Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Advocacy and (social) science
by
Werner Krauss
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
In eigener Sache
by
Werner Krauss
Am 25. Februar erscheint im Hanser Verlag das Buch von Hans von Storch und Werner Krauß mit dem Titel "Die Klimafalle. Die gefährliche Nähe von Politik und Klimaforschung".
Hier gehts zur Verlagsankündigung, und es steht auch eine längere Leseprobe zur Verfügung. Hier der Klappentext:
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Re-thinking adaptation after Sandy
by
Werner Krauss
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There is a brilliant article written by Eric Klinenberg in The New Yorker, Dept of Urban Planning, about
„adaptation“; a wonderful example that the climate debate indeed moves forward
and is not only deadlocked in the fruitless discussion between alarmists and
skeptics or the incestuos climate science / climate politics relationship. Unfortunately, the article is behind a pay
wall. I will try to sum up those arguments which really impressed me most; I’ll
do so mostly from memory and in form of my own thoughts; I can only hope that you get
access to The New Yorker and read this elegant piece of climate expertise on your own!
Monday, January 7, 2013
Is Germany's energy transformation coal powered?
by
@ReinerGrundmann
The EU, and Germany, like to portray themselves as leader when it comes to progressive climate policies. Germany in particular has adopted several policies dear to the environmentalist movement, the phasing out of nuclear energy while at the same time increasing renewable energies. Such is the enthusiasm that it seems to escape attention that the necessary back up energy mainly comes from coal, which is the dirtiest form of energy and the most damaging to climate. The Economist has two articles on the subject (here and here) which are worth a read.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Climate utopia
by
@ReinerGrundmann
This sounds a bit like a New Year’s
resolution and the impression is not altogether wrong. Thinking about the
narrative of climate change, and the project to prevent dangerous warming of
the planet, it occurred to me many times that it is lacking in vision but
excels in warnings, exhortations, and polarization.
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