martes, 6 de mayo de 2014

President Obama's Plan to Fight Climate Change | The White House

President Obama's Plan to Fight Climate Change | The White House



The White House, Washington
Hi, everyone --
Today, we released the third National Climate Assessment report, by far the most comprehensive look ever at climate change impacts in the United States.
Based on four years of work by hundreds of experts from government, academia, corporations, and public-interest organizations, the Assessment confirms abundant data and examples that climate change isn't some distant threat -- it's affecting us now.
Not only are the planet and the nation warming on average, but a number of types of extreme weather events linked to climate change have become more frequent or intense in many regions, including heat waves, droughts, heavy downpours, floods, and some kinds of destructive storms.
Those steps include, importantly, the three sets of actions making up the Climate Action Plan that President Obama announced last June: cutting carbon pollution in America; increasing preparedness for and resilience to the changes in climate that already are ongoing; and leading the international response to the climate change challenge.
We've made great progress in the year since his announcement -- but there's much more work to be done.
Learn more about the new National Climate Assessment report.
Thank you,
John
Dr. John P. Holdren
Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House

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