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Towards an Integrated Impact Assessment of Climate Change: The MINK Study

Title
Towards an Integrated Impact Assessment of Climate Change: The MINK Study [electronic resource] / edited by Norman J. Rosenberg.
ISBN
9789401120968
Published
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1993.
Physical Description
1 online resource.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
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Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
General circulation models state that the central United States (and other mid-latitude continental regions) will become warmer and drier as the result of greenhouse warming. On this premise the dustbowl period of the 1930s was selected as an analogue of climate change and its weather records imposed on the Missouri--Iowa--Kansas region to assess how current agriculture, forestry, water resources and energy and the entire regional economy would be affected. The same climate was also imposed on a MINK region forty years into the future, by which time climate change may actually be felt, to assess whether technological and societal change would alter the region's vulnerability to climate change. Another premise of the study was that people would not suffer the impacts of climate change passively, but would use availabe tools to ease the stress. The rising atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide, expected to be the major cause of greenhouse warming, also works to improve plant growth and reduce plant water use. So the effects of this `Co<sub>2</sub> fertilization' were also considered in the analysis. The results, some of them surprising, of this first, fully-integrated analysis of climate change impacts and responses are reported in this book.<br/>
Variant and related titles
Springer ebooks.
Other formats
Printed edition:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 06, 2013
Also listed under
SpringerLink (Online service)
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