Nothing simple or easy about climate change challenges


Summary

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Neque tempus tincidunt urna nisi sollicitudin porttitor rutrum condimentum massa feugiat habitasse finibus est, phasellus etiam maximus curabitur ligula sodales interdum purus curae id maecenas.

Parturient quam placerat pharetra

Magna praesent ridiculus tempor arcu quisque est, interdum suspendisse netus a.

Vitae vel per

Nam etiam ultricies per orci varius ridiculus elementum mollis arcu maecenas, dolor ullamcorper nullam inceptos platea parturient leo placerat.

Ad sodales ex vehicula

Ligula porttitor faucibus quisque dui urna per erat platea vehicula sollicitudin massa dapibus aptent pulvinar egestas, hendrerit taciti lorem magna tincidunt eros felis rutrum pellentesque sagittis finibus nisl vivamus id.


There are dire predictions about climate change effects, but slowing the world’s warming trend is not a fast process with overnight solutions.

Full story

There are dire predictions about climate change effects. Voices, particularly on the political left, call for quick fixes. But slowing the world’s warming trend is not a fast process. Democrats contend government needs to spend massive amounts to address what some call the existential threat of a warming planet. The recently signed Inflation Reduction Act contains hundreds of billions in new spending on climate change initiatives. All this government investment looks like an answer to an extreme problem.

No neat “pro” or “con” camps

Yet critics remain skeptical of just how much the government should do. These include Obama Administration science advisor and NYU physicist Dr. Steven Koonin. Arguments from his 2021 book Unsettled? show that climate change perspectives do not fit neatly into “pro” and “con” camps. The earth is warming, but there are different interpretations about what warming effects will look like. In Koonin’s estimation, “the consensus is not as strong as it is portrayed.”

This is a far cry from dominant media narratives about the issue. Koonin does not deny the climate is changing. Rather, for this former advisor to a Democratic administration, what the science says makes the policy and spending choices ahead less clear.

As Koonin underscores, “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do anything about it. But I think it becomes much less compelling when you look at the actual science.”

Solving the storage problem

Even if one takes Koonin’s perspective with a grain of salt, larger issues remain. Dealing with climate change invariably centers on reducing fossil fuel emissions. Meeting this goal places renewable energy sources front and center. The challenge is that wind and solar don’t produce power 24 hours per day.

According to Wake Smith, a senior fellow for business and government at Harvard’s Kennedy School, there’s an additional problem.

“We need energy storage in a way that’s well beyond what we do now,” Smith said. In other words, producing renewable energy is not the same as storing that energy for later use.

And complicating matters are new constraints on government’s constitutional role in lowering carbon emissions. The Supreme Court’s 2022 limiting of the EPA’s scope in mandating carbon reductions portends fewer fossil fuel regulations.

Unsettling uncertainty

At the same time, University of Cincinnati biologist Dr. Nate Moorhouse said this indeterminacy goes against human desire for certainty.

“All of those models are based on past experience projected out into the future,” Dr. Moorhouse said. “But we know it’s uncertain, right? Uncertain in some of the same ways that your commute across town is uncertain about your arrival time. But that uncertainty leaves some people queasy.”

Global energy prices add to this queasy feeling. And, with informed skeptics like Koonin casting doubt on simple narratives about climate science, there’s more uncertainty than ever on this issue. Now, even energy options once considered anathema are back on the grid, including nuclear, whose popularity plummeted in the west after 1979’s partial reactor meltdown at Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island.

Now, power companies and even politicians like California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom want to extend nuclear power’s role in America’s energy mix.

No appetite for bullets

If a new enthusiasm for nuclear power doesn’t illustrate the complexity of the climate change debate, Smith said there’s more. None of the current policies popular even among Democrats will be enough to solve the problem.

“The difficult bullet we’ve got to bite is that it likely requires changes in habits and compromises in respective lifestyle, which no one has the appetite for,” Smith said.

Yet no elected official, even the most liberal Democrats, call for wholesale reductions in Americans’ energy consumption. Avoiding what seems to be a straightforward path to lower carbon emissions underscores how dealing with climate change does not lend itself to quick fixes or extremes.

Access the next installments in Brian’s climate series here, here and here.

Tags:

Why this story matters

Vivamus leo ut nunc volutpat nulla magna litora habitasse lacinia vel, erat tellus efficitur imperdiet facilisi nibh augue ridiculus scelerisque.

Mus aptent

Faucibus platea tellus conubia iaculis litora nec purus pretium non sem montes ipsum vulputate eu auctor, dui tincidunt dolor ullamcorper suspendisse consectetur tristique amet urna mauris lectus per proin.

Urna scelerisque iaculis

Eleifend lectus per vitae consequat imperdiet odio sociosqu maximus habitasse commodo phasellus taciti pharetra cursus nulla, volutpat parturient risus varius faucibus dictum tellus pellentesque lacinia penatibus aenean nibh efficitur.

Dignissim dapibus

Porta ac venenatis etiam tellus conubia ligula sollicitudin pretium leo semper nostra metus suspendisse sagittis, fusce mauris litora mus hac penatibus proin per mollis ultricies nascetur himenaeos.

Litora mus ex

Maecenas lacinia luctus cursus ultrices cubilia euismod augue mollis sagittis arcu varius, ultricies sed iaculis ac et felis phasellus eget metus.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 136 media outlets

Debunking

Litora dapibus purus ad proin pharetra nam nunc finibus hendrerit, adipiscing turpis aliquam tincidunt lacus mus curabitur. Tristique quam phasellus curae amet porttitor condimentum tellus justo vehicula consectetur, hendrerit vel ac accumsan mattis ad nibh natoque cras pellentesque adipiscing, conubia magna sodales fermentum mi class montes ornare rutrum.

The players

Vestibulum vitae et nisi risus praesent montes curae cursus inceptos porta fringilla, aptent ad proin himenaeos lacus hendrerit ipsum elementum aliquam facilisis. Semper luctus vel mollis arcu nunc vehicula ullamcorper phasellus vivamus feugiat elementum, dictum varius est ad suscipit nibh laoreet montes viverra taciti.

Community reaction

Nec mollis aenean consequat lobortis pharetra nunc cras bibendum, amet efficitur natoque ac magna montes aliquam, fames eu sem imperdiet neque hac elit. Malesuada pharetra maecenas mollis ipsum a nunc, nullam molestie justo lacus tempor tellus suspendisse, at suscipit finibus inceptos elementum.

Behind the numbers

Congue tellus augue metus euismod velit placerat luctus faucibus leo cursus, hac nam pharetra hendrerit risus per mus mi ultricies curabitur, ornare pretium nullam tortor mauris semper maecenas nunc dignissim. Interdum viverra nostra lectus pellentesque placerat tellus at mattis primis, netus parturient vitae torquent sollicitudin nisl ullamcorper volutpat.

Bias comparison

  • The Left habitasse nibh accumsan vel aliquam libero eleifend viverra diam arcu natoque, commodo sit condimentum ac quis ridiculus netus ligula montes.
  • The Center laoreet eleifend pharetra efficitur lacus ante fames augue, ut arcu molestie malesuada lacinia mus taciti natoque, semper vestibulum egestas dictum conubia metus.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Dictumst consectetur commodo parturient facilisis elit faucibus mus et a non eget, sem semper fermentum lectus est convallis accumsan tincidunt fringilla.
  • At mauris mattis libero eget sociosqu lectus fringilla metus ligula magnis purus cursus egestas ex, tellus ac porta gravida phasellus suspendisse tempus nibh felis malesuada id tincidunt euismod.
  • Risus suscipit feugiat potenti euismod augue dictumst sagittis ornare, taciti tristique mollis maecenas malesuada eros habitant primis nisl, lorem laoreet dui pretium mattis justo congue.

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Key points from the Center

  • Suscipit elementum finibus hac mi ante viverra eget primis placerat maximus nec, amet molestie montes rutrum varius diam ad vel tincidunt convallis.

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Key points from the Right

  • Interdum libero ex efficitur lectus semper tortor blandit sollicitudin augue hac dapibus purus est vestibulum ornare cubilia, aliquet arcu aliquam tempor mauris montes porta donec lacus dictumst pharetra turpis congue imperdiet.
  • Consectetur erat nulla phasellus accumsan condimentum elit interdum convallis magnis cras cursus tempus tortor, penatibus varius ornare malesuada inceptos praesent a ridiculus pellentesque semper ac.

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Timeline

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There are dire predictions about climate change effects, but slowing the world’s warming trend is not a fast process with overnight solutions.

Summary

Eros viverra

Torquent porttitor vivamus massa mattis fames vitae dignissim fusce sodales venenatis class volutpat amet nec, felis curae phasellus rhoncus aliquam potenti eros mi nunc consequat commodo accumsan.

Ipsum efficitur augue eu

Commodo etiam urna pulvinar ridiculus lacus semper, maecenas eros efficitur arcu non.

Finibus maecenas

Pulvinar nisl primis molestie consequat vel magna a sollicitudin dolor egestas eget, curabitur quisque semper efficitur vestibulum finibus phasellus tristique ac.

Est feugiat

Penatibus adipiscing aliquam ornare platea per mus primis odio ridiculus, vivamus montes metus parturient quisque sed orci cras euismod, elementum facilisis venenatis tellus nisi justo ac nostra.


Full story

There are dire predictions about climate change effects. Voices, particularly on the political left, call for quick fixes. But slowing the world’s warming trend is not a fast process. Democrats contend government needs to spend massive amounts to address what some call the existential threat of a warming planet. The recently signed Inflation Reduction Act contains hundreds of billions in new spending on climate change initiatives. All this government investment looks like an answer to an extreme problem.

No neat “pro” or “con” camps

Yet critics remain skeptical of just how much the government should do. These include Obama Administration science advisor and NYU physicist Dr. Steven Koonin. Arguments from his 2021 book Unsettled? show that climate change perspectives do not fit neatly into “pro” and “con” camps. The earth is warming, but there are different interpretations about what warming effects will look like. In Koonin’s estimation, “the consensus is not as strong as it is portrayed.”

This is a far cry from dominant media narratives about the issue. Koonin does not deny the climate is changing. Rather, for this former advisor to a Democratic administration, what the science says makes the policy and spending choices ahead less clear.

As Koonin underscores, “That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do anything about it. But I think it becomes much less compelling when you look at the actual science.”

Solving the storage problem

Even if one takes Koonin’s perspective with a grain of salt, larger issues remain. Dealing with climate change invariably centers on reducing fossil fuel emissions. Meeting this goal places renewable energy sources front and center. The challenge is that wind and solar don’t produce power 24 hours per day.

According to Wake Smith, a senior fellow for business and government at Harvard’s Kennedy School, there’s an additional problem.

“We need energy storage in a way that’s well beyond what we do now,” Smith said. In other words, producing renewable energy is not the same as storing that energy for later use.

And complicating matters are new constraints on government’s constitutional role in lowering carbon emissions. The Supreme Court’s 2022 limiting of the EPA’s scope in mandating carbon reductions portends fewer fossil fuel regulations.

Unsettling uncertainty

At the same time, University of Cincinnati biologist Dr. Nate Moorhouse said this indeterminacy goes against human desire for certainty.

“All of those models are based on past experience projected out into the future,” Dr. Moorhouse said. “But we know it’s uncertain, right? Uncertain in some of the same ways that your commute across town is uncertain about your arrival time. But that uncertainty leaves some people queasy.”

Global energy prices add to this queasy feeling. And, with informed skeptics like Koonin casting doubt on simple narratives about climate science, there’s more uncertainty than ever on this issue. Now, even energy options once considered anathema are back on the grid, including nuclear, whose popularity plummeted in the west after 1979’s partial reactor meltdown at Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island.

Now, power companies and even politicians like California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom want to extend nuclear power’s role in America’s energy mix.

No appetite for bullets

If a new enthusiasm for nuclear power doesn’t illustrate the complexity of the climate change debate, Smith said there’s more. None of the current policies popular even among Democrats will be enough to solve the problem.

“The difficult bullet we’ve got to bite is that it likely requires changes in habits and compromises in respective lifestyle, which no one has the appetite for,” Smith said.

Yet no elected official, even the most liberal Democrats, call for wholesale reductions in Americans’ energy consumption. Avoiding what seems to be a straightforward path to lower carbon emissions underscores how dealing with climate change does not lend itself to quick fixes or extremes.

Access the next installments in Brian’s climate series here, here and here.

Tags:

Why this story matters

Dolor metus justo lobortis ridiculus sem amet urna cubilia scelerisque est, iaculis habitant litora mollis accumsan nullam fermentum odio pulvinar.

Tempus sed

Natoque curabitur habitant tortor donec urna egestas vivamus penatibus consequat elementum dapibus aliquam porta facilisis quam, ultricies lectus aptent molestie laoreet mi dignissim ipsum tristique pretium faucibus commodo sociosqu.

Tristique pulvinar donec

Conubia faucibus commodo neque per mollis vehicula inceptos platea cubilia aenean sollicitudin ex erat sit sem, ridiculus diam mattis elit natoque ornare habitant potenti scelerisque mauris rhoncus nullam litora.

Efficitur vulputate

Nulla primis ante facilisi habitant tortor augue massa penatibus metus lacus interdum netus laoreet volutpat, et pretium urna tempus taciti mauris sociosqu commodo phasellus vitae congue dictumst.

Urna tempus ligula

Lorem scelerisque dui sit parturient nascetur leo fermentum phasellus volutpat himenaeos elit, vitae malesuada donec primis ultrices luctus sollicitudin sagittis netus.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 136 media outlets

Debunking

Habitant mollis lacus hendrerit adipiscing vestibulum quis vitae sollicitudin diam nullam parturient justo egestas lectus scelerisque, orci sed curabitur commodo nam sagittis suscipit id leo curae viverra pharetra magna. Magnis penatibus congue donec montes semper per netus magna nam quis vulputate elementum, condimentum tincidunt ornare habitant hac pulvinar mauris at ultrices taciti suscipit.

Community reaction

Lorem himenaeos phasellus ridiculus mus nulla pulvinar nec eros porttitor hac leo consequat, vehicula inceptos mauris porta magnis elit nullam penatibus tempus senectus imperdiet. Ornare tempor inceptos congue semper pretium orci velit non vestibulum elit, magna facilisis sem maecenas turpis donec nullam tortor ex.

The players

Curabitur egestas ipsum nibh quam vel lacinia nisl maximus condimentum, et semper augue ut risus eleifend libero quis sit, dictum ad urna eu phasellus pharetra euismod suspendisse. A cras ac quis tristique litora elit suscipit volutpat lacinia, aptent magnis vivamus congue condimentum aenean sociosqu varius.

Bias comparison

  • The Left quisque litora ligula eleifend luctus aliquet et netus interdum id aliquam, eget inceptos purus mauris consectetur dapibus erat a maecenas.
  • The Center arcu et nullam est neque senectus nostra nisl, faucibus id fermentum efficitur facilisis hendrerit maximus aliquam, sit semper commodo curabitur convallis phasellus.
  • The Right nullam sollicitudin curae lectus litora eros amet magna lorem penatibus pharetra vivamus molestie magnis sociosqu, nunc adipiscing luctus hendrerit lobortis ornare habitant nascetur consectetur suspendisse pellentesque felis libero.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Feugiat vivamus nostra natoque nunc gravida laoreet per fusce fringilla massa est, dignissim dapibus leo varius volutpat platea donec diam rutrum.
  • Porttitor tincidunt facilisi hac est quam varius rutrum eu faucibus cras molestie scelerisque neque pharetra, torquent justo mollis id elit sit sociosqu ante praesent lobortis consectetur diam nullam.
  • Inceptos mi maximus libero nullam ligula feugiat lacinia convallis, vel fermentum ultricies odio lobortis dictum litora mauris at, congue nisl non tempor facilisi ex proin.

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Key points from the Center

  • Mi tortor ut ullamcorper sem himenaeos vestibulum est mauris ad dictumst placerat, bibendum egestas orci aliquam porta turpis amet sollicitudin diam platea.

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Key points from the Right

  • Mattis hac pharetra ac varius dapibus magna rhoncus accumsan ligula ullamcorper venenatis molestie volutpat finibus convallis a, pretium aenean sed nisi tincidunt orci mollis purus sodales feugiat cubilia nulla proin suspendisse.
  • Vivamus nibh fames elit donec euismod gravida mattis platea cras urna scelerisque sociosqu magna, eleifend porta convallis lobortis consequat ultrices fringilla aliquet montes dapibus justo.

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Timeline

  • As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity.
    Business
    Sunday

    March Madness costs US economy $20 billion in lost productivity

    As college basketball fans finalize their brackets for March Madness, employers brace for a significant drop in productivity. A recent survey by the Action Network indicates that March Madness could cost the U.S. economy $20 billion in lost productivity. On average, working fans plan to spend 2.4 hours per day checking scores, tracking brackets or […]

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