The Long, Hot March of Climate Change
By Amy Goodman
The Pentagon knows it. The world’s largest insurers know it. Now,
governments may be overthrown because of it. It is climate change, and
it is real. According to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, last month was the hottest March on record for the
United States since 1895, when records were first kept, with average
temperatures of 8.6 degrees F above average. More than 15,000 March
high-temperature records were broken nationally. Drought, wildfires,
tornadoes and other extreme weather events are already plaguing the
country.
Across the world in the Maldives, rising sea levels continue to
threaten this Indian Ocean archipelago. It is the world’s lowest-lying
nation, on average only 1.3 meters above sea level. The plight of the
Maldives gained global prominence when its young president, the
first-ever democratically elected there, Mohamed Nasheed, became one of
the world’s leading voices against climate change, especially in the
lead-up to the 2009 U.N. climate-change summit in Copenhagen. Nasheed
held a ministerial meeting underwater, with his cabinet in scuba gear,
to illustrate the potential disaster.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
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