March represents the 529th month in a row with temperatures exceeding the 20th century average.
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 7, 2023
That’s more than 44 years straight without a single comparatively cool month. https://t.co/JGc3w8YRvc
After a staggering defeat in 2010, environmentalists needed a plan they could sell. Thus began a decade-long climb propelled by mass protests, heavy campaign spending and intense lobbying.
— POLITICO (@politico) April 2, 2023
Then came a final assist from Mother Nature herself.https://t.co/FLOoPnX5Ja
Ten photographs that made the world wake up to climate change https://t.co/D47MND1hSn
— CNN (@CNN) March 29, 2023
Much has changed here since Elon took over. Based on my own before-and-after expts, climate denial responses are up 15-30x. Changes in followers are even more dramatic: Stef's analysis shows that climate accounts have seen little change while denial accounts have boomed. https://t.co/VCxpEfQxyg
— Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) March 29, 2023
Zeeshan Aleem: How Donald Trump jeopardized Biden's climate agenda. https://t.co/s8KZN1pH7E
— MSNBC (@MSNBC) March 28, 2023
Why climate “doomers” are replacing climate “deniers” https://t.co/WQte1Pi5Dq
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) March 26, 2023
One expert predicts that by the 2080s, Baltimore will have summers that are 6 degrees hotter on average and winters that are 9.1 degrees warmer on average than today.
— The Baltimore Banner (@BaltimoreBanner) March 25, 2023
It’s most comparable to the current climate of Cleveland, Mississippi. https://t.co/ldEnjryKoB
This year’s winter in New York City is on track to be the least snowy season since records began shortly after the Civil War. The Central Park weather station has so far measured just 2.3 inches of snowfall. On average, the city sees a little over two feet.https://t.co/LIB2ukdDcd
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 24, 2023
The Biden administration warned on Monday that a warming planet poses severe economic challenges for the U.S., which will require the federal government to reassess its spending priorities and how it influences behavior. https://t.co/PhdVhlSYDx
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 20, 2023
The world is likely to reach 1.5°C of global warming by the early 2030s, a new U.N. report says, and it will take immediate, drastic action to prevent temperatures from rising beyond that. https://t.co/PmJkmaT4Lu
— NYT Climate (@nytclimate) March 20, 2023
such a great piece by @robinsonmeyer, we are out of the climate science era and into the climate economics, climate sociology, climate political science, climate demography, climate materials science etc era https://t.co/crfRaXpJSB
— Matthew Zeitlin (@MattZeitlin) March 8, 2023