.comTarantino has deal for 2 books on films, including 1 his own
The Oscar-winning director has a two-book deal with Harper, beginning with a novelization of “Once Upon a Time ... In Hollywood” was released in 2019 and stars Leonardo DiCaprio as an actor and Brad Pitt as his stunt double. “In the ‘70s movie novelizations were the first adult books I grew up reading," Tarantino said in a statement Tuesday. “I see myself writing film books and starting to write theater, so I’ll still be creative. I just think I’ve given all I have to give to movies.”_____AP Film Writer Jake Coyle contributed to this report.
Celebration after game-winning hit made Rays' Phillips sick
Tampa Bay Rays right fielder Brett Phillips arrives for batting practice before Game 5 of the baseball World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers Sunday, Oct. 25, 2020, in Arlington, Texas. Hey, bases loaded, two outs and you’re down by one in the World Series. So, sure they regret it a little bit, but I by no means got upset.”CLOSED ROOFThere could be a lid on the rest of this World Series. It was the second time during the World Series that the retractable roof at the new $1.2 billion stadium was closed for a game. That homer came as part of his fifth three-hit game this postseason, already a MLB record, as were his 59 total bases.
The climate science behind this year's wildfires and powerful storms
In the 1980's, a NASA scientist named James Hansen discovered that climate change, driven by carbon emissions, was upon us. Are these disasters climate change? Hansen is the father of climate change science. Scott Pelley: Well, the president says about climate change, science doesn't know. There's about as much scientific consensus about human-caused climate change as there is about gravity.
cbsnews.comClimate scientists on Earth's two futures
For more than three decades, climate scientists have accurately forecast how carbon emissions would cause a global rise in temperatures. Hansen has been called the father of climate change science. Stopping climate change before irreversible effects have damaged the planet is possible, some scientists believe. Current projections create a more comprehensive look at how the climate responds to carbon dioxide, including how the ocean and plants can absorb some of the carbon humans have released into the atmosphere. According to the latest models, how much the planet will warm is mostly a function of how much carbon humans have burned up to now.
cbsnews.comState fire chief: "These are fires that nobody... ever dreamed of happening in California"
When California's state fire chief began his career more than 20 years ago, fires of 10 to 50,000 acres were a rare occurrence, but now they are a yearly event. "These are fires that nobody, when I started in this business, ever even dreamed of happening in California. "It dawned on me at one point that career fires are happening every single year. Right now, today, there are 10 fires in California that are 100,000 acres plus, and one that's 850,000 acres plus." "I'm afraid, without significant change in the moisture that we get from the atmosphere, we're going to continue to see this getting worse and worse and worse."
cbsnews.comGetting warmer: Trump concedes human role in climate change
President Donald Trump publicly acknowledged that humans bear some blame for climate change, but scientists say the president still isn't dealing with the reality of our primary role. The climate change exchange represented a rare microburst of policy discussion from Trump in a loud, nerve-abrading debate. And it ever so lightly nailed down the position of the Republican president on climate change. On Tuesday, after Trump nodded at a human role in climate change, Wallace asked him why he then had undone the Clean Power Plan. That was a legacy Obama administration climate change effort intended to move U.S. utilities away from the dirtiest fossil-fuel plants.
Few resources, old-growth forest allowed for fire's growth
“This is a stubborn fire,” Angeles National Forest spokesman Andrew Mitchell said. At the time, many Southern California ground crews and a fleet of retardant- and water-dropping aircraft were assigned to multiple record-breaking blazes in the northern part of the state. Officials were investigating the death of a firefighter at another Southern California wildfire that erupted earlier this month from a smoke-generating pyrotechnic device used by a couple to reveal their baby’s gender. Charles Morton, 39, died Sept. 17 while battling the El Dorado Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest east of Los Angeles. The blaze has charred over 21 square miles (55 square kilometers) of Medicine Bow National Forest.
Warming shrinks Arctic Ocean ice to 2nd lowest on record
Ice in the Arctic Ocean melted to its second lowest level on record this summer, triggered by global warming along with natural forces, U.S. scientists reported Monday. The extent of ice-covered ocean at the North Pole and extending further south to Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Russia reached its summertime low of 1.4 million square miles (3.7 million square kilometers) last week before starting to grow again. Arctic sea ice reaches its low point in September and its high in March after the winter. This year's melt is second only to 2012, when the ice shrank to 1.3 million square miles (3.4 million square kilometers), according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center, which has been keeping satellite records since 1979. In the 1980s, the ice cover was about 1 million square miles (2.7 million square kilometers) bigger than current summer levels.
Study: World carbon pollution falls 17% during pandemic peak
The world cut its daily carbon dioxide emissions by 17% at the peak of the pandemic shutdown last month, a new study found. The world cut its daily carbon dioxide emissions by 17% at the peak of the pandemic shutdown last month, a new study found. For a week in April, the United States cut its carbon dioxide levels by about one-third. The study was carried out by Global Carbon Project, a consortium of international scientists that produces the authoritative annual estimate of carbon dioxide emissions. By contrast, the study found that drastic reductions in air travel only accounted for 10% of the overall pollution drop.
"Above normal" 2020 Atlantic hurricane season on tap, researchers forecast
As the world battles the coronavirus crisis, researchers are warning of a potentially active Atlantic Ocean hurricane season, which kicks off June 1 through the end of November. For the 37th year in a row, Colorado State University (CSU) issued its hurricane season forecast Thursday and the numbers appear significantly above normal. One of the reasons for the above-average seasonal #hurricane forecast from CSU is due to the likely lack of #ElNino this summer/fall. The negative phase corresponds to cooler than normal "North" Atlantic Ocean waters. While warmer than normal Tropical Atlantic waters do not occur in every region, every year, they are becoming increasingly prominent.
cbsnews.comU.S. Supreme Court lets climate scientist's defamation claim proceed
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday allowed a prominent climate scientist to pursue a defamation lawsuit against a conservative magazine and a think tank that compared him to a convicted child molester. FILE PHOTO: The U.S. Supreme Court is seen in Washington, U.S., June 11, 2018. Criticism of Mann by conservative climate change skeptics increased after some of his private emails were leaked in 2009. Mann could be said to be the Jerry Sandusky of climate science, except for instead of molesting children, he has molested and tortured data, Simberg wrote. The appeals court ruled in favor of Mann in 2016 and in March of this year the District of Columbia Court of Appeals declined to rehear the case.
feeds.reuters.comSupreme Court allows libel suit by climate scientist who was compared to Jerry Sandusky
The case involves a hotly disputed question that has split lower courts: When can statements of opinion form the basis of a libel suit? Ordinarily, the high court has ruled, a person cant be sued for expressing an opinion. They argued that freedom of speech and the press requires shielding people who comment on matters of great public controversy, such as climate change. In the past, President Trump, among others, has called for making it easier to sue the press for libel. Climate change has staked a place at the very center of his nations public discourse, he added.
latimes.comBarge, tugboat grounded on Deerfield Beach to be removed during high tide
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. - A barge and a tugboat that got grounded on Deerfield Beach are expected to be removed Thursday during high tide. It's unreal," Deerfield Beach resident Michael Mann said. The incident occurred Wednesday when the 130-foot barge was supposed to go out to sea to begin work on a near shore snorkeling reef. Obviously they aren't checking the NOAA reports," Deerfield Beach resident Lu Rodas said. Workers are back at it Thursday and the plan is to remove it with two tugboats during high tide in the afternoon.
Barge, tugboat grounded on Deerfield Beach to be removed during high tide
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. - A barge and a tug boat that got grounded on Deerfield Beach are expected to be removed Thursday during high tide. It's unreal," Deerfield Beach resident Michael Mann said. Obviously they aren't checking the NOAA reports," Deerfield Beach resident Lu Rodas said. Workers are back at it Thursday and the plan is to remove it with two tugboats during high tide in the afternoon. Some residents are very upset with what they call an eye sore on the beach.