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Making Sense of Trends in Disaster Losses |
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by Roger A. Pielke
Record rainfall and over a thousand
dead in Mumbai. Devastating floods in central Europe. A record
hurricane season in the Atlantic, including more than $100 billion
dollars in damage from Hurricane Katrina. The summer of 2005 seems to
have witnessed more than its fair share of weather-related disasters.
And, perhaps understandably, no weather-related disaster occurs without
someone linking it to the issue of global warming. For example, Klaus
Töpfer, director of the United Nations Environment Programme, made such a connection in an interview with the Financial Times Deutschland.
“We live already in climate change. The worldwide increase in strong
rains, droughts and (wind)storms are indications that the greenhouse
effect is having an influence …”
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Rebuttal to: "Science Academies as Political Advocates" by Roger Pielke, Jr. [published in "bridges" vol. 6] |
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by William Colglazier
The following is a rebuttal to an earlier article by Roger Pielke, Jr. entitled "Science Academies as
Political Advocates" that appeared in "bridges" vol. 6.
Science Academies and Climate Change
In his op-ed published in bridges, Roger Pielke, Jr., cited the June 2005 statement on climate change
issued by eleven national science academies as an example of
these institutions unwisely engaging in political advocacy and
politics. In our view, the eleven academies’ statement was consistent
with and supported by careful objective studies done by the US National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) over the past 15 years, which is the reason
that the then NAS President Bruce Alberts signed the statement.
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