2021 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #16
Posted on 18 April 2021 by BaerbelW
Not having had a chance to garner much attention by the time last week's review was published, the last article in that batch - First-Ever Observations From Under Antarctica’s ‘Doomsday Glacier’ Are Bad News - in the meantime turned out to be the most popular one shared during that week.
Articles Linked to on Facebook
- Our greatest libraries are melting away by David Farrier, Washington Post - Opinion, Apr 7, 2021
- Discourses of Climate Delay - a comic adaption by Céline Keller, , Apr 12, 2021
- Wind and solar energy are job creators. Which states are taking advantage? by Karin Kirk, Yale Climate Connections, Apr 7, 2021
- Deserts cool the planet by reflecting solar radiation to space; vegetated areas have an overall warming effect, so planting trees in deserts doesn’t necessarily cool the planet by , Climate Feedback, Apr 9, 2021
- US now ‘halfway to zero’ on electricity-sector carbon emissions by Jeff St. John, Canary Media, April 13, 2021
- What a 1,600-year-old New Zealand tree can tell us about climate change by Kate Evans, Vox, Apr 13, 2021
- Podcast by James Shaw - Climate science and protecting the "best" planet with Dr. Kate Marvel by James Shaw, Acast - What Comes After What Comes Next, Apr 14, 2021
- We Are Living in a Climate Emergency, and We’re Going to Say So by Mark Fischetti, Scientific American, Apr 12, 2021
- Which came first, the misconception or its exploitation? by Ann Reid, NCSE, Apr 5, 2021
- Top climate leaders will participate in Big Oil-sponsored "sustainability" conference by Emily Atkin and Judd Legum, Heated, Apr 14, 2021
- Highlands hunt for climate answers by Talia Ogliore , The Source, Apr 9, 2021
- Video: 'Disinformation ecosystem' - in broader context beyond climate by Peter Sinclair, Yale Climate Connections, Apr 15, 2021
- Skeptical Science New Research for Week #15, 2021 by Doug Bostrom, Skeptical Science, Apr 14, 2021
- vEGU21 - Gather Online - Prolog by Bärbel Winkler, Skeptical Science, Apr 15, 2021
- Carbon Emissions Could Plummet. The Atmosphere Will Lag Behind by Rebecca Hersher, NPR, April 14, 2021
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