Saturday marks the 30th anniversary of James Hansen’s prophetic climate warning to Congress.
Commenting on the then-NASA scientist’s testimony, climate activist and author Bill McKibben said Hansen took “climate change out of the labs and into public,” and called him “the Paul Revere we desperately needed.”
“I would like to draw three main conclusions,” he told (pdf) a Senate Committee on June 23, 1988. “Number one, the Earth is warmer in 1988 than at any time in the history of instrumental measurements. Number two, the global warming is now large enough that we can ascribe with a high degree of confidence a cause and effect relationship to the greenhouse effect. And number three, our computer climate simulations indicate that the greenhouse effect is already large enough to begin to effect the probability of extreme events such as summer heat waves.”
That testimony, meteorologist Bob Henson noted this week, became front page news, and in so doing “the concept of global warming quickly entered public consciousness.”
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