Currently in D.C. — October 27, 2023: Happy and hooooottt Halloween weekend

Plus, a scary new prognosis for ice in Antarctica.

The weather, currently.

Partly cloudy

Holy cow! A hot summer day crept into October’s chill. All week the temperature has been gradually rising and today and Saturday reaches its climax with highs of 81°F and 84°F degrees respectively. I guess it’s time to put the hoodies aside and turn on the fans again. And that’s not the only way in which the weather is temperamental. Today we face a cloudy day with the sun fully breaking for over an hour around 5 o'clock. On the other hand, Saturday will be sunny almost all day long.

John Ruskin once said: “There is no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather.“ With all do respect, Mr. Ruskin, I’m not sure that 84°F are suitable for a weekend Halloween party, but oh well. Maybe I'll disguise myself as a lifeguard.

What you need to know, currently.

Ocean warming will triple for the rest of this century near the vulnerable West Antarctica ice sheet, according to a new study out this week. Even more worrying, over the next ~20 years, there is no statistical difference between the course global emissions take and the melt rates of key ice shelves which hold back enormous Antarctic glaciers.

Here’s more, from The Guardian:

Accelerated ice melt in west Antarctica is inevitable for the rest of the century no matter how much carbon emissions are cut, research indicates. The implications for sea level rise are “dire”, scientists say, and mean some coastal cities may have to be abandoned.

The ice sheet of west Antarctica would push up the oceans by 5 metres if lost completely. Previous studies have suggested it is doomed to collapse over the course of centuries, but the new study shows that even drastic emissions cuts in the coming decades will not slow the melting.

It’s times like these that I always refer back to the original scientists that conduct these important studies. In this case, I’ll give the final word to Kaitlin Naughten, the scientist for the British Antarctic Survey that led the study’s research: “I would hate for people to read this story and think “we should give up on climate action, we’re all doomed anyway”. We must remember that West Antarctica is just one cause of sea level rise, and sea level rise is just one impact of climate change.”

Basically: It is never, ever too late.

Naughten’s parallel essay on her team’s findings is worth a read for everyone — and a worthy call to courage in a time of bad climate news.

What you can do, currently.

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