In The News

Walter Gibbs October 12, 2007
As an issue, global warming has gained new prominence, with the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore, former US vice president, and the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The UN committee is a network of more than 2,000 scientists who have researched the issue for more than 20 years. The award serves as a vindication of science over the skeptics on global warming and could spur...
Colin Woodard October 8, 2007
Rising average temperatures may transform life for millions over the coming decades, and dramatic changes in Greenland, near the Arctic Circle, could foreshadow some of the turmoil for the rest of the world. For centuries, the island's residents lived off ice fishing and seal hunting, accessing resources by dog sledding across the frozen sea. Today, however, climate change has thinned the...
Jim Yardley October 2, 2007
China teeters on the edge of a water crisis. The country has five times the population of the United States, but less water, with the bulk of that supply in the south. Past policy mistakes, a dense population, climate change and galloping economic growth has shrunk China’s water supply. Agricultural irrigation accounts for most water usage, and pollution taints sources nationwide. The...
Mira Kamdar September 28, 2007
Increased consumption by rich and newly rich nations combined with effects of climate change set the stage for a global food crisis. Decreased supplies of world dietary staples like wheat, corn and rice have already increased prices significantly this year, and a few nervous governments brace for possible social unrest by hungry citizens. In this second article of a two-part series that explores...
Chrystia Freeland September 28, 2007
Contrary to a recent United Nations report that the fight against global warming will be costly, former US President Bill Clinton argues that a serious and ambitious program will save money and create jobs. For example, businesses investing in new, energy-efficient technology can dramatically decrease their utilities costs. Other analysts have also noted that the costs of future natural disasters...
Chandrashekhar Dasgupta September 26, 2007
Although climate change has been brought about largely by development in industrialized rich nations, it will impose the most hardship on the poorest countries. In the first article of this two-part series, Ambassador Chandrashekhar Dasgupta of India argues that accelerated social and economic development may offer the only hope for poor nations who have a long way to go in adapting to climate...
Anwen Roberts September 19, 2007
As evidence of climate change continues to mount, international legal experts now debate liability. Climate-change law matters for the residents of low-lying island nations such as Tuvalu, in the southeast Pacific. If sea levels continue to rise at rates reported in recent years, Tuvalu country will go underwater in 50 years. International law is ill equipped to handle massive numbers of...