Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThis Just In! New Poll Finds Americans Reluctant To Acknowledge, Deal With Looming Climate Disaster
Americans who dont believe in global warming should visit my Miami Beach neighborhood at high tide, when Biscayne Bay surges through our storm drains and swamps our streets. In May, the New York Times ran a photo of sunny-day flooding outside my local Walgreens, above an article headlined, Miami Finds Itself Ankle-Deep in Climate Change Debate. Really, the debate should be over. Scientists have already documented 5 in. to 8 in. of sea-level rise around South Florida over the past 50 years. This kind of phenomenon has encouraged President Obama to start emphasizing that climate change is not a someday thing. This is not some distant problem of the future, he said recently. This is a problem that is affecting Americans right now.
Thats true. But as a new global survey conducted by TIME about attitudes toward energy and conservation illustrates, many Americans dont believe it. This sets them apart from the people Time surveyed in five other countries. Only 40% of Americans strongly agreed that the earth is getting warmer, even though the earth is, in fact, getting warmer; 71% of Indians strongly agreed. Globally, 57% of the 3,505 people surveyed strongly agreed that the polar ice caps are melting because of global warming, including the 39% of Americans who strongly agreed. On almost every question, Americans were the least likely to back the scientific consensus on climateand among the least likely to support doing anything about it. One out of three Americans wanted their politicians to fight global warming, compared with 3 out of 4 Brazilians.
This may seem odd because, as Obamas new National Climate Assessment makes clear, the U.S. is already feeling the effects of global warming. The first 13 years of the 21st century were among the 14 hottest on record. California is enduring a historic drought. Wildfires are getting worse throughout the West. And while its premature to blame climate change for any particular stormthat stock phrase seemed to appear in every story about Superstorm Sandyour weird weather trends are consistent with expectations for a warmer world.
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But compared with citizens of Germany, South Korea, India, Turkey and Brazil, Americans were among the least likely to turn off the lights when leaving a room or power down their computer at night and by far the least likely to walk or take public transit instead of driving. Americans were also more opposed to carbon taxes, carbon limits and even bike lanes than the rest of the world. They were less concerned than the global average about polluted air, higher sea levels and almost every other problem the pollsters asked about except higher gas prices. (While Americans are somewhat more likely than citizens of other nations to believe that the U.S. could do more to fight global warming, they are by far the least likely to think the U.S. should accept most of the burden for reducing emissions.)
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http://time.com/2863213/the-slow-greening-of-america/
PADemD
(4,482 posts)Some of the homes will be under water in a few years, and the buyers will be in shock.