As we’ve been discussing there is a paucity of information on the precise effectiveness of vaccines vs the Delta variant and the contours of the pandemic in the new circumstances of the last eight weeks or so. We know in general that vaccines continue to be highly effective at preventing severe illness. But the details are not as easy as they should be to come by. This seems to be both the product of very new facts which studies are only catching up with and a continued paucity of good national data from the CDC. That vacuum is filled by anecdotal information.
Texas Judge Temporarily Blocks Abbott From Arresting Democratic Lawmakers
A Texas judge has granted temporary reprieve to Democratic lawmakers who fled the state in an attempt to block Republicans’ tranche of restrictive voting legislation.
Continue reading “Texas Judge Temporarily Blocks Abbott From Arresting Democratic Lawmakers”
Senate Big Lie Investigators To Interview Georgia U.S. Attorney Who Abruptly Quit
Senators investigating Trump’s attempt to overturn the results of last year’s election will next interview BJ Pak, the former U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia.
Continue reading “Senate Big Lie Investigators To Interview Georgia U.S. Attorney Who Abruptly Quit”
The Folks at the Top Are the First To Go
I was raised by a man steeped in the life sciences. He wasn’t a climate scientist. He was a marine botanist who spent the first and last parts of his career teaching general biology at various colleges. But this professional description doesn’t capture the depth of the imprint on him and thus indirectly on me. For him it was an entire ethic and worldview, one rooted in evolutionary theory and furnished from various domains of knowledge: archeology, paleontology, paleo-zoology, ecology, astronomy in addition to biology.
Act Fast
A good run-down of the cataclysmic and imminent changes to the global climate sketched out in today’s big climate report.
The Water Cycle Is Intensifying, IPCC Report Warns, Leading To More Intense Storms And Flooding
This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis.
The world watched in July 2021 as extreme rainfall became floods that washed away centuries-old homes in Europe, triggered landslides in Asia and inundated subways in China. More than 900 people died in the destruction. In North America, the West was battling fires amid an intense drought that is affecting water and power supplies.
Water-related hazards can be exceptionally destructive, and the impact of climate change on extreme water-related events like these is increasingly evident.
In a new international climate assessment published Aug. 9, 2021, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns that the water cycle has been intensifying and will continue to intensify as the planet warms.
The report, which I worked on as a lead author, documents an increase in both wet extremes, including more intense rainfall over most regions, and dry extremes, including drying in the Mediterranean, southwestern Australia, southwestern South America, South Africa and western North America. It also shows that both wet and dry extremes will continue to increase with future warming.
Why is the water cycle intensifying?
Water cycles through the environment, moving between the atmosphere, ocean, land and reservoirs of frozen water. It might fall as rain or snow, seep into the ground, run into a waterway, join the ocean, freeze or evaporate back into the atmosphere. Plants also take up water from the ground and release it through transpiration from their leaves. In recent decades, there has been an overall increase in the rates of precipitation and evaporation.

NASA
A number of factors are intensifying the water cycle, but one of the most important is that warming temperatures raise the upper limit on the amount of moisture in the air. That increases the potential for more rain.
This aspect of climate change is confirmed across all of our lines of evidence: It is expected from basic physics, projected by computer models, and it already shows up in the observational data as a general increase of rainfall intensity with warming temperatures.
Understanding this and other changes in the water cycle is important for more than preparing for disasters. Water is an essential resource for all ecosystems and human societies, and particularly agriculture.
What does this mean for the future?
An intensifying water cycle means that both wet and dry extremes and the general variability of the water cycle will increase, although not uniformly around the globe.
Rainfall intensity is expected to increase for most land areas, but the largest increases in dryness are expected in the Mediterranean, southwestern South America and western North America.

IPCC Sixth Assessment Report
Globally, daily extreme precipitation events will likely intensify by about 7% for every 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) that global temperatures rise.
Many other important aspects of the water cycle will also change in addition to extremes as global temperatures increase, the report shows, including reductions in mountain glaciers, decreasing duration of seasonal snow cover, earlier snowmelt and contrasting changes in monsoon rains across different regions, which will impact the water resources of billions of people.
What can be done?
One common theme across these aspects of the water cycle is that higher greenhouse gas emissions lead to bigger impacts.
The IPCC does not make policy recommendations. Instead, it provides the scientific information needed to carefully evaluate policy choices. The results show what the implications of different choices are likely to be.
One thing the scientific evidence in the report clearly tells world leaders is that limiting global warming to the Paris Agreement target of 1.5 C (2.7 F) will require immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Regardless of any specific target, it is clear that the severity of climate change impacts are closely linked to greenhouse gas emissions: Reducing emissions will reduce impacts. Every fraction of a degree matters.
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Mathew Barlow is a professor of Climate Science at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
A Lead IPCC Author Explains The Profound Changes Underway In Earth’s Oceans And Ice
This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis.
Humans are unequivocally warming the planet, and that’s triggering rapid changes in the atmosphere, oceans and polar regions, and increasing extreme weather around the world, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns in a new report.
The IPCC released the first part of its much anticipated Sixth Assessment Report on Aug. 9, 2021. In it, 234 scientists from around the globe summarized the current climate research on how the Earth is changing as temperatures rise and what those changes will mean for the future.
We asked climate scientist Robert Kopp, a lead author of the chapter on Earth’s oceans, ice and sea level rise, about the profound changes underway.
What are the IPCC report’s most important overall messages in your view?
At the most basic level, the facts about climate change have been clear for a long time, with the evidence just continuing to grow.
As a result of human activities, the planet is changing at a rate unprecedented for at least thousands of years. These changes are affecting every area of the planet.

IPCC Sixth Assessment Report
While some of the changes will be irreversible for millennia, some can be slowed and others reversed through strong, rapid and sustained reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
But time is running out to meet the ambitious goal laid out in the 2015 international Paris Agreement to limit warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels (2 C equals 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit). Doing so requires getting global carbon dioxide emissions on a downward course that reaches net zero around or before 2050.
What are scientists most concerned about right now when it comes to the oceans and polar regions?
Global sea level has been rising at an accelerating rate since about 1970, and over the last century, it has risen more than in any century in at least 3,000 years.
In the years since the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report in 2013 and the Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate in 2018, the evidence for accelerating ice sheet loss has become clearer.
Over the last decade, global average sea level has risen at a rate of about 4 millimeters per year (1.5 inches per decade). This increase is due to two main factors: the melting of ice in mountain glaciers and at the poles, and the expansion of water in the ocean as it takes up heat.
Ice sheets in particular are primarily responsible for the increase in the rate of sea level rise since the 1990s. There is clear evidence tying the melting of glaciers and the Greenland Ice Sheet, as well as ocean warming, to human influence. Sea level rise is leading to substantial impacts on coastal communities, including a near-doubling in the frequency of coastal flooding since the 1960s in many sites around the world.
Since the previous reports, scientists have made substantial advances in modeling the behavior of ice sheets. At the same time, we’ve been learning more about ice sheet physics, including recognizing the potential ways ice sheets can become destabilized. We don’t well understand the potential speed of these changes, but they have the potential to lead to much more rapid ice sheet loss if greenhouse gas emissions grow unchecked.
These advances confirm that sea level is going to continue to rise for many centuries to come, creating an escalating threat for coastal communities.
Sea level change through 2050 is largely locked in: Regardless of how quickly nations are able to lower emissions, the world is likely looking at about 15 to 30 centimeters (6 to 12 inches) of global average sea level rise through the middle of the century.
But beyond 2050, sea level projections become increasingly sensitive to the world’s emissions choices. If countries continue on their current paths, with greenhouse gas emissions likely to bring 3-4 C of warming (5.4-7.2 F) by 2100, the planet will be looking at a most likely sea level rise of about 0.7 meters (a bit over 2 feet). A 2 C (3.6 F) warmer world, consistent with the Paris Agreement, would see lower sea level rise, most likely about half a meter (about 1.6 feet) by 2100.

IPCC Sixth Assessment Report
What’s more, the more the world limits its greenhouse gas emissions, the lower the chance of triggering instabilities in the polar ice sheets that are challenging to model but could substantially increase sea level rise.
Under the most extreme emissions scenario we considered, we could not rule out rapid ice sheet loss leading to sea level rise approaching 2 meters (7 feet) by the end of this century.
Fortunately, if the world limits warming to well below 2 C, it should take many centuries for sea level rise to exceed 2 meters – a far more manageable situation.
Are the oceans or ice nearing any tipping points?
“Tipping point” is a vague term used in many different ways by different people. The IPCC defines tipping points as “critical thresholds beyond which a system reorganizes, in a way that is very fast or irreversible” – for example, a temperature rise beyond which climate dynamics commit an ice sheet to massive loss.
Because the term is so vague, the IPCC generally focuses on characteristics of changes in a system – for example, whether a system might change abruptly or irreversibly – rather than whether it fits the strict dynamic definition of a “tipping point.”
One example of a system that might undergo abrupt changes is the large-scale pattern of ocean circulation known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC, of which the Gulf Stream is part. Paleoclimate evidence tells us that AMOC has changed rapidly in the past, and we expect that AMOC will weaken over this century. If AMOC were to collapse, it would make Europe warm more slowly, increase sea level rise along the U.S. Atlantic coast, and shift storm tracks and monsoons. However, most evidence indicates that such a collapse will not happen in this century.

IPCC Sixth Assessment Report
There is mixed evidence for abrupt changes in the polar ice sheets, but clear evidence that changes in the ice sheets can be locked in for centuries and millennia.
If the world succeeds in limiting warming to 1.5 C (2.7 F), we expect to see about 2-3 meters (7-10 feet) of sea level rise over the next 2,000 years; if the planet continues to warm and reaches a 5 C (9 F) increase, we expect to see about 20 meters (70 feet) over the next 2,000 years.
Some people also discuss summer Arctic sea ice – which has undergone substantial declines over the last 40 years and is now smaller than at any time in the past millennium – as a system with a “tipping point.” However, the science is pretty clear that there is no critical threshold in this system. Rather, summer Arctic sea ice area decreases roughly in proportion to the increase in global temperature, and if temperature were stabilized, we would expect sea ice area to stabilize also.
What do scientists know now about hurricanes that they didn’t realize when the last report was written?
Since the last IPCC assessment report in 2013, there has been increasing evidence that hurricanes have grown more intense, and intensified more rapidly, than they did 40 years ago. There’s also evidence that hurricanes in the U.S. are moving more slowly, leading to increased rainfall.
However, it’s not clear that this is due to the effects of greenhouse gases – reductions in particulate pollution have also had important effects.
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The clearest effect of global warming is that a warmer atmosphere holds more water, leading to more extreme rainfall, like that seen during Hurricane Harvey in 2017. Looking forward, we expect to see hurricane winds and hurricane rains continue to increase. It’s still unclear how the overall number of hurricanes will change.
The report involved 234 scientists, and then 195 governments had to agree on the summary for policymakers. Does that broad range of views affect the outcome?
When you’re writing a report like this, a key goal for the scientists is to accurately capture points of both scientific agreement and scientific disagreement.
For example, with respect to ice sheet changes, there are certain processes on which there is broad agreement and other processes where the science is still emerging and there are strong, discordant views. Yet knowing about these processes may be crucially important for decision-makers trying to manage risk.
That’s why, for example, we talk not only about most likely outcomes, but also about outcomes where the likelihood is low or as-yet unknown, but the potential impacts are large.

AP Photo/Felipe Dana
The IPCC uses a transparent process to produce its report – the authors have had to respond to over 50,000 review comments over the three years we’ve spent writing it. The governments also weigh in, having to approve every line of a concise Summary for Policy Makers that accurately reflects the underlying assessment – oftentimes making it clearer in the process.
I’m very pleased that, as with past reports, every participating government has signed off on a summary that accurately reports the current state of climate science.
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Robert Kopp is a professor in the Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences and the director of the Rutgers Institute of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences at Rutgers University.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Ex-Top DOJ Officials Testify On Clark’s Election-Stealing Scheming With Trump
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things.
Rosen And Donoghue Tell Their Stories
Former Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and former acting Deputy Attorney General Richard Donoghue gave testimony this weekend on then-acting civil division chief Jeffrey Clark’s attempts to weaponize the DOJ to help Trump steal the 2020 election.
- Rosen and Donoghue testified in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee for more than six hours and about five hours, respectively, on Saturday. Rosen met with investigators at DOJ inspector general Michael Horowitz’s office for two hours on Friday, the New York Times reports.
- Rosen reportedly told Horowitz’s investigators that he discovered Clark was having unauthorized discussions with Trump on how the DOJ could cast doubt on the legitimacy of Biden’s win.
- The ex-acting attorney general also said that Clark admitted in late December that he had met with Trump and promised to Rosen not to do it again, according to the Times.
- Rosen reportedly hastened to speak with Horowitz’s office and the Judiciary committee on Clark’s skullduggery before anyone, including Trump’s legal team, could stop him.
- Trump’s pressure campaign against Rosen to overturn the election “was real, very real” and “very specific,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin (D-IL) told CNN on Sunday.
- Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), a member of the committee, said Rosen provided “dramatic evidence of how intent Trump was in overthrowing the election,” the Times reports.
Over The Final Infrastructure Hurdle
The Senate voted 68-29 to invoke cloture on the bipartisan infrastructure bill last night, meaning we’re FINALLY set for the vote on actually passing the damn thing by Tuesday.
- Meanwhile, plans to move along Senate Democrats’s weeping $3.5 trillion infrastructure proposal are moving forward: They’ll be unveiling the budget resolution today, Budget Committee chair Bernie Sanders (I-VT) told Punchbowl.
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen will tell the Senate to lift the debt ceiling not through reconciliation but “on a bipartisan basis,” something Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has flatly stated he and his GOP colleagues have no interest in doing.
A Key COVID-19 Vaccine Milestone
As of today,
there are more Americans fully vaccinated than there are Americans who are not
I know we have a lot of work to do to get more people the shot
But its worth celebrating this milestone pic.twitter.com/nSCpt7EFMT
— Ashish K. Jha, MD, MPH (@ashishkjha) August 8, 2021
Cuomo Troubles
Melissa DeRosa, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s (D) top aide, resigned on Sunday night after state Attorney General Letitia James’ investigation found that Cuomo had sexually harassed 11 women.
- “Personally, the past two years have been emotionally and mentally trying,” DeRosa said in a statement.
- One of the 11 women, a Cuomo staffer who accuses the governor of groping her, has filed a criminal complaint. She spoke out in a pre-taped CBS interview earlier on Sunday, saying that “what he did to me was a crime.”
CBS THIS MORNING EXCLUSIVE: The aide who accused NY Gov. Cuomo of groping her speaks publicly for the first time: "What he did to me was a crime," Brittany Commisso tells @CBSThisMorning & @timesunion. "He broke the law." Watch Monday at 7a, only on CBS. https://t.co/W9SGPNSf1S pic.twitter.com/kRulD0ViUD
— CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) August 8, 2021
- Meanwhile, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) is quietly preparing to take the reins in case Cuomo resigns (which he has declared he will not do) or is impeached by the state Assembly (a majority of whom have said they support doing), according to the New York Times.
A Huge Wake-Up Call
Humans have driven global warming at an “unprecedented” speed and some of the changes are “irreversible,” according to an alarming new report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
- Limiting the warming to the 1.5°C threshold “will be beyond reach” unless “there are immediate, rapid, and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions,” one of the IPCC top officials warned.
- Other climate scientists also sounded the alarm over the report:
The new IPCC 6th Assessment Report (AR6) provides an unprecedented degree of clarity about the future of our planet, and the need to reduce – and ultimately eliminate – our emissions of greenhouse gases.
In this thread I take a look at some key findings from the report: 1/27
— Zeke Hausfather (@hausfath) August 9, 2021
Key analysis: “A Hotter Future Is Certain, Climate Panel Warns. But How Hot Is Up to Us.” – The New York Times
The State Of Texas Democrats’ Fight For Voting Rights
Twenty-two of the more than 50 Texas House Democrats who fled the state to kneecap the passage of their GOP colleagues’ anti-voting bill are suing Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and House Speaker Dade Phelan (R).
- The Democrats accuse Abbott (who has vowed to have them arrested) and Phelan (who has already signed a civil arrest warrant against one of the legislators) of violating their constitutional rights, including freedom of speech.
- The lawsuit seems to be largely symbolic; the Democrats are claiming only $15 dollars in damages overall.
Trump’s Brain Worms In Action
Trump: Could you imagine if I were President right now and we had this massive attack from the Coronavirus. You know they like to call it the, they have new names and they’ll have other new names but it’s exactly what we had. pic.twitter.com/HwAqce3S60
— Acyn (@Acyn) August 8, 2021
Your Much-Needed Dose Of Cute This AM
I’m in the market for a flying squirrel now pic.twitter.com/16N2tYvceW
— Justin?Boldaji (@justinboldaji) August 8, 2021
Senate Work To Pass Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill Continues Through Weekend
The Senate voted Saturday afternoon to end debate on the bipartisan infrastructure bill. What happens next is unclear — a number of disputes remain over amendments. Senators’ efforts to solve those could stretch into next week as the legislation moves slowly through procedural hurdles. Or it could all wrap up much sooner.
We’ll be keeping tabs below.
Biden Is Having His Cake and Eating It Too
The much-heralded bipartisan mini-bill actually seems on its way to passage in the Senate. On the critical (and mind-numbing) vote to allow a majority vote, 18 Republicans ended up voting in the affirmative. It now seems very likely that Biden will get his bipartisan deal while also managing to pass close to his entire fiscal, infrastructure and climate agenda. If that happens – and it is likely to happen notwithstanding a few more months of haggling and drama – it will be a major, major accomplishment.
Yet in a guest opinion piece Friday in The New York Times Alex Pareene argued that it is in fact a “pyrrhic victory in a broken Senate.” I’m almost never in the practice of responding to people in the Editors’ Blog. But I wanted to do so in this case because Pareene is a gifted writer and incisive political observer. So it’s important to explain why he’s wrong.
Continue reading “Biden Is Having His Cake and Eating It Too”