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caseyhandmer.wordpress.com | ||
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blog.dshr.org
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| | | | | Source John Timmer's With four more years like 2023, carbon emissions will blow past 1.5° limit is based on the United Nations' Environmen... | |
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wryheat.wordpress.com
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| | | | | A monthly review of climate, energy, environmental, and political policy issues Articles compiled by Jonathan DuHamel (jedtaz@gmail.com) In this issue we examine several articles dealing with "net zero" - the elimination of carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels. These articles show that "net zero" will have almost no effect on global temperature, but will... | |
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judithcurry.com
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| | | | | by Balázs M. Fekete For over three decades, the reduction of CO2 emission was the primary motivation for promoting the transition from fossil fuels to alternative energy sources. Concerns about the inevitable exhaustion of fossil fuels were considered particularly during energy crises, but these concerns died out quickly as discoveries of new fossil fuel reserves... | |
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wattsupwiththat.com
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| | | High electricity rates aren't an unavoidable consequence of modern life or federal policy. They are the predictable outcome of state-level choices that ignore reliability, undervalue dispatchable generation, and impose rigid mandates regardless of cost. Americans deserve leaders who recognize that keeping the lights on at a modest price isn't optional. The states keeping electricity affordable today offer a roadmap for those willing to learn. | ||