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The United Nations has released a new report warning that the world could be on the path to catastrophic climate change. Chandra Lanier of Veuer has history.
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The federal government will release a major report on climate change – Volume II of the National Climate Assessment – Black Friday, usually one of the slowest days of the year.

"It's an absolute shame to bury the truth about climate impacts over the course of a year that has seen the deaths of hundreds of Americans in mega-funds, hurricanes, floods and algae blooms. devastating, "said National Wildlife Federation President Collin O'Mara.

Volume II is The program is expected to detail the current and future impacts of climate change and warn again that the Earth is warming, that humans are causing it and that already serious impacts, such as forest fires in California, will only worsen, said Climate Central.

The new report should also focus more on the region, as demand for local information on risks and consequences increases, said Bernadette Woods Placky, chief meteorologist at Climate Central.

The report is also expected to contain a new chapter focusing exclusively on the Caribbean territories of the United States, such as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

President Donald Trump, a skeptic of climate change, went on Wednesday night on Twitter to express his doubts, taking for example the particularly cold Thanksgiving forecasts.

"The cold, prolonged blast could shatter ALL THE RECORDS – What about global warming?" the president tweeted.

Volume I of the report was published a year ago. It described the current understanding of the science behind climate change and was described as the largest and most comprehensive report on the United States ever published on our warming world.

As Congress mandated for the first time in the late 1980s, the assessment is prepared every four years by the nation's leading scientists from 13 agencies. This is designed as a reference for the President, Congress and the public.

The World Resources Institute said that "it will be a valuable tool for leaders who want to protect their citizens".

Why publish it on what is practically a national holiday? Perhaps because "we know that climate change is not a priority for this administration," Placky said. In 2017, President Donald Trump announced his intention to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate agreement, which requires countries to set ambitious targets to reduce the greenhouse gases responsible for global warming. of the planet.

Once, he also tweeted that global warming was a "hoax".

Placky also recalled that the previous assessment, in 2014, had been released by President Barack Obama with a huge deployment to the White House.

O 'Mara, of the Wildlife Federation, said that "the publication of the National Climate Assessment on Black Friday will not escape the fact that authorities continue to identify the bodies in the unprecedented mega-fairs of California, We continue to recover debris from hurricanes Florence and Michael and typhoon Yutu, aggravated by climate change. "

Meteorologist Angela Fritz with the meteorological group of the capital, asked: "Is there any way to hide it more? And New Year's Eve at 9 pm, guys?"

NOAA Research Meteorologist Harold Brooks "Other than Christmas Eve or New Year's Eve, could there be a worse day of the year to free it?"

The Thanksgiving-holiday release arrives more than two weeks earlier than the initial release planned at the American Geophysical Union's annual conference in December, according to Climate Nexus.

Another possible reason for publishing a report on global warming this Friday could be because the weather will be almost record in the heavily populated and saturated North American media.

The report will be published at 2 pm EST Friday.

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