Flood myths are common to human culture. Swollen rivers, tidal
storms, and tsunamis make their appearance frequently in literature. But
Hurricane Sandy, which has drawn newly etched high-water marks on the
buildings of lower Manhattan (and Brooklyn), has shifted the discussion from storytelling to reality.
Volatility in climate has drawn the attention of policy makers for a decade. But as so often is the case, a dramatic event like superstorm Sandy – the largest storm to hit New York since the colonial era – has punctured the psyche of the densely populated East Coast, including the New York-Washington, DC axis where U.S. policy is made.
Read more: http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Renewable-Energy/Energy-Policy-in-a-Renewable-Future.html
Volatility in climate has drawn the attention of policy makers for a decade. But as so often is the case, a dramatic event like superstorm Sandy – the largest storm to hit New York since the colonial era – has punctured the psyche of the densely populated East Coast, including the New York-Washington, DC axis where U.S. policy is made.
Read more: http://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Renewable-Energy/Energy-Policy-in-a-Renewable-Future.html
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