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Hints:
mega-fires
mega-hurricanes


Stephen Schneider: We can't avoid the fact that there's already a 400 percent increase in the area of wildfire in the U.S. West. [---1---]

Your're listening to climate scientist Stephen Schneider of Stanford. He spoke about avoidable and unavoidable climate impacts at the March 2009 climate summit in Washington.

But we can certainly avoid having it going to massive proportions by trying to keep the warming not much more than another one or two degrees. [---2---]

[---3---]

Stephen Schneider: But they're only 10 or 15 percent stronger. Let's not let them go to 40 percent. Let's not let us get three or six degrees warming.

He said science can only access the risk.

Stephen Schneider: But what to actually do about that? [---4---]

All he said is to simply on what to do about climate change, said Schneider, but alternatively, society will decide.

【視聽版科學(xué)小組榮譽(yù)出品】
That goes along with the fact that the summers are hotter, and the summers are longer. We don't want to see it go to four to six to eight, where we could have not only catastrophic mega-fires, but also catastrophic mega-hurricanes. He said hurricanes are more intense now than 40 years ago, with the evidence pointing to warmer oceans from global warming. Which can be a decision made from school boards trying to figure out whether they have new green schools, right up to national issues where we want to put a price on carbon or incentives to people to invent our way out of the problem.