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Article  Which islands will become uninhabitable 1st due to climate change? + Jaws of Snake

#1
C C Offline
https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth...ange-first

INTRO: About a million people live in coral atolls like those in the Maldives, Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands. These islands are just a few feet in elevation, making them some of the places most at-risk from the rising seas that will result from climate change. Five uninhabited islands in the Solomon Islands have already vanished beneath the waves in the past century.

The Maldives, Kiribati, Tuvalu, and the Marshall Islands have the highest percentage of their land area at risk because they are all atolls; other countries also have low lying islands, but have more higher ground available to flee to.

So which low-lying islands will be underwater — and uninhabitable — the soonest due to climate change? As it turns out, that question is impossible to answer. Four islands illustrate why... (MORE - details)

COVERED: Mainadhoo, Huvadhoo Atoll, Maldives ..... Roi-Namur Island, Kwajalein Atoll, Republic of Marshall Islands ..... Mundoo, Laamu Atoll, The Maldives ..... Fongafale, Funafuti Atoll, Tuvalu


Jaws of the Snake
https://rogerpielkejr.substack.com/p/jaws-of-the-snake

EXCERPTS: . . . climate policy is much more complex than this, but for better or worse, public and political discourse has been reduced to a debate centered on scientific predictions of our collective long-term futures.

[...] Research shows that these dynamics persist — legacy media and social media emphasize the IPCC Working Group 1 and 2 reports, which provide projections of climate futures and their impacts, and de-emphasize Working Group 3 which has expertise in energy systems and technologies of mitigation. Anyone paying attention to climate policy and politics will be familiar with these dynamics.

[...] As our view of the long-term climate future becomes less catastrophic, due initially to moving beyond misleading, implausible scenarios and then continuing into the future as decarbonization accelerates, the jaws of the snake will close even tighter.  A narrowing of plausible futures is an inevitable consequence of climate policy progress...

[...] The future is not what it used to be. Science and policy need to keep up, regardless whose expertise wins and loses... (MORE - missing details)
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#2
Zinjanthropos Offline
(Nov 13, 2023 06:23 PM)C C Wrote: https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth...ange-first

INTRO: About a million people live in coral atolls like those in the Maldives, Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands. These islands are just a few feet in elevation, making them some of the places most at-risk from the rising seas that will result from climate change. Five uninhabited islands in the Solomon Islands have already vanished beneath the waves in the past century.

The Maldives, Kiribati, Tuvalu, and the Marshall Islands have the highest percentage of their land area at risk because they are all atolls; other countries also have low lying islands, but have more higher ground available to flee to.

So which low-lying islands will be underwater — and uninhabitable — the soonest due to climate change? As it turns out, that question is impossible to answer. Four islands illustrate why... (MORE - details)

COVERED: Mainadhoo, Huvadhoo Atoll, Maldives ..... Roi-Namur Island, Kwajalein Atoll, Republic of Marshall Islands ..... Mundoo, Laamu Atoll, The Maldives ..... Fongafale, Funafuti Atoll, Tuvalu

Will there be islands that become inhabitable or be more inhabitable as temps rise? Canada has a few in the north that might work? Greenland for the Danes? Will current uninhabitable islands that are too mountainous provide living space?
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#3
C C Offline
(Nov 14, 2023 02:20 PM)Zinjanthropos Wrote: Will there be islands that become inhabitable or be more inhabitable as temps rise? Canada has a few in the north that might work? Greenland for the Danes? Will current uninhabitable islands that are too mountainous provide living space?


They can't dally with anything either balancing or [shudder] positive. Only the worst case scenarios and models are considered for policy. With respect to currently frozen landscapes turning warm, only the doom that will befall the wildlife that has adapted to those extremes is applicable. Not what or who might inhabit such after the transforming devastation.

How climate change became apocalyptic
https://www.scivillage.com/thread-14836-...l#pid60269
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#4
Zinjanthropos Offline
(Nov 15, 2023 12:39 AM)C C Wrote:
(Nov 14, 2023 02:20 PM)Zinjanthropos Wrote: Will there be islands that become inhabitable or be more inhabitable as temps rise? Canada has a few in the north that might work? Greenland for the Danes? Will current uninhabitable islands that are too mountainous provide living space?


They can't dally with anything either balancing or [shudder] positive. Only the worst case scenarios and models are considered for policy. With respect to currently frozen landscapes turning warm, only the doom that will befall the wildlife that has adapted to those extremes is applicable. Not what or who might inhabit such after the transforming devastation.

How climate change became apocalyptic
https://www.scivillage.com/thread-14836-...l#pid60269

Imaging my descendants whale watching in Death Valley Sea.
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