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ENN ENN ENN Environmental News Network -- Know Your Environment
09
Fri, May
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  • Ocean’s heat cycle shows that atmospheric carbon may be headed elsewhere

    As humans continue to pump the atmosphere with carbon, it’s crucial for scientists to understand how and where the planet absorbs and naturally emits carbon.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Examined Tropical Cyclone Bud's Rains in the U.S. Southwest

    Beneficial rainfall from hurricane Bud's remnants has spread into the U.S. Desert Southwest after making landfall in western Mexico and moving north. NASA added up the rainfall using satellite data to provide a full picture of the rainfall.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA's Terra Satellite Sees Tropical Depression Carlotta Weakening Over Mexico

    NASA Terra satellite captured an image of Tropical Depression Carlotta as it was making landfall in southwestern Mexico where it weakened into a remnant low pressure area. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Study: Climate Action Can Limit Asia’s Growing Water Shortages

    Even “modest” action to limit climate change could help prevent the most extreme water-shortage scenarios facing Asia by the year 2050, according to a new study led by MIT researchers.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Finds Tropical Depression Carlotta's Strong Storms over Mexico, Eastern Pacific

    Tropical Depression Carlotta continues to hug the coast of southwestern Mexico and drop heavy rainfall. NASA's Aqua satellite provided a look at cloud top temperatures through infrared imagery to find out where the most powerful parts of Tropical Depression Carlotta were located.

    NASA's Aqua satellite found very cold cloud top temperatures and strong storms in fragmented thunderstorms over mainland Mexico and the Eastern Pacific Ocean.   

    >> Read the Full Article
  • June 2018 El Niño/Southern Oscillation Update: El Niño Watch!

    Well, well, well… what have we here? Favorable conditions for El Niño to develop?

    >> Read the Full Article
  • National Weather Service director cautions: Don't chase single model runs this hurricane season

    The sultry summer months along the Gulf Coast and East Coast are a time of volatile weather as warm ocean water fuels storms, some just bringing rain and some growing into fierce tropical storms and hurricanes.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Better Be Safe Than Sorry: Economic Optimization Risks Tipping of Important Earth System Elements

    Optimizing economic welfare without constraints might put human well-being at risk, a new climate study argues. While being successful in bringing down costs of greenhouse gas reductions for instance, the concept of profit maximization alone does not suffice to avoid the tipping of critical elements in the Earth system which could lead to dramatic changes of our livelihood. The scientists use mathematical experiments to compare economic optimization to the governance concepts of sustainability and the more recent approach of a safe operating space for humanity. All of these turn out to have their benefits and deficits, yet the profit-maximizing approach shows the greatest likelihood of producing outcomes that harm people or the environment.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • When the River Runs High

    A massive world-wide study of dry riverbeds has found they’re contributing more carbon emissions than previously thought, and this could help scientists better understand how to fight climate change.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Leading Antarctic Experts Offer Two Possible Views of Continent’s Future

    The next 10 years will be critical for the future of Antarctica, and choices made will have long-lasting consequences, says an international group of award-winning Antarctic research scientists in a paper released today. It lays out two different plausible future scenarios for the continent and its Southern Ocean over the next 50 years.

    >> Read the Full Article

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