All John Abraham wants is a civil discussion about global warming.
That's why on Tuesday morning he was sharing the airwaves with Jake Judd, a talk-show host on 1340 KDLM, Real Country News in Detroit Lakes, Minn., and self-professed skeptic on climate change.
By the end of the half-hour radio chat, civility won out. More important for Abraham, consensus across the vast divide between a skeptic and a climate scientist had been reached.
"All right, all right," Judd said. "No matter what side you are on, most people agree that Earth is warming and we have to do something about it."
Abraham, an associate professor at the University of St. Thomas, is part of a national movement among climate scientists and researchers who are stepping out of the ivory tower and into the harsh light of politics and the public debate around global warming. They say they are making an organized effort to take their certainty about the risk to the planet to the public -- before it's too late.
"We need to depolarize the debate," Abraham said. "As long as we are polarized, we are stalemated."
This week Abraham launched a "ready response team" website to quickly connect the news media to about 50 national experts on everything from polar bears to flooding in Pakistan to the influence of sun spots on the Earth's temperature.
At the same time, the American Geophysical Union, an international organization of geophysical researchers, established a similar bank of climate scientists to serve as experts on global warming. Late last week a group of influential scientists published a letter in the magazine Science calling for an independent public education initiative to effectively share information about climate change.