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Obama Battles To Win Military Voters
Obama Battles To Win Military Voters

As Memorial Day weekend nears, veterans and the military vote …

Romney: Politics 'Sport For Old Guys'
Romney: Politics 'Sport For Old Guys'

Mitt Romney has revealed that his campaign gaffes "haunt" him …

IRS: Number of High-Income Households Falls
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The number of high-income households in the US fell in 2009 but…

Brick-and-Mortar Stores Push Anew for Online Sales Tax Collection
Retailers Push for Online Sales Tax

Brick-and-mortar retailers, facing tough competition from …

US Consumer Confidence Highest in 4 1/2 years
Consumer Confidence Hits 4.5-Year High

A better hiring outlook and lower gas prices pushed a measure …

UBS, Citigroup Lost $50 Million Due to Nasdaq's Facebook Glitches, Sources Say
Facebook Glitches May Have Cost $50M

The market-making arms of UBS and Citigroup suffered combined …

Apple CEO Cook Gives Up $75M in Stock Dividends
Apple CEO Skips $75M in Stock Dividends

Apple CEO Tim Cook is giving up $75 million in dividends on …

Gas Prices' Ninth Daily Drop Boon for Holiday Travel
Gas Prices' Drop Boon for Travel

The average price for a gallon of regular gas has fallen each …

US Stocks Fall, but Still Halt Three-Week Slide
US Stocks Halt Three-Week Slide

US stocks fell Friday as investors worried about signs of …

Typical CEO Made $9.6M Last Year, AP Study Finds
Study: Typical CEO Made $9.6M Last Year

Profits at big U.S. companies broke records last year, and so …

Study: Polar Bears Can Be Saved by Slower Arctic Melt

Updated: Thursday, 16 Dec 2010, 8:32 AM EST
Published : Thursday, 16 Dec 2010, 8:32 AM EST

(NewsCore) - Polar bears can be saved from extinction if carbon emissions are curbed over the next 20 years, a new study claimed, challenging the theory that the melting of Arctic sea ice could not be halted once temperatures rose beyond a certain point.

US federal and university scientists specializing in Arctic climate and polar bear ecology said Wednesday that instead of an unstoppable decline in ice, a linear -- and reversible -- reduction was more likely.

Previously, it was believed that there was a tipping point above which the retreat of Arctic ice would become unstoppable even if global temperatures subsequently stabilized. Under this projection, about two-thirds of the world’s 22,000 polar bears were predicted to be lost by mid-century.

But if carbon emissions drop during the next two decades, the polar bears’ habitat could be preserved, according to the research, published in the journal Nature.

“What we projected in 2007 was based on the usual greenhouse gas scenario,” said Steven Amstrup, an emeritus researcher with the US Geological Survey and a senior scientist with Polar Bears International. “That was a pretty dire outlook, but it didn’t consider the possibility of greenhouse gas mitigation.”

Cecilia Bitz, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Washington, said, “Our research offers a very promising, hopeful message, but it’s also an incentive for mitigating greenhouse emissions.”

However, some scientists said the new projections were too optimistic. “I wouldn’t say that we can rule out a tipping point, but it does show that a tipping point isn’t inevitable,” said Walt Meier, a senior scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colo.

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