Puget Sound Community Change (PSCC)

Shop Locally, Share Locally

This group (home page) is focused on bringing more mindfullness to the marketplace and promotes shopping at locally owned and sustainability-minded businesses by rewarding customers and donating to their favorite causes. The program directs money to local non-profits and businesses and creates a way for citizen-consumers to make choices about their spending ...learn more

GROUP DETAILS

Created: Sep 16, 2007

Updated: Nov 01, 2009

Membership: Open

Public

 
Created: Jan 16, 2008
Updated: Mar 24, 2008
Viewed: 306 times
Page Status: active
  •  
Not Yet Rated

The Challenge of Climate Change: National Geographic Live

Event Info   Edit

Start time: Sun, Apr 20, 2008 17:30
 
End time: Mon, Apr 21, 2008 20:30
 
Type: Lecture/Talk
 
Website: www.nglive.org
 
Address: 200 University Street Seattle
Benaroya Hall
Seattle, Washington
United States
 

Network [Add] · [List] · [Visualize]

Connected with 0 organizations
Connected with 0 people
Connected with 0 resources
Connected with 0 solutions
Connected with 0 jobs
Connected with 0 events
Connected with 0 wikipages

 

About  [Edit]


National Geographic Reports: The Challenge of Climate Change

It is nearly impossible to read a newspaper or magazine, listen to the radio, or watch the nightly news without encountering at least one mention of climate change. For years, melting glaciers and ice caps, cataclysmic storms, rising seas, and longer, hotter summers have fueled concerns that our planet is warming, and prompted heated debate among politicians, scientists, journalists and ordinary citizens.

Quietly, below the roar of the crowd, National Geographic has been documenting the effects of climate change and its many contributing factors, and modeling the potentially devastating consequences for our environment and societies around the world.

This event, the first in a new series called National Geographic Reports, will bring to the stage years of in-depth nonpartisan reporting and analysis into the issues of climate change. National Geographic Executive Editor Dennis Dimick has overseen this coverage and reporting, working side by side with senior writers, photographers, scientists, and research teams as they gathered and analyzed the data.

In a sweeping visual journey, Dimick shares highlights of these scientific reports, magazine features, and data recovered from decades spent tracking carbon emissions, sea levels, air and water temperatures, and fuel consumption. He explains in layman’s terms the crux of climate change, and most importantly, what we—as individuals, as families, as communities, as companies, and as a nation—can do to reverse the trends.

www.nglive.org 

Comments

Login to Post a Comment.


Contributors to this Page