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Climate change - more dangerous than Al Qaida?The Pentagon asked one of their think tanks for a study on future dangers ...
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An interview with film director Roland Emmerich: Sitting in the cutting room, I thought, hopefully people will believe this story. And then I accidentially read in the ultra conservative American "Forbes"-Magazine a report about the Pentagon. They asked one of their think tanks to inquire, what might be the biggest threat in the near future. In first place: the climate turnover. Terrorism only made second place. In ice cores from the Arctic and Antarctica, which has given an insight into the climate of the last 100,000 years, they found indications for an abrupt climate change.
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The 'Pentagon - Study'In parallel to the film 'The day after tomorrow' a study made the headlines this year in February / March, which the Pentagon paid US$100,000 for. The topic: not military dangers but climate change. In the document with the subtitle 'Imagining the unthinkable' the authors regard the potential dangers of climate change as extremely high. Global warming could rather soon lead to a critical limit after which temperatures may drastically decrease. Some projections:
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The authors of the Pentagon report, Peter Schwarz and Doug Randall, are not climate experts. They are from the business sector and are used to developing scenarios for the future. For this study they interviewed climate scientists. However, they are not going to predict the future climate in the report 'Imaging the Unthinkable', but they are going to describe potential consequences, if the climate system should surprise us with unexpected dramatic changes. The idea that this surprise could be a strong cooling comes from the analysis of a climate event 8200 years ago. At that time, following a period of continuous warming, a significant cooling occurred, which lasted for about 100 years. Download:
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