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emahlee's profile
Emily Cunningham
Emily Cunningham
Emily Cunningham
@emahlee

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Emily Cunningham

@emahlee

Founding member of @AMZNforclimate. UX designer calling for climate leadership from Amazon. Fired for raising the alarm about climate and covid-19. She/her.

dxʷdəwʔabš land
seattletimes.com/business/amazo…
Joined December 2008

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    1. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      "Most mainstream research into climate change focuses on the most likely scenario, not worst-case scenarios, leaving a lot of questions about those scenarios unanswered... Scientists don’t all agree, and that uncertainty creates room for the most shocking stories to go viral."

      2 replies 8 retweets 21 likes
      Show this thread
    2. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      Over the last few years, there has been a heavy emphasis on climate research studying impacts between 1.5C and 2C—mostly in anticipation of the IPCC report on that subject, which was published last October.

      2 replies 5 retweets 30 likes
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    3. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      Up until a year or two ago, there was hardly any coverage in the mainstream press on climate scenarios north of 2C—a level scientists of the world consider catastrophic, and island nations call "genocide."

      3 replies 12 retweets 38 likes
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    4. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      But 2C isn't a "likely" scenario—it's a tremendously optimistic scenario. Today we are on track for more than 4C by the end of the century—after which, warming could continue.

      4 replies 49 retweets 98 likes
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    5. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      Over the last 30 years, the world as a whole has done little to nothing to bend those curves downward. In fact, last year we added carbon to the atmosphere at an unprecedented rate. Every year is worse than the last.

      1 reply 17 retweets 72 likes
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    6. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      Writing about worst-case scenarios is useful (I've even done it: http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2017/07/climate-change-earth-too-hot-for-humans.html …). But 4C is not a worst-case; it is where we are headed.

      4 replies 54 retweets 98 likes
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    7. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      The upper-end of the UN's bell curve of possibilities puts the planet at 8C warmer by the end of the century—a worst-case outcome of a do-nothing carbon trajectory.

      1 reply 20 retweets 45 likes
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    8. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      4C may seem unthinkable, with such horrifying impacts we would like to believe the chances are vanishingly slim we get there. But while I think we will avoid that amount of warming, it is far from a worst case.

      3 replies 19 retweets 49 likes
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    9. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      That we often think of it that way is a reflection of just how tilted toward best-case and even beyond-bast-case most scientific research has been over the last few decades, when we did little in response.

      1 reply 10 retweets 43 likes
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    10. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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      Which is why, at this point, unfortunately, our likeliest outcomes are actually quite catastrophic, and catastrophic outcomes actually quite likely. (x/x)

      8 replies 24 retweets 66 likes
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      Emily Cunningham‏ @emahlee 14 Jun 2019
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      Replying to @dwallacewells @KelseyTuoc

      David, I agree with just about everything you wrote in this thread (even retweeting 3 of your points). But I take major issue and strongly disagree with your framing of "likeliest outcomes." @AlexSteffen has a pointed thread on this:

      3:43 PM - 14 Jun 2019
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      • Emily Cunningham
      2 replies 1 retweet 0 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Emily Cunningham‏ @emahlee 14 Jun 2019
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          Replying to @emahlee @dwallacewells and

          Emily Cunningham Retweeted Alex Steffen

          "There is no way in 2019 for American journalists to responsibly make odds on the likelihood of climate action."https://twitter.com/AlexSteffen/status/1093266094989533184 …

          Emily Cunningham added,

          Alex SteffenVerified account @AlexSteffen
          I'd like to make what may seem like a small point, but I actually think is a critically important one: There is no way in 2019 for American journalists to responsibly make odds on the likelihood of climate action. https://twitter.com/AlexSteffen/status/1093234590322327552 …
          Show this thread
          1 reply 3 retweets 4 likes
        3. Emily Cunningham‏ @emahlee 14 Jun 2019
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          Replying to @emahlee @dwallacewells and

          Emily Cunningham Retweeted Alex Steffen

          https://twitter.com/AlexSteffen/status/1093266948379443200 …

          Emily Cunningham added,

          Alex SteffenVerified account @AlexSteffen
          For starters, this is a passive-voice construction hiding an overtly subjective and non-specific assessment of the odds of climate action. You see this all the time in American climate reporting.
          Show this thread
          2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
        4. 3 more replies
        1. New conversation
        2. David Wallace-Wells‏ @dwallacewells 14 Jun 2019
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          Replying to @emahlee @KelseyTuoc @AlexSteffen

          I agree it’s a bit foolish to make particular predictions—so much about human response is uncertain. By “likely outcomes” I just mean the range of scenarios that lie between 2C (which I take to be roughly best-case) and 4C (where our current path takes us by 2100).

          1 reply 2 retweets 3 likes
        3. Alex Steffen‏Verified account @AlexSteffen 14 Jun 2019
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          Replying to @dwallacewells @emahlee @KelseyTuoc

          I agree that the consensus on 'currently likely' outcomes is something like 2.0º-4ºC. My point is that pundits often use past trendlines as evidence to predict we won't act, when we're in a discontinuity in which history is a poor guide, and climate politics is in wild flux.

          3 replies 5 retweets 12 likes
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