National Geographic Reports: The Challenge of Climate Change
Sunday, April 20 and Monday, April 21, 2008 at 7:30 p.m.order tickets
Dennis Dimick (top); a coal-fired power plant (bottom) Photographs by Mark Thiessen (top), and Peter Essick (bottom)
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.
View a page from our hardcopy brochure describing this event.
Location
Tickets
S. Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium
Benaroya Hall
200 University Street
Seattle, WA