RevolutionSliderError:SliderwithaliasHomeBannernotfound.Maybeyoumean:'spring-2018'or'fall-2017'or'spring-2017'or'fall-2015'or'summer-2017'or'spring-2016'jQuery(document).ready(function(){jQuery(".rev_slider").show();});Editor’sNoteThisnarrativebyNathanielRichisaworkofhistory,addressingthe10-yearperiodfrom1979to1989:thedecisivedecadewhenhumankindfirstcametoabroadunderstandingofthecausesanddangersofclimatechange.Complementingthetextisaseriesofaerialphotographsandvideos,allshotoverthepastyearbyGeorgeSteinmetz.WithsupportfromthePulitzerCenter,thistwo-partarticleisbasedon18monthsofreportingandwelloverahundredinterviews.IttrackstheeffortsofasmallgroupofAmericanscientists,activistspoliticianstoraisethealarmandstaveoffcatastrophe.Itwillcomeasarevelationtomanyreaders—anagonizingrevelation—tounderstandhowthoroughlytheygraspedtheproblemandhowclosetheycametosolvingit.JakeSilversteinTheworldhaswarmedmorethanonedegreeCelsiussincetheIndustrialRevolution.TheParisclimateagreement—thenonbinding,unenforceableandalreadyunheededtreatysignedonEarthDayin2016—hopedtorestrictwarmingtotwodegrees.Theoddsofsucceeding,accordingtoarecentstudybasedoncurrentemissionstrends,areonein20.Ifbysomemiracleweareabletolimitwarmingtotwodegrees,wewillonlyhavetonegotiatetheextinctionoftheworld’stropicalreefs,sea-levelriseofseveralmetersandtheabandonmentofthePersianGulf.TheclimatescientistJamesHansenhascalledtwo-degreewarming“aprescriptionforlong-termdisaster.”Long-termdisasterisnowthebest-casescenario.Three-degreewarmingisaprescriptionforshort-termdisaster:forestsintheArcticandthelossofmostcoastalcities.RobertWatson,aformerdirectoroftheUnitedNationsIntergovernmentalPanelonClimateChange,hasarguedthatthree-degreewarmingistherealisticminimum.Fourdegrees:Europeinpermanentdrought;vastareasofChina,IndiaandBangladeshclaimedbydesert;Polynesiaswallowedbythesea;theColoradoRiverthinnedtoatrickle;theAmericanSouthwestlargelyuninhabitable.Theprospectofafive-degreewarminghaspromptedsomeoftheworld’sleadingclimatescientiststowarnoftheendofhumancivilization.PartOne1979–1982ThefirstsuggestiontoRafePomerancethathumankindwasdestroyingtheconditionsnecessaryforitsownsurvivalcameonPage66ofthegovernmentpublicationEPA-600/7-78-019.Itwasatechnicalreportaboutcoal,boundinacoal-blackcoverwithbeigelettering—oneofmanysuchreportsthatlayinunevenpilesaroundPomerance’swindowlessofficeonthefirstflooroftheCapitolHilltownhousethat,inthelate1970s,servedastheWashingtonheadquartersofFriendsoftheEarth.Inthefinalparagraphofachapteronenvironmentalregulation,thecoalreport’sauthorsnotedthatthecontinueduseoffossilfuelsmight,withintwoorthreedecades,bringabout“significantanddamaging”changestotheglobalatmosphere.Pomerancepaused,startled,overtheorphanedparagraph.Itseemedtohavecomeoutofnowhere.Herereadit.Itmadenosensetohim.Pomerancewasnotascientist;hegraduatedfromCornell11yearsearlierwithadegreeinhistory.Hehadthetweedyappearanceofanundernourisheddoctoralstudentemergingatdawnfromthestacks.Heworehorn-rimmedglassesandathickishmustachethatwilteddisapprovinglyoverthecornersofhismouth,thoughhisdefiningcharacteristicwashisgratuitousheight,6feet4inches,whichseemedtoembarrasshim;hestoopedovertoaccommodatehisinterlocutors.Hehadanactivefacepronetobreakingoutinwide,evenmaniacalgrins,butincomposure,aswhenhereadthecoalpamphlet,itprojectedconcern.Hestruggledwithtechnicalreports.Heproceededasahistorianmight:cautiously,scrutinizingthesourcematerial,readingbetweenthelines.Whenthatfailed,hemadephonecalls,oftentotheauthorsofthereports,whotendedtobesurprisedtohearfromhim.Scientists,hehadfound,werenotinthehabitoffieldingquestionsfrompoliticallobbyists.Theywerenotinthehabitofthinkingaboutpolitics..vc_custom_1539166463038{margin-top:0px!important;border-top-width:0px!important;padding-top:0px!important;}.vc_custom_1537853680676{background-color:#000000!important;}.vc_custom_1537854322745{background-image:url(https://santaclaramaga.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/5mag-climate-archive-ss-slide-9PAW-superJumbo-v3.png?id=4436)!important;}.vc_custom_1537812571977{margin-top:0px!important;border-top-width:0px!important;padding-top:0px!important;}.vc_custom_1537854928421{padding-top:220px!important;padding-bottom:220px!important;}

Revolution Slider Error: Slider with alias HomeBanner not found.
Maybe you mean: 'spring-2018' or 'fall-2017' or 'spring-2017' or 'fall-2015' or 'summer-2017' or 'spring-2016'

Editor’s Note
This narrative by Nathaniel Rich is a work of history, addressing the 10-year period from 1979 to 1989: the decisive decade when humankind first came to a broad understanding of the causes and dangers of climate change. Complementing the text is a series of aerial photographs and videos, all shot over the past year by George Steinmetz. With support from the Pulitzer Center, this two-part article is based on 18 months of reporting and well over a hundred interviews. It tracks the efforts of a small group of American scientists, activists politicians to raise the alarm and stave off catastrophe. It will come as a revelation to many readers — an agonizing revelation — to understand how thoroughly they grasped the problem and how close they came to solving it. Jake Silverstein

The world has warmed more than one degree Celsius since the Industrial Revolution. The Paris climate agreement — the nonbinding, unenforceable and already unheeded treaty signed on Earth Day in 2016 — hoped to restrict warming to two degrees. The odds of succeeding, according to a recent study based on current emissions trends, are one in 20. If by some miracle we are able to limit warming to two degrees, we will only have to negotiate the extinction of the world’s tropical reefs, sea-level rise of several meters and the abandonment of the Persian Gulf. The climate scientist James Hansen has called two-degree warming “a prescription for long-term disaster.” Long-term disaster is now the best-case scenario. Three-degree warming is a prescription for short-term disaster: forests in the Arctic and the loss of most coastal cities. Robert Watson, a former director of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has argued that three-degree warming is the realistic minimum. Four degrees: Europe in permanent drought; vast areas of China, India and Bangladesh claimed by desert; Polynesia swallowed by the sea; the Colorado River thinned to a trickle; the American Southwest largely uninhabitable. The prospect of a five-degree warming has prompted some of the world’s leading climate scientists to warn of the end of human civilization.

Part One
1979–1982

The first suggestion to Rafe Pomerance that humankind was destroying the conditions necessary for its own survival came on Page 66 of the government publication EPA-600/7-78-019. It was a technical report about coal, bound in a coal-black cover with beige lettering — one of many such reports that lay in uneven piles around Pomerance’s windowless office on the first floor of the Capitol Hill townhouse that, in the late 1970s, served as the Washington headquarters of Friends of the Earth. In the final paragraph of a chapter on environmental regulation, the coal report’s authors noted that the continued use of fossil fuels might, within two or three decades, bring about “significant and damaging” changes to the global atmosphere.

Pomerance paused, startled, over the orphaned paragraph. It seemed to have come out of nowhere. He reread it. It made no sense to him. Pomerance was not a scientist; he graduated from Cornell 11 years earlier with a degree in history. He had the tweedy appearance of an undernourished doctoral student emerging at dawn from the stacks. He wore horn-rimmed glasses and a thickish mustache that wilted disapprovingly over the corners of his mouth, though his defining characteristic was his gratuitous height, 6 feet 4 inches, which seemed to embarrass him; he stooped over to accommodate his interlocutors. He had an active face prone to breaking out in wide, even maniacal grins, but in composure, as when he read the coal pamphlet, it projected concern. He struggled with technical reports. He proceeded as a historian might: cautiously, scrutinizing the source material, reading between the lines. When that failed, he made phone calls, often to the authors of the reports, who tended to be surprised to hear from him. Scientists, he had found, were not in the habit of fielding questions from political lobbyists. They were not in the habit of thinking about politics.

Seed Grants
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Headquartered down the road in San Carlos, Village Enterprise has been alleviating poverty in rural East Africa since 1987.

Silence Broken
Silence Broken

It was the story of the decade, a scandal of shocking proportions. Producer Blye Faust ’97 helped bring it to the silver screen, where it’s drawn rave reviews.

The Call
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A peek behind the curtains—to top secret aerospace research, the Hubble Telescope, and Steve Jobs’ living room.

Going to BAT
Going to BAT

His Major League Baseball career is in the past, but Randy Winn ’96 is still stepping up to the plate to help the entire baseball family.

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Back porch blues
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A generous anonymous couple from the classes of ’72 and ’73 offered half a million dollars as a challenge and asked: Could 4,000 Broncos give a little something on March 18, the Day of Giving?

We Are Giants
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Five Broncos earned the 2014 World Series ring. For some, it’s their third.

Man in Black
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Daniel S. Hendrickson, S.J., M.Div. ’06 takes charge as Creighton University’s 25th president.

Natural Law
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John Cruden J.D. ’74 becomes assistant attorney general for the Department of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.

Fair and Just
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Risë Jones Pichon ’73, J.D. ’76 becomes presiding judge for the Santa Clara County Superior Court.