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Climate Change and Great Lakes Water ResourcesSubmitted by Charles Frost on Wed, 12/05/2007 - 21:25.
Climate Change and Great Lakes Water Resources (a 44 page PDF), a new report from the National Wildlife Federation, looks at threats to the Great Lakes from global warming and water diversion, and concludes that states need to approve the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Executive Summary THE EARTH’S CLIMATE IS WARMING. This is the unequivocal conclusion of climate scientists. Despite the complexities of climatology, certain consistent themes emerge with implications for water availability: as the world gets warmer, it will experience increased regional variability in precipitation, more frequent heavy precipitation events, and will become more susceptible to drought.
These simple facts could have a profound impact on the
The science is compelling. Now the question for citizens and policymakers is whether existing laws and policies are adequate to protect the
Part I of this report focuses on how climate change will impact water resources. It begins with a brief summary of climate change science. It then explores what a changing climate will mean for the Great Lakes, including possible lowering of lake levels, impacts on fisheries and wildlife, changes in Taken together, the key findings of Part I present a major challenge to the • Spring and summer temperatures in the • According to one recent study, lake levels in Lake Michigan and
• Groundwater will be impacted, as aquifer levels and recharge rates are expected to drop;
• Lower lake levels and rising temperatures (both in the air and water) will significantly impact fisheries, wildlife, wetlands, shoreline habitat, and water quality in the Great Lakes region;
• Tourism and shipping, which are critically important to the region, are especially vulnerable to climate change impacts; and
• Water shortages in other regions will raise the threat of Part II of this report focuses on policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change and to adapt to the unavoidable impacts on water resources. It begins with a brief summary of recommendations to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases which cause climate change. It then evaluates the adequacy of existing • Emphasize water conservation as water becomes more scarce and valuable;
• Protect aquatic habitat for fisheries and wildlife in changing conditions;
• Provide strong legal protections against diversions of
• Create regional governance institutions that can help adaptively manage water resources as new scientific information becomes available. The report concludes by examining how the Great Lakes compact gives the region an opportunity to make these improvements in water resource policy and better protect the
This is a 44 page PDF file, that might take a while to download...
From:
Via: http://planning.co.cuyahoga.oh.us/blog/
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Revisit Steven Litt's blog
We all have our personal philosophies. I like Steven Litt's on WATER.
I don't know who mnorman is and I don't understand how the PD's electronic format works, but I hope that this is his philosophy.
Tip for Steven Litt
Interesting way to end his first posting (the mnorman thing is obviously a process glitch over there, big surprise)... but I like Litt... he really deserves great credit for raising awareness about the I-90 bridge, and Breuer, and other important environmental and arts and culture issues, against the editorial tide of the PD. He is really about the most sophisticated voice at the PD... big surprise he is from the NYNY area... Westchester, no less.
Tip, Steven... the CIA Gund is in play.
Disrupt IT
Living in the area i am