The Columbus Dispatch

Earth’s warming no cause for jokes

- The Washington Post

‘What the hell is going on with Global Waming?” President Donald Trump tweeted last week in the midst of a cold snap. “Please come back fast, we need you!”

If Trump had consulted scientists in the government he works for, they could have helped with his basic understand­ing, as well as his spelling: The warming of the Earth is unmistakab­le, as seen in a global temperatur­e record that offers no reason for laughter.

Experts from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion announced Wednesday that 2018 was the fourth-warmest year on record, according to two separate estimates, one from each agency.

A single year’s temperatur­e readings do not constitute a trend. But there is a trend. The five warmest years have come in the past five years. Eighteen of the 19 warmest years on record have come since the beginning of this century.

That 2018 did not quite match the record-setting 2016 for warmth is in part because a warming El Niño effect in 2016 raised temperatur­es even higher than human influence alone would have. By contrast, 2018 saw a cooling La Niña and was still fourth-warmest.

The overall direction is relentless: This decade will be warmer than the last, which was warmer than the one before it, and so on.

As more and more of their prediction­s have come true, scientists have become more confident in their models — and more alarmed. Some effects of climate change remain difficult to predict or plan for. Warming could even contribute to cold snaps such as the one that prompted Trump to mock climate science on Twitter last week.

Other effects are all too predictabl­e: rising seas, stronger storms, more heat waves, more droughts, more flooding, invasive species, the proliferat­ion of disease, depleted fisheries, dying ecosystems, more-acidic oceans, crop failures, mass migrations, days so hot that people cannot work.

Experts warn that Americans likely are already feeling global warming’s influence in the super-wet storms that have pummeled places such as Houston, feeding on extremely warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico.

In the face of ever-rising evidence, the president did not even mention climate change in Tuesday’s State of the Union address. His administra­tion still intends to remove the United States from the Paris climate agreement, the world’s best hope to get all major contributi­ng countries moving in the same direction.

While the Trump administra­tion ripped up clean-air rules, U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions shot up 3.4 percent last year, putting the lie to the argument that market forces alone will adequately drive down the country’s carbon footprint.

Some Democrats, meanwhile, have announced a “Green New Deal” whose goal seems to be radically reshaping U.S. society and vastly expanding government rather than simply addressing the climate problem, which is hard enough — and important enough. Though not nearly as harmful as Mr. Trump’s rank denialism, engaging in this sort of fantasy also hurts the cause of practicall­y addressing the issue.

The world needs rational U.S. leadership. Unfortunat­ely, global warming will not stop in the meantime.

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