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Scientists critical of Christie’s dismissive remarks on climate change

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Leading up to Sandy, New Jersey had experienced 21 consecutive months of above-average temperatures, and the above-normal surface water temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean off the Jersey coast last October provided Sandy with more energy at a time when it otherwise would have started to weaken.

“What we saw with Sandy is clearly consistent with what the scientific community has been warning for a decade or more,” said Antonio Busalacchi, director of the Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center at the University of Maryland.

And it’s only going to get worse.

Sea levels are expected to rise a foot by 2050 and 3 feet by 2100, according to Ken Miller, an earth and planetary sciences expert at Rutgers University.

Scientists have been focusing on forecasting sea level rise on a regional basis such as the Eastern Seaboard, but have not yet come to any conclusions. Still, a state like New Jersey, which sustained $37 billion in damage from Sandy, would do well to prepare for more frequent “extreme events,” Busalacchi said.

“The climate of the past is not the climate of the future,” Busalacchi said. “We will be reliving the sins of the past if we do our planning based on what happened in the last 30 years rather than the next 30 years.”

There are still those who dismiss global warming or question whether humans are to blame for climate change, arguing that weather extremes are purely random or the computer models used to predict the changes are too crude. The vast majority of climate experts, however, call the evidence convincing.

Christie does not deny that climate change exists. While he vetoed a bill in 2011 that would have required New Jersey to rejoin a regional carbon cap-and-trade initiative intended to reduce greenhouse gases, he acknowledged that “the levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in our atmosphere are increasing, that climate change is real, that human activity plays a role in these changes and that these changes are impacting our state.”

Oppenheimer said he respected Christie for making that statement. “He avoided doing what many of his Republican colleagues do — dump all over the science,” Oppenheimer said. “I respect that a lot.”

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