Senate Majority Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has instructed Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) to produce a revamped climate bill as soon as possible, according to sources, a task Kerry
intends to accomplish within two weeks. (Washington Post)
California attorney general Jerry Brown is trying to sabotage the state anti-cap-and-trade ballot initiative by changing its name.
The ballot initiative would rollback the California cap-and-trade law (AB 32) pending a decline in state unemployment.
The original name of the ballot initiative was the:
California Jobs Initiative
The initiative’s new Brown-ized name is the:
Suspends Air Pollution Control Laws Requiring Major Polluters To Report And Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions That Cause Global Warming Until Unemployment Drops Below
Specified Level For Full Year Initiative
Imhofe: Pushing for a probe of what he sees as a costly hoax. AP View Enlarged Image
Climate Fraud: A senator wants an investigation of the false climate testimony before Congress and wants Al Gore to reappear. The illegalities may involve more than just
lying to Congress.
At a hearing Tuesday by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on the Environmental Protection Agency's budget, ranking Republican James Inhofe told EPA head Lisa
Jackson that man-induced climate change was a "hoax" concocted by ideologically motivated researchers who "cooked the science."
More than that, Inhofe, in releasing a GOP report questioning the science used to support cap-and-trade legislation, hinted that such activities may be part of a vast
criminal enterprise designed to bilk governments, taxpayers and investors while enriching those making the false claims.
In asking the administration to investigate what he called "the greatest scientific scandal of our generation," Inhofe called for Gore to be summoned to explain
and defend his earlier testimony in light of the Climate-gate e-mail scandal and admissions by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that its Fourth Assessment
Report (AR4) was essentially a work of fiction. (IBD)
Scientific scandals and record snowfalls have begun to melt away the congressional appetite for more global-warming regulations. On Sunday, to take the latest example, a
major scientific journal admitted that "oversights" compelled the retraction of its conclusion that sea levels were rising as a result of increased worldwide
temperatures. Reports of this sort make it increasingly difficult for members of Congress to enter iced-over districts to ask their constituents to make economic sacrifices in
an attempt to appease Mother Earth into favoring us with colder weather.
This does not mean, however, that the left has given up on global warming as a means of exerting more government control over the economy.
To avoid a potentially messy vote, President Obama's Environmental Protection Agency has turned to the administrative rule-making process to impose climate-control regulations.
In December, the agency made an "endangerment finding" that declared that six gases - including the carbon dioxide you are exhaling as you read this - are putting the
planet's well-being in peril. The first major rule based on this finding will be finalized next month.
President George W. Bush's EPA administrator, Stephen L. Johnson, warned that such a finding would result in a major government power grab. "[T]he potential regulation of
greenhouse gases under any portion of the Clean Air Act could result in an unprecedented expansion of EPA authority that would have a profound effect on virtually every sector
of the economy and touch every household in the land," he explained.
Fortunately, Mr. Obama's team might not get away with it. So far, 40 senators have signed on to an effort by Sen. Lisa A. Murkowski, Alaska Republican, to nullify the EPA
endangerment finding. Three Democrats have been willing to co-sponsor the legislation, but Senate sources suggest a number of others may be willing to vote for the bill when it
comes to the floor. (The Washington Times)
U.S. EPA will need increased funding for climate programs in future years as the agency moves forward on efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions, Administrator Lisa Jackson
said yesterday.
"I would expect that the needs would continue to grow as we move into a world -- either through legislation, hopefully through legislation, but possibly also with
regulation -- of increasing activity on climate change," Jackson told the House Interior and Environment Appropriations Subcommittee.
President Obama's fiscal 2011 request would allot $56 million -- including $43 million in new funding -- for regulatory programs to curb greenhouse gas emissions. The climate
funding was increased even as EPA's total budget was trimmed to $10 billion -- about $300 million lower than 2010 enacted levels.
The proposed increase in funding is aimed at aiding states as they begin to implement forthcoming greenhouse gas regulations and for EPA to develop new standards and pollution
control guidance. EPA is expected to roll out its first greenhouse gas regulations next month for cars and light duty vehicles; those rules will also trigger stationary source
regulations.
Despite the increased funding request, Jackson and other Obama administration officials continue to voice a preference for comprehensive energy and climate legislation over EPA
regulation.
While Jackson predicted that EPA will need even more cash for climate programs, the top Republican on the House panel questioned the proposed spending levels. ( Greenwire)
Rather than given blank checks the EPA should be expunged. Misanthropic ratbags.
I am part of the enquiry team who are investigating the theft of data from the UEA in Norwich last year.
As part of the investigation we would like to speak to everyone who has made any requests for information relating to the CRU at the UEA.
Records indicate that you made such a request last year and as a result I would like to discuss this and any other knowledge you may have with you at a convenient time.
Please can you contact me (I would suggest initially by e mail) leaving a contact number so that we can have a chat.
Some explanation of the rather surprising statements on FoI made by Sir Edward Acton and his colleagues in their submission to the Parliamentary Select Committee has
emerged. As noted in the previous post, Sir Edward said that no offence under the FoI had been established and that the evidence was prime facie in nature. Here is the
exact quote for reference
On 22 January 2010, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) released a statement to a journalist, which was widely misinterpreted in the media as a finding by the
ICO that UEA had breached Section 77 of the FOIA by withholding raw data. A subsequent letter to UEA from the ICO (29 January 2010) indicated that no breach of the
law has been established; that the evidence the ICO had in mind about whether there was a breach was no more than prima facie; and that the FOI
request at issue did not concern raw data but private email exchanges.
I've now had a chance to cast an eye over Sir Edward Acton's contribution to the Parliamentary Select Committee's inquiry into CRU. Like many commenters, I'm not impressed.
It's every man for himself
The contribution is billed as as being submitted by Sir Edward, "with additional comment provided, where indicated, by the University's Climatic Research Unit".
It's interesting to note, therefore, that the controversial sections are attributed to the CRU rather than to Sir Edward, so there's a strong hint that the UEA boss is not
confident enough of what Jones et al are saying to want to put his name against it. Joint and several liability is a dangerous thing when giving evidence to one's political
masters, it seems.
Judith Curry determined that the
recent scandals surrounding the climate science are just a problem with its image: the climate skeptics who used to be just shills for Big Oil and who could be dismissed -
because Big Oil is bad and no one needs oil, anyway ;-) - were suddenly transformed because they incorporated many open source software advocates who fight against the evil
commercial software industry (which is similar to Big Oil). It's the main change that occurred, according to Dr Curry.
She thinks it's enough to repaint the makeup so that the good, left-wing people are on the side of the alarm and the skeptics become the bad "deniers" once again, so
that the world is nice, simple, and black-and-white. Anthony Watts will surely help her to achieve this goal and the IPCC will return to the good old tracks, she thinks. ;-)
(See my reply to her opinions.
You may also read Climate Progress to find out that the
hardcore AGW activists' reaction to her essay is much less friendly than Watts' or mine.)
(I am using my own words and simplifications to make her text more entertaining but if you read it, the essence of her proposals is the same.) ... (The Reference Frame)
Judith Curry posted here on WUWT regarding
rebuilding the lost trust we used to have in climate science and climate scientists. This is my response to her post, an expansion and revision of what I wrote in the comments
on that thread.
First, be clear that I admire Judith Curry greatly. She is one of the very, very few mainstream climate scientists brave enough to enter into a public dialogue about these
issues. I salute her for her willingness to put her views on public display, and for tackling this difficult issue.
As is often my wont in trying to understand a long and complex dissertation, I first made my own digest of what Judith said. To do so, I condensed each of her paragraphs
into one or a few sentences. Here is that digest:
Digest of Judith Curry’s Post: On the Credibility of Climate Research, Part II: Towards Rebuilding Trust
In
parallel with Robert T. Watson, former chair of the IPCC, I have a piece over at Yale e360 on the IPCC. Watson argues that the IPCC
needs some minor tinkering but is otherwise sound. I call for more comprehensive reforms.
Please visit there, read both essays and then feel free to return here and ask questions or discuss. Here are a few short excerpts:
Watson: So does the IPCC process need to be significantly revised? I would argue no, that the IPCC is more
than capable of conducting rigorous and reliable assessments in an open, transparent, and inclusive manner. But the IPCC needs to regain its full and deserved credibility.
The procedures for the selection of authors and review editors and the peer-review process and approval of reports are all sound. What is needed is to tighten up the
implementation of these procedures, coupled with training of authors and review editors. The selected authors need to represent the full range of credible views, including
those of the skeptics, and must ensure that all statements are based on sound science and that the citations used contain convincing evidence.
Pielke: Standing up for climate science means openly supporting reform of the IPCC while underscoring its
institutional importance. The climate science community has failed to meet its own high standards. If the IPCC continues to pretend that things will soon get back to normal
or that it need only castigate its critics as deniers and skeptics, it will find that its credibility will continue to sink to new lows. It is time to reform the IPCC.
SINGAPORE - The pace of global warming continues unabated, scientists said on Thursday, despite images of Europe crippled by a deep freeze and parts of the United States
blasted by blizzards.
The bitter cold, with more intense winter weather forecast for March in parts of the United States, have led some to question if global warming has stalled.
Understanding the overall trend is crucial for estimating consumption of energy supplies, such as demand for winter heating oil in the U.S. northeast, and impacts on
agricultural production.
"It's not warming the same everywhere but it is really quite challenging to find places that haven't warmed in the past 50 years," veteran Australian climate
scientist Neville Nicholls told an online climate science media briefing. (Reuters)
LONDON/OSLO, Feb 25 - Climate scientists must do more to work out how exceptionally cold winters or a dip in world temperatures fit their theories of global warming, if they
are to persuade an increasingly sceptical public.
At stake is public belief that greenhouse gas emissions are warming the planet, and political momentum to act as governments struggle to agree a climate treaty which could
direct trillions of dollars into renewable energy, away from fossil fuels. (Reuters)
The
global warming began falling in Staten Island NY at 8 am their time (five hours behind the UK). By the time it has finished, perhaps by tomorrow morning, 12-14 inches may
have accumulated, whipped up by strong winds, possibly gusting to hurricane force.
Not under any conceivable circumstances however, are the warmists prepared to concede that this – or the exceptionally hard winter throughout the northern hemisphere – in
any way affects their beliefs.
Instead, we
hear tell that climate scientists must do more to work out how exceptionally cold winters or a dip in world temperatures fit their theories of global warming if they are to
persuade an increasingly sceptical public.
And there lies a brilliant illustration of exactly where the so-called science has gone completely off the rails. The mindset is focused on trying to make "inconvenient
truths" fit the hypothesis, rather than evaluating the new conditions to see if they refute it. (EU Referendum)
The Science and Public Policy Institute (SPPI) has released another paper
examining the surface temperature data adjustments by U.S. Government-funded scientists.
Both the Goddard Institute for Space Science (GISS), the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), have come under increasing scrutiny and criticism for their station
selections and the protocols used for adjusting raw data. The outcome of the on-going tampering with raw data is the appearance of significant warming in the
contiguous 48 States.
Writing in Contiguous U.S. Temperature Trends Using NCDC Raw and Adjusted Data for One-Per-State Rural and Urban Station Sets, Dr. Edward Long states, “The problem
would seem to be the methodologies engendered in treatment for a mix of urban and rural locations; that the ‘adjustment’ protocol appears to accent to a warming effect
rather than eliminate it. This, if correct, leaves serious doubt for whether the rate of increase in temperature found from the adjusted data is due to natural warming
trends or warming because of another reason, such as erroneous consideration of the effects of urban warming.” (TransWorldNews)
IPCC chief Rajendra Pachauri announced yesterday that the IPCC was working on a strategy to better police the experts who produce its studies, reports
the Wall Street Journal.
Pachauri said,
“We certainly don’t feel comfortable with the loss of even one iota of trust.”
So how many iotas are there in a sh**load, Raj?
Pachauri’s comments come in the wake of the cancellation of his high-profile visit to the US. He was scheduled to be a keynote speaker at the Wall Street Journal’s ECO-nomics
conference (March 3-5 in Santa Barbara) and at the energy conference CERAWEEK 2010 (March 8-12 in Houston).
In addition to Climategate, Pachauri is laboring under revelations of financial conflicts of interest between his heading the IPCC and his private consultancies/board
memberships/employment by renewable energy firms.
It could be, of course, that Pachauri simply couldn’t decide which of his custom-tailored suits to bring along on his trip — each of which costs about 10% of what the
average worker in India makes. (Green Hell)
In the next few days, the world's leading authority on global warming plans to roll out a strategy to tackle a tough problem: restoring its own bruised reputation.
A months-long crisis at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has upended the world's perception of global warming, after hacked emails and other disclosures revealed
deep divisions among scientists working with the United Nation-sponsored group. That has raised questions about the panel's objectivity in assessing one of today's most hotly
debated scientific fields.
The problem stems from the IPCC's thorny mission: Take sophisticated and sometimes inconclusive science, and boil it down to usable advice for lawmakers. To meet that goal,
scientists working with the IPCC say they sometimes faced institutional bias toward oversimplification, a Wall Street Journal examination shows. (WSJ)
The IPCC has made the "problem" excessively complex. The real question is whether the world is warmer or cooler than should be expected (you need
to know this before you know whether it is warming or recovering from excessive cold). The only factual answer at present is that we do not know and can not know until we
properly determine earth's albedo under various natural cycle phases and that is likely going to take centuries. In the meantime get on with life and stop the absurd assault
on carbon.
The plight of the Mongolian population, which is struggling through one of the worst winters in
living memory, has at last been officially recognised. According to The
Guardian - the only newspaper so far to record the event – the UN has launched a $4m appeal to clear up livestock killed by the big freeze in the country.
Rather than give money directly, creating a dependency culture, nomads are to be paid to collect and bury the carcases of animals killed by the cold, with a view to preventing
disease and soil contamination.
The appeal comes after officials in Mongolia have
declared more than half of the impoverished country a disaster area. So far, at least 2.5 million livestock have perished after weeks of persistent snow and temperatures
below minus 50°C.
On current government estimates, three million more animals will die before the cold weather ends in June and the total economic losses so far are put at $62 million. Nearly
two-thirds of the country has been buried under eight to 16 inches of hard-frozen snow, making grazing impossible for the country's herds of cows, yaks, goats, sheep, horses
and camels.
As we have already noted, the slow response to this disaster – which has been completely ignored by UK charities - contrasts
unfavourably with the concern shown by Oxfam for supposed climate change-related problems in the region.
One might have thought, therefore, that some alarm might be expressed about how charities dedicated to humanitarian relief are allowing their obsession with global warming to
detract from their core mission.
That, however, does not seem to have occurred to Greg Clark, Conservative shadow secretary for energy and climate change. Recently addressing the National Council for Voluntary
Organisations (NCVO) annual conference, he told delegates that all organisations
must make climate change central to their operations.
Charities have an important role to play in "humanising" climate change and showing the public how it is affecting populations, he said, acknowledging that
campaigning and advocacy as a crucial role for charities dealing with climate change. He wants charities to take a lead role in raising awareness of climate issues.
More than content to see efforts thus diverted, Clark was evidently unconcerned at the modest amounts being directed to major disasters such as that affecting Mongolia,
heedless of the billions being expended on climate change, much of it totally
wasted.
Even a fraction of the amount spent by the UK government on carbon
credits to keep civil servants warm would resolve the immediate problems in Mongolia, and perhaps help keep some children alive.
However, such is the mood of the age that we must learn to live with a new aphorism, that "charity begins with climate change". The likes of Greg Clark would
obviously agree. (EU Referendum)
CUPERTINO, Calif.--The presence of one of the world's pre-eminent environmentalists at Apple's shareholder meeting Thursday was the subject of much of the morning's pointed
discussion.
As expected, Apple's attitude on environmental and sustainability issues was one of the main concerns of the stockholders present Thursday, followed closely by the company's
immense pile of cash. But early harsh comments about former Vice President Al Gore's record set the tone.
Gore was seated in the first row, along with his six fellow board members, in Apple's Town Hall auditorium as several stockholders took turns either bashing or praising his
high-profile views on climate change. (CNET News)
In this weeks Round-Up you can vote for your favorite deadly gas, discover the pure joy of milk in a bag and learn the correct way to use a saucepan on a polar bear. I’m
not kidding. (Daily Bayonet)
AN iceberg the size of Luxembourg knocked loose from the Antarctic continent earlier this month could disrupt the ocean currents driving weather patterns around the globe,
researchers said.
While the impact would not be felt for decades or longer, a slowdown in the production of colder, dense water could result in less temperate winters in the north Atlantic, they
said.
The 2550 sq km block broke off on February 12 or 13 from the Mertz Glacier Tongue, a 160km spit of floating ice protruding into the Southern Ocean from East Antarctica due
south of Melbourne, researchers said.
Some 400m thick, the iceberg could fill Sydney Harbour more than 100 times over.
It could also disturb the area's exceptionally rich biodiversity, including a major colony of emperor penguins near Dumont d'Urville, site of a French scientific station,
according to the scientists.
"The ice tongue was almost broken already. It was hanging like a loose tooth,'' French glaciologist Benoit Legresy said.
Mr Legresy has been monitoring the Metz Glacier via satellite images and on the ground for a decade in cooperation with Australian scientists.
The billion-tonne mass was dislodged by another, older iceberg, known as B9B, which split off in 1987.
Jammed against the Antarctic continent for more than 20 years, B9B smashed into the Metz tongue like a slow-motion battering ram after it began to drift.
Both natural cycles and manmade climate change contribute to the collapse ice shelves and glaciers.
Tide and ocean currents constantly beat against exposed areas, while longer summers and rising temperatures also take a toll. (AFP)
The explorer Pen Hadow is mounting a new expedition to the Arctic to research “climate change's evil twin” – the acidification of the oceans caused by emissions of
carbon dioxide. (The Independent)
THERE was no apocalypse, no climate cataclysm. No change in our weather patterns.
Zilch. Nada. A big fat nothing.
But Sydney householders have still been hit with the bill for climate change disasters that never happened.
Your insurance premiums were mercilessly hiked last year, some by as much as 10 per cent, in preparation for what insurance experts labelled the "perfect storm" - a
series of severe weather occurrences that were meant to pound our roofs and cars with rockmelon-sized hailstones, flood our lounge rooms knee-deep and leave us corner-bound,
cowering from the environment's wrath.
Good trick, wasn't it?
Nothing like a scare campaign to empty wallets. The beneficiaries, insurance firms that boosted rates during an economic meltdown, are now rolling in cash. (Andrew Carswell,
The Daily Telegraph)
LONDON - Carbon dioxide emissions by companies regulated under the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme fell by 11 percent last year in the wake of the economic
downturn, analysts said on Thursday.
Emissions by heavy industry across the 27-nation bloc fell to 1.886 billion tonnes in 2009, 233 million lower than the previous year, Point Carbon estimated.
The drop means there was a surplus in allocated EU carbon permits of 77 million tonnes, Point Carbon added. (Reuters)
An article today in BRIDGES Weekly Trade News Digest (What? You don’t subscribe??) contains an explicit
rejection by India’s trade minister of the idea that carbon border tax adjustments belong in the WTO’s agenda. Border tax adjustments in this context refers to de
facto tariffs that would “level the playing field” for domestic producers competing with foreign producers not subject to climate change policies of an equivalent
rigour, also called “border carbon adjustments” or variations on that theme.
While Minister Khullar predicts that these sorts of measures will be in place in 2-3 years time, he rejects that the WTO is the forum to deal with environmental issues.
Furthermore, countries introducing such measures can expect litigation:
India and other developing countries will undoubtedly challenge the true impetus behind the [border carbon adjustment] measures.
“Such measures imposing restrictions on imports on the grounds of providing a ‘level playing field’, or maintaining the ‘competitiveness’ of the domestic
industry, etc are likely to be viewed as mere protectionist measures by the developed world to block the exports of the poorer nations,” [a recent report from an
Indian think-tank closely connected with the Indian government] reads. “This is because there is little empirical evidence that companies relocate to take advantage of lax
pollution controls.”
The [report] argues that such unilateral trade measures will inevitably lead to tit-for-tat trade retaliation that could spiral into an all-out trade war. Such warnings
have also been raised by China and several think tanks following the issue.
NUSA DUA, Indonesia, Feb 25 - Developing countries could in future earn money from reducing carbon emissions by protecting oceans and marine ecosystems, a top U.N. official
said on Thursday.
Sea grasses, mangroves and salt marshes naturally store huge amounts of carbon but this is released as greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, when wetlands are drained or
disturbed.
The head of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Achim Steiner, said a combination of public and private funds could be used to pay poor countries to repair and
preserve carbon-rich marine environments.
"Do I believe that one day we might see a market for ocean-based carbon storage? I would say, at this point, why not?," Steiner told reporters at a UNEP conference in
Nusa Dua, on the Indonesian island of Bali. (Reuters)
When no feedbacks are included, the greenhouse effect caused by CO2 adds about 1.2 °C per doubling of the CO2 concentration. This is a result of a rather clean physics
problem. There's no real "complexity" in this problem: we reduce the Earth to a pretty manageable differential equation.
The doubling from the pre-industrial concentration of 280 ppm to 560 ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere will occur slightly before 2100, assuming business as usual. If the figure 1.2
°C were the total answer, and assuming that the mankind has caused the whole 0.6-0.8 °C of the warming we may have seen in the last century or so, it would mean that 0.4-0.6
°C of man-made warming would be left by 2100 - less than the innocent 20th century change.
That's a completely unspectacular change. So this elementary greenhouse effect is not enough for the "applications" of the physical effect in policymaking. The
advocates of carbon regulation and threats depend on some amplification of the man-made greenhouse effect, i.e. positive feedbacks. The IPCC would like the warming per the CO2
doubling to go as high as 5 °C and some people would be thrilled to see even higher figures - that seem to completely disagree with the small rate of the recent warming.
Feedbacks: geometric series
Imagine that you add some CO2. That changes the temperature by the "bare mechanism" of the greenhouse effect. But the modified temperature also changes some other
things in the climate that may change the temperature again. These "second round" effects are called the feedbacks and they may change the temperature in both
directions.
If you would like a demonstration of functional feedback try our feature: How do
they get a lot of warming from a little gas? with its interactive calculation forms. You'll seen see why "positive and high can not apply" when it comes to
the dreaded climate feedback.
Svensmarks Cosmic Ray Theory. TOP: If the sun's magnetic field is weak it allows more cosmic rays, which may seed more clouds on Earth. BOTTOM: A strong solar magnetic
field blocks the same rays and could mean less clouds and clearer skies.
People have known for 200 years that there’s some link between sunspots and our climate. In 1800, the astronomer William Herschel didn’t need a climate model, he
didn’t even have a calculator — yet he could see that wheat prices rose and fell in time with the sunspot cycle. Since then, people have noticed that rainfall patterns are
also linked to sunspots.
Sunspots themselves don’t make much difference to us, but they are a sign of how weak or strong the sun’s magnetic field is. This massive solar magnetic field reaches
out around the Earth, and it shields us from cosmic rays. Dr Henrik Svensmark has suggested that if more cosmic rays reach further down into our atmosphere, they might ionize
molecules and help “seed” more clouds.
As it happens, this year, the sun has almost no sunspots, but for much of the late 20th Century, the solar magnetic field was extremely active. If the theory is right, an
active field means a warming earth with fewer clouds. A quiet sun though, means a cooler earth with more clouds. More
» (Jo Nova)
If climate is not a random walk, then we can predict climate if we understand what drives it. The energy that stops the Earth from looking like Pluto comes from the
Sun, and the level and type of that energy does change. So the Sun is a good place to start if we want to be able to predict climate. To put that into context,
let’s look at what the Sun has done recently. This is a figure from “Century to millenial-scale
temperature variations for the last two thousand years indicated from glacial geologic records of Southern Alaska” G.C.Wiles, D.J.Barclay, P.E.Calkin and T.V.Lowell 2007:
The red line is the C14 production rate, inverted. C14 production is inversely related to solar activity, so we see more C14 production during solar minima. The
black line is the percentage of ice-rafted debris in seabed cores of the North Atlantic, also plotted inversely. The higher the black line, the warmer the North Atlantic
was. The grey vertical stripes are solar minima. As the authors say, “Previous analyses of the glacial record showed a 200- year rhythm to glacial activity in
Alaska and its possible link to the de Vries 208-year solar (Wiles et al., 2004). Similarly, high-resolution analyses of lake sediments in southwestern Alaska suggests that
century-scale shifts in Holocene climate were modulated by solar activity (Hu et al., 2003). It seems that the only period in the last two thousand years that missed a de
Vries cycle cooling was the Medieval Warm Period.”
The same periodicity over the last 1,000 years is also evident in this graphic of the advance/retreat of the Great Aletsch Glacier in Switzerland (below enlarged here):
The solar control over climate is also shown in this graphic of Be10 in the Dye 3 ice core from central Greenland (below enlarged here)::
The modern retreat of the world's glaciers, which started in 1860, correlates with a decrease in Be10, indicating a more active Sun that is pushing galactic cosmic rays out
from the inner planets of the solar system.
The above graphs show a correlation between solar activity and climate in the broad, but we can achieve much finer detail, as shown in this graphic from a 1996 paper by
Butler and Johnson (below enlarged here)::
Butler and Johnson applied Friis-Christensen and Lassen theory to one temperature record - the three hundred years of data from Armagh in Northern Ireland. There isn�t
much scatter around their line of best fit, so it can be used as a fairly accurate predictive tool. The Solar Cycle 22/23 transition happened in the year of that
paper’s publication, so I have added the lengths of Solar Cycles 22 and 23 to the figure to update it. The result is a prediction that the average annual temperature at
Armagh over Solar Cycle 24 will be 1.4C cooler than over Solar Cycle 23. This is twice the assumed temperature rise of the 20th Century of 0.7 C, but in the opposite
direction.
To sum up, let’s paraphrase Dante: The darkest recesses of Hell are reserved for those who deny the solar control of climate. See PDF.
(Icecap)
“There is increasing evidence of continued and accelerating sea-level rises around the world.”
At around the same time the Royal Society also said in a press statement touching on sea level changes that, “…estimates generally larger than those previously projected
including evidence of continued and accelerating sea-level change around the world.”
However, a closer look at the data supporting this statement reveals that it is difficult to justify. What is the evidence that sea levels are rising and, indeed,
accelerating? (Dr. David Whitehouse, GWPF)
Meeting with experts in Barcelona to begin the European research project CLICO -- Climate Change, Water Conflict and Human Security
The European research project CLICO -Climate Change, Water Conflict and Human Security- devoted to the study of climate change and its social dimensions will begin in February
with conferences that will take place from 25 to 27 February in Bellaterra. During the next three years, researchers from 14 institutes, under the direction of the Institute of
Environmental Science and Technology (ICTA) at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), will be analysing the effects hydro-climatic phenomena -drought, flooding and rise of
sea levels- have on the intensification of social tension and conflicts in eleven regions of the Mediterranean, Maghreb, Middle East and Sahel, and will propose specific
actions to guarantee the peace and security of the population in each area. (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona)
Results of Northwest Atlantic Field Program Could Be Applied Worldwide
A three-year field program now underway is measuring carbon distributions and primary productivity in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean to help scientists worldwide determine the
impacts of a changing climate on ocean biology and biogeochemistry. The study, Climate Variability on the East Coast (CliVEC), will also help validate ocean color satellite
measurements and refine biogeochemistry models of ocean processes. (Press Release)
So
desperate is the EU commission to pursue its fantasy of "carbon capture and
storage" (CCS) for coal-fired power stations that it is conjuring money out of thin air to kick-start the scheme – a cool €3.9 billion.
Needless to say, though, there is no such thing as a free euro. The bill will eventually have to be picked up by electricity consumers throughout the EU.
The magic trick being pulled off by the commission is to issue 300 million carbon "allowances", supposedly from a reserve stock, and to give them – entirely free of
charge - to generators who are willing to build CCS demonstration projects.
At the current market price of about €13 each, equivalent to one ton of carbon dioxide, the price could increase significantly if the price rises. Generators who are given
the allowances can sell them to other generators who are short of carbon quota, the sums paid being recovered through hidden levies on electricity bills.
The first tranche of 200 million will be awarded in 2011, with the remainder issued in 2013, covering up to eight schemes. Provision is also being made to fund experimental
renewable energy projects.
Contributions from national governments and generators are also expected and, if the Energy Bill currently going through parliament succeeds, four of the projects may be built
in Britain, at an estimated cost of up to £1 billion each.
As if this wasn't sufficient madness, the Troy and Lib-Dim oppositions ganged
up on the government this week, demanding mandatory emission caps on coal-fired plants – sufficiently restrictive to ensure that no generator could continue in business.
Even this government had the sense to realise quite how mad the opposition proposal was, using its majority to defeat an amendment to the Bill. But the vote was a close-run
thing, slashing the in-built 57-strong majority to just eight. (EU Referendum)
Theo Theophanous, John Brumby’s former energy minister, blows the whistle on the clean-coal technology that Labor claims will cut our emissions without huge job losses:
AUSTRALIA should debate going nuclear and Victoria should be prepared to host nuclear power stations, former state energy minister Theo Theophanous said yesterday.
In a dramatic final speech to Parliament, the retiring Labor heavyweight called on Kevin Rudd to lead a national debate on nuclear power.
If world leaders – still reeling from the fiasco of the Copenhagen Summit in the global war against carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions – were hoping to find technological
‘solace’ on their return, the news could not be worse. Central to hopes for the future management of carbon dioxide emissions are theories associated with carbon capture
and sequestration (CCS). That is, collecting and storing the carbon emitted from burning fossil fuels underground, mainly beneath the ocean floor. However, a new US study just
published exposes the concept of subsea CO2 management as “overwhelming in both physical needs and costs” and the entire strategy for geological sequestration per se as
“profoundly non-feasible”. (Peter C. Glover, CFP) | The full report can be downloaded here.
By Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) - 02/22/10 08:01 PM ET
The surest way to rejuvenate our ailing economy, create American jobs, and strengthen our energy security is through an “all-of-the-above” energy policy that encourages
production of our vast domestic resources. We can and should utilize all of the energy available to us, including natural gas, oil, coal, and nuclear — along with emerging
alternative energy sources like wind, biofuels, geothermal, and solar. A new non-partisan government report shows that America is an energy-rich nation. The Congressional
Research Service found that America’s combined supply of recoverable natural gas, oil, and coal is the largest on Earth. In fact, the CRS reports that America’s recoverable
resources are far larger than those of Saudi Arabia (3rd), China (4th), and Canada (6th) combined — and that’s without including America’s immense oil shale and methane
hydrates deposits. Additionally, just-released Department of Energy statistics show that the United States has eclipsed Russia as the world’s largest producer of natural gas.
(The Hill)
As recent as last summer an article in The Independent, citing assessment from the lead economist at the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned
that “The world is heading for a catastrophic energy crunch that could cripple a global economic recovery because most of the major oil fields in the world have passed
their peak production.” The 2008 report urged that we are at a crossroads and we need to transition
rapidly to a low carbon fuel economy. It’s certainly not a new argument; it was a consensus in the 1970s that we were running out of oil too. Since oil is a finite resource,
as a matter of physics, we will eventually run out of oil says George Mason
professor Don Boudreaux. But,
Conventional wisdom, however, often is handicapped by a poor grasp of economics. And among the important lessons of economics is that the supply of resources is less a
matter of physics than of, well, economics. First, no mineral, no plant, no geographical location, no anything becomes a resource unless and until human creativity and
ingenuity figure out how to put that thing to use in a manner that satisfies human wants. Petroleum was no resource to our ancestors who had yet to grasp the fact that it can
be refined and burned in ways that improve the quality of life. In fact, I suspect that whenever that gooey, noxious black stuff appeared in freshwater creeks in
pre-Columbian Pennsylvania, natives of that region regarded it as a nuisance.
At the NARUC Winter Meeting in Washington D.C. last week, a Study Group composed of regulatory
commissioners, consultants, government and university economists, and non-profit association sponsors released their energy research report: ANALYSIS OF THE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC
AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF MAINTAINING OIL AND GAS EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION MORATORIA ON AND BENEATH FEDERAL LANDS
(Assessment of the Combined Relative Impacts of Maintaining Moratoria and Increased Domestic Onshore and Offshore Oil and Gas Resource Estimates).
The just released study, prepared by Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) and
subcontractor Gas Technology Institute (GTI), makes a resounding case for the federal government to consider exploration and production on land and offshore for the common
good. And far from being an ‘industry group’, the ‘Moratoria Study Group’ represented a formidable national body of public and private energy experts whose
study found that consumers, the national economy, vast new employment potential and national defense could benefit from plentiful, affordable and reliable domestic energy
resources.
The study makes several important findings and public-policy points.
1. Increased Estimates of Domestic Oil and Gas Resources
The report increased government estimates of the U.S. domestic natural gas resource base from 1,748 Trillion Cubic Feet (Tcf) to 2,034 Tcf, and increased the estimate of
crude oil resources from 186 billion barrels of oil (Bbo) to 229 Bbo. It also revealed that a multi-trillion dollar impact on American citizens of not
developing resources could result in increased energy imports; increased gasoline, natural gas and electricity prices; along with decreased jobs, gross domestic product and
family disposable income.
2. Congress and President Removed Moratoria, but Resources Still Unavailable
“The previous Administration and Congress removed oil and gas moratoria on public lands over one year ago,” Study Group chair O’Neal Hamilton said,
“but required actions to access the energy resources thought to exist there have not been taken.” (Hamilton is past Chairman of the South Carolina Public Service Commission
and Chairman of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners’ NARUC Committee on Gas, which initiated the study in 2007.)
“Whether additional Federal lands should be leased for energy development–and under what conditions leasing should occur–is a matter for national energy policy
decision makers,” Hamilton said. “Our research allows policy makers to know the extent of the resource base and the effects that maintaining the restrictions would
have on the country. Our public interest work is dedicated to giving decision makers information upon which they can rely in developing America’s national energy policy.”
3. Dramatic Negative Effects from Not Developing U.S. Resources[Read
more →] (MasterResource)
A Louisville company that's planning to build a coal-to-natural gas manufacturing plant in western Kentucky wants a state law that would require utilities to buy electricity
from facilities like theirs.
A reprehensive of the Erora Group told a legislative committee Thursday that it would be able to complete financing for its Cash Creek Project if utilities were compelled to
buy electricity from producers of renewable and alternative forms of energy.
The Cash Creek Project is designed to gasify 2.8 million tons per year of Kentucky coal to produce natural gas that would be sold through an interstate pipeline and burned to
produce electricity.
The House has already passed a separate bill that would let one of its business partners condemn private property for a pipeline that would send its carbon dioxide to Texas to
be used to help extract oil and natural gas from the ground there. (Courier-Journal)
With a global nuclear renaissance in the works, the quagmire of what to do with waste is back with a bite. And Madrid’s decisions on the matter could point to a trend. [Read
More] (Andres Cala, Energy Tribune)
CHARLESTON, South Carolina - South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster said on Wednesday he would take legal action to stop President Barack Obama from dropping plans
to build a nuclear waste storage facility in Nevada.
Last month the Obama administration announced it was stopping the license application for a long-planned nuclear waste storage site at Yucca Mountain near Las Vegas, which is
opposed by environmental groups.
McMaster said that he would file a petition to intervene with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission this week and plans to take additional legal action in appellate courts in
Washington and Virginia on Friday. (Reuters)
MONTPELIER, Vt. — In an unusual state foray into nuclear regulation, the Vermont Senate voted 26 to 4 Wednesday to block operation of the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant
after 2012, citing radioactive leaks, misstatements in testimony by plant officials and other problems.
Unless the chamber reverses itself, it will be the first time in more than 20 years that the public or its representatives has decided to close a reactor.
The vote came just more than a week after President Obama declared a new era of rebirth for the nation’s nuclear industry, announcing federal loan guarantees of $8.3 billion
to assure the construction of a twin-reactor plant near Augusta, Ga. (NYT)
MADISON — A team of University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers has developed a highly efficient, environmentally friendly process that selectively converts gamma-valerolactone,
a biomass derivative, into the chemical equivalent of jet fuel.
The simple process preserves about 95 percent of the energy from the original biomass, requires little hydrogen input, and captures carbon dioxide under high pressure for
future beneficial use. (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Autism was first identified in 1943 in an obscure medical journal. Since then it has become a frighteningly common affliction, with the Centers for Disease Control reporting
recently that autism disorders now affect almost 1 percent of children.
Over recent decades, other development disorders also appear to have proliferated, along with certain cancers in children and adults. Why? No one knows for certain. And despite
their financial and human cost, they presumably won’t be discussed much at Thursday’s White House summit on health care.
Yet they constitute a huge national health burden, and suspicions are growing that one culprit may be chemicals in the environment. An article in a forthcoming issue of a
peer-reviewed medical journal, Current Opinion in Pediatrics, just posted online, makes this explicit.
The article cites “historically important, proof-of-concept studies that specifically link autism to environmental exposures experienced prenatally.” It adds that the
“likelihood is high” that many chemicals “have potential to cause injury to the developing brain and to produce neurodevelopmental disorders.”
The author is not a granola-munching crank but Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, professor of pediatrics at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York and chairman of the school’s
department of preventive medicine. While his article is full of cautionary language, Dr. Landrigan told me that he is increasingly confident that autism and other ailments are,
in part, the result of the impact of environmental chemicals on the brain as it is being formed. (NYT)
Phil Landrigan, well-known anti-pesticide activist and Clown Prince of Chemophobia may not munch granola but "crank" is a label that seems well
deserved -- and you've given him a platform for his insane chemical bashing, again. He's the "scientific expert" trotted out by New Jersey Sen. Robert Torricelli in
an effort to make schools safe -- for disease-spreading roaches and rodents -- at the risk of our children's health by trying to ban pesticide use in schools. He's flown the
flag for NRDC and the hysterical Alar campaign. In fact, Landrigan has a long and shameful history of chemical scaremongering.
And here's Kristof and The Crone trotting him out yet again to terrorize people already confused by the dazzling shape-shifting and expanding definition of Autism
Spectrum Disorder, who are now to wonder whether they poisoned their developing child, causing them to miss the standardized "normal" classification. Shame!
Even worse, Kristof hangs absurd and long-debunked phthalate danger assertions on this chemophobia piece like baubles on a Christmas tree and, for good measure,
scary-sounding mercury, lead, tobacco and asbestos, all to set the scene for the anti-everything "precautionary principle".
Researchers from the Toronto Western Research Institute noted a higher prevalence of arthritis and arthritis-attributable activity limitations (AAL) in the U.S. versus the
Canadian population. The authors attribute the higher prevalence of arthritis and AAL to a greater level of obesity and physical inactivity in Americans, particularly women.
Full findings of this study are published in the March issue of Arthritis Care & Research, a journal of the American College of Rheumatology.
Arthritis is the leading cause of physical disability, and one of the most frequently reported chronic conditions in the U.S. and Canada. Those in mid to late life are
particularly vulnerable to this disabling condition, which is expected to increase in both countries due to the aging baby boomer population. According to a 2005 figure from
the National Arthritis Data Workgroup more than 21% of American adults (46 million) have arthritis or another rheumatic condition and over 60% of arthritis patients are women.
The 2008 Canadian Community Health Survey reported 15.3% (4.3 million) of Canadians have some form of arthritis, with more women then men affected.
This study is the first to provide a direct comparison of U.S. and Canadian data in search of between-country disparities associated with the prevalence of arthritis and AAL.
The authors analyzed results from the Joint Canada/United States Survey of Health (JCUSH) conducted in cooperation by Statistics Canada and the U.S. National Center for Health
Statistics during 2002-2003. Data were obtained for 3,505 Canadians and 5,183 Americans with an overall response rate of 65.5% and 50.2%, respectively. (Wiley-Blackwell)
WASHINGTON - People who were morbidly obese and school-aged children were much more likely to become seriously ill or to die from H1N1 swine flu, U.S. experts said on
Wednesday.
Preliminary data showed the morbidly obese had four times the rate of hospitalizations and deaths, while the death rate for children was five times higher than usual, experts
at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
They are working up detailed studies of the pandemic in the United States, the CDC's Dr. Nancy Cox, Dr. Anne Schuchat and Dr. Lyn Finelli told a meeting of the Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices.
"We estimate that the deaths in children are probably five fold higher, at least, than what is usually seen in seasonal flu," Schuchat told the meeting. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON - Everyone in the United States over the age of six months should get seasonal influenza vaccines every year, federal vaccine advisers said on Wednesday.
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices made the long-awaited vote to recommend virtually universal flu vaccination -- something public health experts have long
recommended.
"The new recommendation seeks to remove barriers to influenza immunization and signals the importance of preventing influenza across the entire population," the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement. (Reuters)
The first to have a heart attack was George Kull Jr., 56, a millwright who worked for three decades at the steel mills in Lackawanna, N.Y. Three weeks after learning that
his plant was closing, he suddenly collapsed at home.
Less than two hours later, he was pronounced dead.
A few weeks after that, a co-worker, Bob Smith, 42, a forklift operator with four young children, started having chest pains. He learned at the doctor’s office that he was
having a heart attack. Surgeons inserted three stents, saving his life.
Less than a month later, Don Turner, 55, a crane operator who had started at the mills as a teenager, was found by his wife, Darlene, slumped on a love seat, stricken by a
fatal heart attack.
It is impossible to say exactly why these men, all in relatively good health, had heart attacks within weeks of one another. But interviews with friends and relatives of Mr.
Kull and Mr. Turner, and with Mr. Smith, suggest that the trauma of losing their jobs might have played a role.
“He was really, really worried,” George Kull III said of his father. “With his age, he didn’t know where he would get another job, or if he would get another job.”
(NYT)
Yes, losing your job increases stress -- that's not good for your health. Let's not get carried away here though. It was not being laid off that created
the need for three cardiac stents in a 40-something male, that was atherosclerosis, which is not at all associated with sudden onset from stress but rather gradual buildup.
Worrying about the future might have contributed in a small way to the fatal coronaries of the cited 50-something men but it is not correct to say they were in good health
since they all apparently had cardiac conditions, albeit previously undiagnosed.
About all that can really be said here is that booming economies are good for your health. The corollary is really that small government and low tax rates are the best health
care a sovereign nation can provide.
NEW YORK - A woman's risk of heart disease and stroke in middle-age and beyond may be associated with the number of children she gives birth to, a large study of Swedish
women hints.
"Women having two births had the lowest risk of future cardiovascular disease," Dr. Erik Ingelsson, at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, noted in an email to
Reuters Health, while women having five or more births had the highest risk.
Prior studies looking at ties between number of births and women's later risk of heart disease have yielded conflicting results. Most of these studies were small. Ingelsson and
his colleagues looked for an association between number of births and heart disease risk in 1.3 million Swedish women after they turned 50.
During follow up lasting up to 23 years (average of 9.5 years), more than 65,000 heart disease-related events such as heart attack or stroke occurred, the researchers report in
American Heart Journal.
Compared with women who gave birth twice (the lowest risk group), women with no, one, or three births had about 10 percent greater risk of future heart disease. The risk was 30
percent higher in women with four births and nearly 60 percent higher in women with five or more births. (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK - People who burn wood or other "biofuels" for heat or cooking may have a heightened risk of emphysema and related lung conditions, a new study suggests.
In an analysis of 15 international studies, researchers found that people exposed to smoke from "biomass" fuels in their homes generally had a greater risk of chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) than those who used other sources for cooking and heating.
Biomass refers to biological materials that can be burned for energy, including wood, crops and animal dung. They are major sources of energy in the developing world, and are
thought to be used for cooking and heating in half of homes worldwide. (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK - People who use smokeless tobacco, or "snuff," are just as hooked on nicotine as cigarette smokers, if not more so, new research from Sweden shows.
And those who smoke and use snuff may be especially nicotine-dependent, Dr. Ann Post of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and her colleagues found. (Reuters Health)
The Obama administration’s decision to remain neutral in the dispute between Great Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands is a shameful decision that will go down
very badly across the Atlantic. As The Times has just reported, Washington has
point blank refused to support British sovereignty over the Falklands, and is adopting a strictly neutral approach.
In the words of a State Department spokesman:
We are aware not only of the current situation but also of the history, but our position remains one of neutrality. The US recognises de facto UK administration of the
islands but takes no position on the sovereignty claims of either party.
The remarks had echoes of an
earlier statement by a senior State Department protocol official who, when asked about the shoddy treatment of the British Prime Minister in March last year, responded:
There’s nothing special about Britain. You’re just the same as the other 190 countries in the world. You shouldn’t expect special treatment.
Even by the relentlessly poor standards of the Obama administration, whose doctrine unfailingly appears to be “kiss your enemies and kick your allies”, this is a new
low. The White House’s neutrality in a major dispute between America’s closest friend and the likes of Venezuelan tyrant Hugo Chavez, Argentina’s biggest backer,
represents the appalling appeasement of an alliance of anti-Western Latin American regimes, stretching from Caracas to Havana – combined with a callous indifference towards
the Anglo-American alliance. Continue
reading...
IT takes a special kind of madness to run out of land for houses in this huge and near empty continent.
And even more madness - of the finger-wagging sort - to have made our houses among the dearest in the world.
Yeah, sure, celebrate a small victory when the Legislative Council this week blocked a “development tax” the Brumby Government hoped to slap on new housing estates on
the city’s fringe.
But did you know the Government plans three new bits of meddling legislation to make houses even pricier, including one to force builders to make every new house
disabled-friendly?
True. Every new house could soon have to have wheelchair access, wider doors and corridors, and a toilet big enough for a wheelchair in order to allow “most (disabled)
people to visit a home with dignity”?
Don’t have disabled visitors? Well, get some. Oh, and reinforce your bathroom walls with extra noggins so handrails can be fitted more cheaply for the day that you’re
old, too, and need them.
Yes, I know the families out in those new estates actually tend to be young and fit - and short of the $4300 that the Housing Industry Association warns this latest social
engineering will cost.
But there’s no cost too great when government moralists dream of ways to improve you.
It’s thanks to their sort that the latest annual Demographia study of housing affordability shows our houses are already far too expensive for most young couples just
trying to get a start.
PITTSBURGH—Just think, every time you feed Fido or flip a spoonful of sugar into your coffee cup, you use more than 300 gallons of water.
Checking the amounts of water it takes to make a $1 worth of sugar, cat and dog food or milk is part of a comprehensive study by Carnegie Mellon University researchers to
document American industry's thirst for this scarce resource.
Chris T. Hendrickson, the Duquesne Light Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, said the study shows that most water use by industry occurs indirectly as a result of
processing, such as packaging and shipping of food crops to the supermarket, rather than direct use, like watering crops.
The study found it takes almost 270 gallons of water to produce a $1 worth of sugar; 140 gallons to make $1 worth of milk; and 200 gallons of water to make $1 worth of cat and
dog food. (Carnegie Mellon University)
I don't care for these "bound water" claims since they are so misleading. Did this much water cease to exist in the earth? Of course not, it's
merely part of a transient use cycle. Would the water not have evaporated from oceans and precipitated somewhere anyway? Again, that's silly, we either make temporary use of
the water or it flows to sea (or evaporates off) anyway. Is there any reason other than misanthropy that we should not profit from making use of the water in various parts of
its endless cycle?
A BYU researcher helped discover a cellular tool some plants use to fertilize themselves. This fundamental understanding is important in the effort to reduce the 88 million
tons of nitrogen fertilizer used worldwide every year. That in turn could help reduce fossil fuel use, because 3-5 percent of the world's natural gas is burned to make nitrogen
fertilizer. The research is published in the journal Science. (PhysOrg.com)
How much has our superstitious bans on GM crops, still maintained in some states, cost us? How far do we now trail our competitors, both in the development of this science
and in market share? The International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Crops marks the rise and rise of the science-armed farmer:
Additional research focuses on practical application of nanotechnology across a wide range of fields including homeland defense and the environment
February 25, 2010
Huixin He, associate professor of nanoscale chemistry at Rutgers University, Newark, and Tamara Minko, professor at the Rutgers Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, have developed
a nanotechnology approach that potentially could eliminate the problems of side effects and drug resistance in the treatment of cancer. Under traditional chemotherapy, cancer
cells, like bacteria, can develop resistance to drug therapy, leading to a relapse of the disease.
As reported in the December 21, 2009, issue of the journal Small, He, Minko and their co-researchers, including investigators from Merck & Co. and Carl Zeiss SMT, a global
nanotechnology firm, have designed nanomaterials that allow for the delivery of both a chemical (doxorubicin) to destroy cancer cells and a genetic drug to prevent drug
resistance.
When administered to drug-resistant ovarian cancer cells, the treatment was more than 130 times lethal than when doxorubicin was administrated alone. “The drug can only be
released when it is inside the cancer cells,” He said. “This controlled internal release mechanism can dramatically eliminate side effects associated with anticancer drugs
to normal tissues.” (Rutgers)
In
an interesting development in the ongoing saga of global warming - tell that to the Americans today when their "snow hurricane" hits them - Steve McIntyre has a novel
perspective on the similarities between the "Climategate and Enron.
We are getting to the stage, though, where the whole climate charade is unravelling before our very eyes at a speed almost too fast to follow, leaving Real
Climate railing against the "collapse" of journalistic standards.
That, in itself is highly indicative. We hear nothing about the constant diet of lurid scare stories in the media, but when The Guardian - of all papers -
"sins" by offering semi-critical pieces, it gets a full broadside.
Criticism, however, is not confined to this obscure and ill-tempered blog. Tilts at journalists are one thing both warmists and sceptics have
in common, even if UK media comment is still relatively muted.
For sure, we've had The Times pick up on the Met
Office story about it wanting to revamp the temperature database, a story that Watts
up with that? had a day earlier, after it was covered by Fox
News.
We've also had Geoffrey Lean doing a bit
of reporting instead of pontificating – which has to be a first. He is telling us that our favourite stage villain, Dr R K Pachauri, is facing his critics in Bali tonight
– the environmental ministers of the member states who make up the UNFCCC. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
And the inconvenient truth this hour, winter ain’t letting up, which has Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe fed up at the man who won a Nobel Prize saying that the Earth was
warming up. Inhofe has long called warming a hoax. Today, he is doing one better, dramatically better, demanding the Justice Department investigate what he calls the greatest
scientific scandal of our generation.
First witness he wants to see testify? Al Gore.
With us now, James Inhofe.
Senator, any reaction as yet from the former vice president? (FNC)
In Senate EPA hearings today false claims were made by Senators Boxer (D-CA) and Merkley (D-OR) that the Science and Public Policy Institute (SPPI) is Exxon Mobil funded,
implying its work and findings should be cast aside.
Says SPPI president, Robert Ferguson, “SPPI has never been offered or accepted funds or support in any form from Exxon Mobil. Senators Boxer and Merkley owe an apology and a
correction in the record.” Added Ferguson, “It is rather simple for any senate staffer to call Exxon Mobil to verify the facts, or examine public filings for Exxon
Mobil’s Contributions and Community Investments.
The intended slurs came as EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson faced stern questioning from Senator James Inhofe (R-OK) and Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) about recent revelations of
the shoddiness of the science underpinning the EPA’s CO2 ‘endangerment’ finding. (SPPI)
New Haven, Conn. — Researchers at Yale and George Mason Universities have identified six distinct “Americas” when it comes to the issue of global warming. One of these
groups, the “Dismissive,” who believe global warming is not happening and is probably a hoax, has more than doubled in size since 2008 and now represent 16 percent of the
American public, according to the report, Global Warming’s Six Americas, January 2010.
Meanwhile, the percentage of the “Alarmed”—Americans who are the most convinced that global warming is happening, is caused by humans and is a serious and urgent
threat—has dropped from 18 percent in 2008 to 10 percent. (Yale University)
Maybe Al Gore's been advised by legal counsel to lie low. He may be the leader of the anthropogenic global warming (AGW) movement, but he's not defending it in public, not
even when it's falling apart and his new fortune is based upon it.
Mr. Gore and his financial backers earned millions of dollars in start-up "green" companies and carbon trading schemes. If the scam worked, he could've become the
first "carbon billionaire."
"What goes up can fall down" applies to ill-gotten gains in the stock market or "carbon trading" schemes. In such schemes, it's foreseeable that trusting
investors will (a) not only get hurt when the scam collapses, but they'll also (b) pursue legal remedies and sue him for fraud. (Rex McBride, American Thinker)
Missing global warming alarmist Al Gore was captured today in a pre-dawn raid on his remote tropical island hideout.
The former vice president had been missing since the Copenhagen global warming conference last December, when he erroneously dismissed the Climategate scandal as having to do
with e-mails that were 10 years old.
Since Gore was last seen in public, Climategate has been followed by glacier-gate, rainforest-gate, sea-level gate, the resignation of UN climate chief Yvo de Boer, revelations
of IPCC chief Rajendra Pachauri’s financial conflicts-of-interest and admissions by Climategate’s Phil Jones of no global warming since 1995 and the existence of a possibly
warmer-than-now Medieval Warm Period. (Green Hell Blog)
UNITED NATIONS: UN chief Ban Ki-moon has asked the officials gathered at the environment ministerial meeting in Bali to reject attempts by climate skeptics who question the
existence of climate change especially after the controversy surrounding the errors that have surfaced.
"I urge you to reject the last-ditch attempts by climate skeptics to derail your negotiations by exaggerating shortcomings in the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report," Ban
said.
"Tell the world that you unanimously agree that climate change is a clear and present danger, that you are working to implement agreements already made and that you are
continuing negotiations under the UNFCCC to address climate change according to the demands of current scientific information," he added. (Economic Times)
Delingpole
over on his blog tells us that it's "time to
get angry" over global warming.
And if you needed any more reasons than you have already, then the story in The Register
is a good place to start.
There, we learn that DECC, the fatuous department of climate change has spent £361,700 in the last 12 months on search keywords such as "climate change" and
"global warming" to target Google users with government publicity urging them to cut their carbon emissions.
The Energy Saving Trust, meanwhile, had spent more than £270,000 on similar advertising in the last 12 months, with the two agencies bidding against each other for the key
slots, thus driving up the cost to the taxpayer.
Personally, I don't know whether I should be angrier at the stupidity of government agencies, or the fact that another £600,000-plus of our money has been wasted the climate
change propaganda effort.
The trouble with Delingpole's nostrum though is that anger needs to be directed, focused and then discharged at a suitable target, to achieve a specific effect.
Cue Gerald Warner writing in his
blog about Dave's rather spectacular collapse in the opinion poll ratings, last seen giving him a mere six percent lead over Labour.
Here indeed is directed anger, aimed at the very target where, collectively, we have the capability to do real damage. For it is Dave who has within his capability, should his
party win at the next election, to put a stop to this waste – and to the entire charade of climate change. But he will not and, for that, we need to make him suffer.
The Tory claque, on the other hand, tell us that if we don't vote for Dave, then we get another five years of Labour, under the leadership of Gordon Brown. But, in
many areas, not least climate change, to say nothing of our rule from Brussels, this will make not the slightest bit of difference.
Thus, a change of face is not enough of a reason to vote Tory – we want something more than that, and so far a man wedded to personality politics has not been able to
deliver. If he can't do that before an election, then the chances of him doing it when he is safely ensconced in Downing Street is nil. It is better to keep the Tories out
until they get their acts together. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
BEIJING, Feb 24 - Rich and developing countries have little hope of overcoming key disagreements over how to fight global warming, China's climate change ambassador said on
Wednesday, warning of a year of troubled negotiations.
China's Special Representative for Climate Change Negotiations, Yu Qingtai, said as nations seek a new global treaty on climate change by the end of 2010, major players are
unlikely to budge on the issues that stymied stronger agreement at the contentious Copenhagen climate summit in late 2009.
"There may be some adjustments and shifts in the positions and tactics of the various sides, but I personally believe that on some core issues, the positions of the major
parties will not undergo any substantive changes," Yu said at a meeting in Beijing on China's climate change policies.
After they failed to agree on a comprehensive pact at Copenhagen, negotiators now hope to put together a binding treaty through meetings culminating in Mexico late this year.
(Reuters)
But country 'still committed' to reducing carbon intensity
China has no intention of capping its greenhouse gas emissions even as authorities are committed to realizing the nation's target to reduce carbon intensity through new
policies and measures, the country's top climate change negotiators said yesterday.
The negotiators also warned that rich and developing countries have little hope of overcoming key disagreements over how to fight global warming.
China "could not and should not" set an upper limit on greenhouse gas emissions at the current phase, said Su Wei, the chief negotiator of China for climate change
talks in Copenhagen, at a meeting in Beijing on China's climate change policies in the post-Copenhagen era. (China Daily)
KEVIN Rudd's carbon pollution reduction scheme has been dealt a double blow, with the Senate pushing a vote off until at least may and the scheme's last influential industry
supporter declaring it off the agenda.
After calling for the CPRS to be passed last November, Australian Industry Group chief executive Heather Ridout said yesterday the fracturing of consensus on climate change
policy and the failure of international negotiations meant there was no clear way forward. The AI Group would now consider the opposition's direct action approach as well as
other emissions reduction options through a high-level industry leaders group to "identify the best way forward".
Ms Ridout's comments came after the Business Council of Australia and the Australian Chamber of Commerce & Industry this month declared their opposition to implementing an
emissions reduction plan ahead of the rest of the world.
Last night, the Coalition was pushing for a new Senate inquiry into the government's scheme after succeeding in delaying the debate until May. Ms Ridout said that, in the
longer term, the AI Group continued to see a market-based approach as the best means of delivering "least-cost abatement" but a cap-and-trade system was not included
in five principles that would guide the industry leaders group's deliberations. (The Australian)
Still only partly right. The way forward is to expunge ridiculous carbon superstition and get on with life and development.
Our study of data-massaging by the U.S. government agency charged with collecting temperature information raises uncomfortable questions.
We have been repeatedly told (perhaps "lectured" is a better word) the past twenty years that global warming is occurring. With Climategate and subsequent confessions
and bailouts by scientists at the CRU, Penn State, Arizona State, IPCC, et al., we are learning that little to none of the factual content in their "peer reviewed"
articles is true. The Medieval Warming Period did occur, and it was warmer than currently; the oceans are not going to flood the plains; and the Arctic Ocean may not be turning
into a summer water park. Of course, the mainstream media, especially in the United States, has reported little of this news, and President Obama appears not to be
well-informed. But now the global warming story grows more interesting because here in America, we may have our own little "gate." I will call it ATG, for
"American Temperaturegate." ( Edward R. Long, American Thinker)
Plan comes at a time when public conviction about the threat of climate change has declined sharply after questions over the science (Mark Tran, The Guardian)
Wonder what will happen when the find most of the warming has been induced in tortured data rather than the real world?
Prospect magazine, the house journal of the bien-pensant centre-left is the latest media
outlet to throw in the towel and start discussing the other side of the climate debate. In its current issue it publishes a broadly sceptic take on the quality of the
temperature records and notes some of the Climategate revelations.
SPPI receives many kind emails from members of the public who support our quiet but increasingly successful work in bringing some scientific and economic truth and
perspective to the over-politicized debate about the climate. Here is a letter from an eminent scientist who has recently discovered what nonsense “global warming” is. (SPPI)
Fox News reports that the IPCC is on the brink of making major
changes to the way it does business.
In the wake of its swift and devastating fall from grace, the panel says it will announce "within the next few days" that it plans to make significant though as
yet unexplained changes in how it does business.
Brenda Abrar-Milani, an external relations officer at the IPCC's office in Geneva, Switzerland, said changes have been slow in coming because "we have to inform the
governments (all 194 member States) of any planned steps, and they are the ones who eventually take decisions on any revision of procedures."
"We put everything on the table and looked at it," she said, explaining that the panel's reforms would be extensive. She refused to detail any of the changes,
but she did confirm that are in response to recent scandals involving the panel.
The article quotes Steve McIntyre, whose reaction seems to have been the same as mine:
Steve McIntyre, who also worked at the IPPC and whose blog, Climate Audit, has been one of the most vocal critics of the panel, says that while cries for reform have
become loud, "very little thought has yet been put into what changes have to be made."
"I don't think they plan to change very much," he said. "They just don't know how to reform it."
The
Council on Foreign Relations asked Kevin Trenberth, John Christy and me for
capsule summaries of our views on reform of the IPCC. Here are snippets from the responses:
Trenberth: The IPCC review and oversight process is very rigorous. Clearly there can be and have been some lapses, but they appear to
be fairly few. I do not think the system is broken and needs further change; it simply needs more attention to adhering to the process already in place.
Christy: [IPCC] lead authors are given powerful control by being vested with final review authority and thus are able to fashion a
report that supports their own opinions while marginalizing countervailing views. This is not how the real uncertainties and difficulties of climate science may be
established and communicated to policymakers.
Pielke: Unless the IPCC brings its institutional policies and procedures into the twenty-first century through a wholesale
institutional reform, it will continue to come out on the losing end of challenges to its legitimacy and credibility.
Rajendra Pachauri, the Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), will defend his handling of a crisis that has shaken the world's faith in his
organisation at a meeting of environmental leaders in Bali. (TDT)
I only have one comment on her excellent post and this is respect to treating the climate issue as having just two “camps”. She writes (bold face added).
“And finally, the blogosphere can be a very powerful tool for increasing the credibility of climate research. “Dueling blogs” (e.g. climateprogress.org versus
wattsupwiththat.com and realclimate.org versus climateaudit.org) can actually enhance public trust in the science as they see both
sides of the arguments being discussed.”
As we summarize in our article
Pielke Sr., R., K. Beven, G. Brasseur, J. Calvert, M. Chahine, R. Dickerson, D. Entekhabi, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, H. Gupta, V. Gupta, W. Krajewski, E. Philip
Krider, W. K.M. Lau, J. McDonnell, W. Rossow, J. Schaake, J. Smith, S. Sorooshian, and E. Wood, 2009: Climate
change: The need to consider human forcings besides greenhouse gases. Eos, Vol. 90, No. 45, 10 November 2009, 413. Copyright (2009) American Geophysical Union
there are actually three perspectives in the climate science debate. The view that is most robust scientifically, yet has been generally ignored by
policymakers and others, is that
“Although the natural causes of climate variations and changes are undoubtedly important, the human influencesare significant and involve a diverse range of
first- order climate forcings, including, but not limited to, the human input of carbon dioxide (CO2). Most, if not all, of these human infl uences on regional and global
climate will continue to be of concern during the coming decades.”
We need more discussion on the blogs of this viewpoint, as it is well supported by the peer reviewed scientific literature (e.g. see).
(Climate Science)
The IPCC has a Special Committee on Extreme Events and Disasters, which was set up in the spring of 2009. Andy
Revkin has the story of my nomination to the committee, along with 30 other U.S. experts. Behind closed doors the
IPCC selected 13 of these 31 nominees to serve on their committee. I was not included, despite the fact that I have more relevant publications than any other U.S. nominee (Google
scholar) and numerous participants were selected who have no publications in the area of climate change and extreme events. Revkin finds this a bit curious, but was unable
to get the IPCC to explain how it made its empanelment decisions.
The IPCC report includes the following focal areas, among others:
Changes in impacts of climate extremes: human systems and ecosystems
Role of climate extremes in natural and socioeconomic systems
Nature of impacts and relation to hazards
Observed trends in system exposure and vulnerability
System- and sector-based aspects of vulnerability, exposures, and impacts
Regional aspects of vulnerability, exposures, and impacts
Costs of climate extremes and disasters
My nomination came about when a colleague asked me in the spring of 2009 if I was participating in the committee. I explained to him that there was no point, as the IPCC would
never select me to be included. He said they'd have to select me, if nominated, given my expertise and the IPCC's historical reliance on my work. So we made a bet of a beer,
and I was nominated. Obviously, I won the bet and the beer. Since then, a range of colleagues have asked me why I am not participating on the committee.
There is a good case to be made that since I have collaborated in a lot of work in this area, I should not be on the committee, because I would be evaluating my own work. I
think that this argument makes sense. However, this has not been a criterion used by the IPCC in its empanelment decisions in the past or on the extremes committee (based on
who else was selected). However, having seen the efforts of the IPCC to actively undercut my work in its past reports and more recently via press release, I have my views as to
what sort of criteria it employed in deciding the panel's membership ;-) (Roger Pielke Jr)
THE Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority has been accused of brainwashing young minds by politicising climate change in a new video.
The Federal Opposition has attacked the reef management agency over a cartoon on the GBRMPA website, educating students about climate change and its impact upon the Great
Barrier Reef.
The cartoon says: "So much carbon dioxide in the air, covering us like a blanket when it becomes too hot. This is called climate change." ( Cairns Post) | Watch the
video here
The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (calling themselves "Ga'brumpa" from their acronym) has always been a misanthropic enclave,
determined to extend their empire to encompass the Pacific and any watershed draining into it, regardless of nation or continent, as well as any activity anywhere on the
planet which may release dust or airborne material of any description which might, one day, end up in the same water body as the damn reef complex. They recognize no
legitimate harvest of resources and no people's rights, not even the right to exist. To make the world a better place protect CO2, eliminate GBRMPA.
Ofcom is to investigate the Government's notoriously emotive 'Drowning Dog' prime time TV advertisements. Ad industry self-regulator the ASA is already conducting its own
investigation of the 'climate porn' campaign.
The taxpayer-funded advertisement features a father reading a bedtime story to his young daughter. The picture book comes to life, with a Carbon Monster engulfing a town; many
cartoon animals are swept away in the resulting floods - which are the result of humans keeping the heating on and driving cars, the advertisement says. (Andrew Orlowski, The
Register)
We are sure you have heard that global warming is causing more frequent and intense droughts throughout the world. Right? The claim is easy to make – higher temperatures
increase evaporation rates, soil moisture is depleted, and drought conditions result. Indeed the Technical Summary of the most recent IPCC assessment includes “More intense
and longer droughts have been observed over wider areas, particularly in the tropics and subtropics since the 1970s. While there are many different measures of drought, many
studies use precipitation changes together with temperature. Increased drying due to higher temperatures and decreased land precipitation have contributed to these changes”.
Further, they write “Although precipitation has increased in many areas of the globe, the area under drought has also increased. Drought duration and intensity has also
increased. While regional droughts have occurred in the past, the widespread spatial extent of current droughts is broadly consistent with expected changes in the hydrologic
cycle under warming. Water vapour increases with increasing global temperature, due to increased evaporation where surface moisture is available, and this tends to increase
precipitation. However, increased continental temperatures are expected to lead to greater evaporation and drying, which is particularly important in dry regions where surface
moisture is limited.” The bottom line in the table below from the IPCC’s Technical Summary leaves little doubt that the IPCC thinks that droughts have become more frequent,
they have been caused in some part by humans, and they will become more frequent in the decades to come.
A major article on global-scale drought has appeared recently in the Journal of Climate by drought experts from Princeton University and the University of
Washington; the work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. We saw an interesting sentence in their abstract as
Sheffield et al. wrote “Globally, the mid-1950s showed the highest drought activity and the mid-1970s to mid-1980s the lowest activity.” That does not seem consistent with
the story coming from the IPCC.
Sheffield et al. begin stating “Drought is a naturally occurring climate phenomenon that impacts human and environmental activity globally. It is among the costliest and
most widespread of natural disasters. One of the reasons for this is the usually large spatial extent of droughts and their lengthy duration, sometimes reaching continental
scales and lasting for many years. Drought is generally driven by extremes in the natural variation of climate, which are forced by the internal interactions of the atmosphere
and feedbacks with the oceans and land surface. These are modulated by external forcings such as variations in solar input and atmospheric composition, either natural or
anthropogenic.” Fair enough, they reveal that drought could be impacted by anthropogenic changes to atmospheric composition.
Sheffield et al. note that “Soil moisture is a useful indicator of drought because it provides an aggregate estimate of available water from the balance of precipitation,
evaporation, and runoff fluxes.” Accordingly, they used a popular hydrologic simulation model to estimate soil moisture levels at the 1º latitude by 1º longitude resolution
for land areas of the globe for the period 1950 to 2000.
Their results seem completely at odds with the conclusions of the IPCC. Sheffield et al. note with respect to global and continental droughts “The longest duration drought
was 49 months (4 yr) in Asia from 1984 to 1988, closely followed by the 1950–53 North American drought (44 months). The most spatially extensive was the African drought of
the early 1980s, which reached its peak extent in April 1983 when it covered over 11 million square kilometers.” Their time series plot for the globe and for various
continents shows no upward trend whatsoever (below).
Figure 1. Monthly time series of area-averaged soil moisture percentile, percentage area in drought, and percentage contiguous area in drought (from Sheffield et al., 2009)
The table below from the article is amazing … note that the longest duration drought record-breakers generally occurred early in the record with four of the six from the
1950s. Similarly, the maximum spatial extent record-breaking droughts also tended to occur early, not late, in the time series.
Table 1. Summary of large-scale drought occurrence for the six continents. For the last column, the extent as a percentage of total area and the date when the maximum
spatial extent was attained are given in brackets. Oceania is defined as Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and the Pacific Islands.
The article contains no end of comments indicating no upward trend on drought conditions. The authors state “The mean number of global droughts > 500 000 km2 occurring
in any month is about 4.5 (or 55 yr-1) with a standard deviation of 1.6. This time series is quite variable and indicates several periods of increased global drought activity:
the mid-1950s, 1960s, late 1980s to early 1990s, and late 1990s. The mid-1970s to mid-1980s are characterized by the lowest number of droughts, apart from a short burst of
activity around 1976–77. The year with most drought months is 1992”.
The authors note that most of the last droughts are well-documented and have been analyzed by climate scientists for years. Sheffield et al. note “Other droughts are
ranked highly in terms of severity and spatial extent yet are not well documented or analyzed, such as the 1965 Australian and 1963–64 South American droughts.”
The IPCC and the global warming alarmists continue to insist that droughts are becoming more frequent, more intense, more spatially extensive, and of longer duration.
However, Sheffield et al. analyzed drought patterns at the global scale for the period 1950 to 2000, and found no evidence to support claims of increasing drought activity.
Enough said.
Reference:
Sheffield, J., K.M. Andreadis, E.F. Wood, and D.P. Lettenmaier. 2009. Global and Continental Drought in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century: Severity–Area–Duration
Analysis and Temporal Variability of Large-Scale Events. Journal of Climate, 22, 1962-1981. (WCR)
Back in the Pliocene era, between 5 million and 3 million years ago, the average global temperature was about 7°F warmer than it is today, yet atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels were about the same. If carbon dioxide were the sole factor in warming, that wouldn't make any sense. It isn't, of course; there are several other contributors,
including the brightness of the sun and the location of the continents (whose positions dictate, among other things, where ice caps can form) — but these were all pretty much
the same in the Pliocene as well.
So what accounted for the higher global temperature? According to a new paper in Nature, one possible factor is hurricanes. Scientists have long suspected that global warming
could make hurricanes more intense somehow, but the new study suggests the effect works both ways: tropical cyclones could help drive up temperatures in response. "We're
suggesting that hurricanes could have created a permanent El Niño condition," says Yale's Alexey Fedorov, lead author of the study. (Michael D. Lemonick, Time)
New Haven, Conn. — More frequent tropical cyclones in Earth’s ancient past contributed to persistent El Niño-like conditions, according to a team of climate scientists
led by Yale University. Their findings, which appear in the Feb. 25 issue of the journal Nature, could have implications for the planet’s future as global temperatures
continue to rise due to climate change.
The team used both cyclone and climate models to study the frequency and distribution of tropical cyclones (also known as hurricanes or typhoons) during the Pliocene epoch, a
period three to five million years ago when temperatures were up to four degrees Celsius warmer than today. (Yale University)
According
to the AP, top researchers now agree that the world is likely to get stronger but fewer hurricanes in the future because of global warming, seeming to settle a scientific
debate on the subject. But they say there's not enough evidence yet to tell whether that effect has already begun. Despite warnings by scientists that identifying an actual
trend in storm variability is impossible due to a lack of reliable historical data, a new report in Nature Geoscience is being cited as a solid prediction of future
trends in tropical cyclone activity. The other thing not mentioned is that this research is based on models of questionable accuracy.
The review article by Thomas R. Knutson et al., entitled “Tropical
cyclones and climate change,” was published online on Sunday, February 12, 2010. In it, the authors warn that there is precious little that can be predicted from past
data. But this does not stop them from blithely predicting the future based on new “high-resolution” models. Here is part of the paper's abstract:
Large amplitude fluctuations in the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones greatly complicate both the detection of long-term trends and their
attribution to rising levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases. Trend detection is further impeded by substantial limitations in the availability and quality of global
historical records of tropical cyclones. Therefore, it remains uncertain whether past changes in tropical cyclone activity have exceeded the variability expected from natural
causes. However, future projections based on theory and high-resolution dynamical models consistently indicate that greenhouse warming will cause the globally averaged
intensity of tropical cyclones to shift towards stronger storms, with intensity increases of 2–11% by 2100.
Once again, climate scientists are predicting future climate behavior based, not on empirical data, but on computer models. They go on to state that
confidence in some of their predictions is low “owing to uncertainties in the large-scale patterns of future tropical climate change, as evident in the lack of agreement
between the model projections of patterns of tropical SST changes.” Their approach is to combine a number of different models into an “ensemble,” manipulating the output
until it converges on what historical observations we have. In the end they predict fewer but stronger storms because of global warming, though “the actual intensity level of
these strong model cyclones varies between the models, depending on model resolution and other factors.”
Modeling and the Search for Scientific Truth
I have repeatedly stated that models can be a useful tool in any number of fields. Understand that there are different kinds of computer models. Some are
quite exact and can be used for such things as aerodynamics and structural analysis. Those types of quantitative models are based in well understood natural laws and are
relatively tractable. They give answers that engineers can use as actual guidance. But even then they are not always right. Recently Boeing had to reinforce
the wing root attachment points on their new 787 airliner because the computer model simulations were not born out in actual testing.
Moreover, not all models are blessed with such passing verisimilitude with respect to nature. Most models are approximations for the systems being modeled.
They are pressed into service when the system being studied is too complex for human intuition to predict system behavior. Computer models of this kind—which includes GCM
climate models—should be used to provide insight, but instead are used to make authoritative predictions of things to come. This brings us to the philosophy of Sir Karl
Popper.
Karl
Popper was one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th Century and a tremendous influence on modern scientific thought. One TRE
reader, Peter Foster, pointed out to me that the 2007 IPCC report cites Popper's 1934 book, The Logic of Scientific Discovery. Peter is the second person with a
connection to Canterbury University in Christchurch, New Zealand, to contact me this month. Unsurprisingly,
both mentioned Popper. In 1937, the rise of Nazism and the threat of the Anschluss led the Austrian born Popper to emigrate to New Zealand. There he became a lecturer in
philosophy at Canterbury University where he had a strong influence that evidently persists to this day.
According to Popper “the criterion of the scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability.” By falsifiability he did
not mean that a theory was false but that there exists a way to prove the theory false (for more see Popper's essay “Science
as Falsification”). A theory has to be testable. There have to be defined properties which can be predicted by theory and checked by measurement. It would appear that the
IPCC authors agree, as shown in this quote from the AR4 section entitled “The Nature of Earth Science”:
Science generally advances through formulating hypotheses clearly and testing them objectively. This testing is the key to science. It is not the belief or
opinion of the scientists that is important, but rather the results of this testing. Scientific theories are ways of explaining phenomena and providing insights that can be
evaluated by comparison with physical reality. Each successful prediction adds to the weight of evidence supporting the theory, and any unsuccessful prediction demonstrates
that the underlying theory is imperfect and requires improvement or abandonment.
Popper was among the first to state that discovering truth is the aim of scientific inquiry while acknowledging that most of the greatest scientific theories
in the history of science are, strictly speaking, false. Scientists' theories represent their current understanding of nature. As that understanding improves old theories are
discarded and new ones formulated. Popper's philosophy of science defined progress as the process of moving from one false theory to another, still false theory that is
nonetheless closer to the truth.
Climate models are analogous to those false yet useful theories—models try to encapsulate science's understanding of how the Earth system works. This has
led many, including another friend of mine from Canterbury University, to make the argument that the models we have may not be perfect but they are at least usable. The
question becomes, how much faith are you willing to place in a model's results, starting from the acknowledgment that all such models are by definition wrong. Having spent many
years modeling large, nonlinear systems I am not willing to base potentially world changing decisions on the output of current climate models.
This is because of how the models are constructed and how they are calibrated. In short, the models are tuned to produce a specific amount of temperature
increase for a doubling of CO2 levels. It is unsurprising that the researchers then get the answers they expected. It is also unsurprising that, when
faced with an unexpected response from the natural system like the recent leveling and possible decline in global temperatures, the models fail miserably. Worse than that,
secondary predictions are often made based on the predictions of models or even models that use the output of other models as their starting data.
A New Hurricane Model
One of the references cited by the Nature Geoscienc hurricane modeling report was a recent paper
in Science that can help fill in some of the technical details of how the modeling research was performed. In it, researchers did, indeed, report that fewer but stronger
hurricanes will sweep the Atlantic Basin in the 21st century. This new modeling study by US government researchers from NOAA is predicated on climate change “continuing.”
As explained in an accompanying perspective by Science writer Richard A.
Kerr:
What makes the new study more realistic is its sharper picture of the atmosphere. In low-resolution models such as global climate models, the fuzzy
rendition of the atmosphere can't generate any hurricanes, much less the intense ones that account for most of the damage hurricanes cause. The high-resolution models used by
the U.S. National Weather Service to forecast hurricane growth and movement do produce a realistic mix of both weak and strong storms, but those models can't simulate global
warming.
So, as a compromise the researchers took the output of some of those “fuzzy” GCM and used their projections for global environment at the end of the
century as the starting point for the new “high-resolution” models.
Climate modeler Morris Bender of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, New Jersey, and
his colleagues used a technique sometimes called "double-downscaling." The group started with the average of atmospheric and oceanic conditions forecast for the end
of the century by 18 global climate models. They transferred those averaged conditions into a North Atlantic regional model detailed enough to generate a realistic number of
hurricanes, although still too sketchy to get their intensities right. Finally, the team transferred the regional model's storms to an even higher-resolution hurricane
forecast model capable of simulating which ones would develop into category 3, 4, and 5 storms.
Naturally this has led to a number of reports in the popular media that we are to expect fewer but stronger hurricanes in the future and those hurricanes are
going to be caused by global warming. It should be noted that this study actually contradicts some reports that the recent “anomalous” rise in hurricane activity is linked
to climate change. No consensus here.
Model tracks for all storms that eventually reached category 4 or 5 intensity. Bender et al./Science.
Given that the model predictions for 2100 are not testable except in the fullness of time, there is no convenient way to test to the new models future
accuracy. As the researchers themselves state, “these findings are dependent on the global climate models used to provide the environmental conditions for our downscaling
experiments.” It is, however, possible to run the model on known data taken over the past quarter of a century. The new modeling study attempted to reproduce recent
conditions and they found:
The researchers note that the new modeling offers no support for claims that global warming has already noticeably affected hurricane activity. In the real
world, the number of Atlantic hurricanes observed during the past 25 years has doubled; in the model, global warming would cause a slight decline in the number over the same
period. Given that the mid-resolution model used by the group duplicates the observed rising trend, it may be natural.
So the fuzzier mid-resolution model, presumably less accurate than the new one, gets the recent trend correct, which the researchers interpret as an
indication that any rising trend is purely natural. The new high-resolution model doesn't correctly predict current conditions. Here we have low-resolution models known to be
inexact providing the hypothetical starting point data for other models—models which fail to correctly predict trends even based on real data—yet we are asked to
uncritically accept the projections for hurricanes 90 years from now. It is to be expected that, if you start with wonky data input, you end up with wonky data output, but this
carries the process a step further. Believing the results of this exercise seems more an act of faith than science. Is it any wonder that I mentioned the greatest sin a
modeler: believing that the model is the thing being modeled.
Computer simulation of the most intense hurricanes shows an increase from today (top) to a warmer world at the end of the century (bottom). Adapted from Bender et
al./Science.
Rather amazingly, an earlier study in Nature
stated that current climate conditions resemble those that led to peak Atlantic hurricane activity about 1000 years ago. I say amazingly because this study based on examining
ocean sediments, included Pennsylvania State University meteorologist Michael Mann of hockey stick fame—a global warming true believer in anyone's book. The paper states:
“The short nature of the historical record and potential issues with its reliability in earlier decades, however, has prompted an ongoing debate regarding the reality and
significance of the recent rise.”
Good modelers, like all cautious scientists, always use conditional phrases and qualifiers when writing of their work. “In the absence of a detectable
change, we are dependent on a combination of observational, theoretical and modeling studies to assess future climate changes in tropical cyclone activity,” concludes the
review by Knutson et al. “These studies are growing progressively more credible, but still have many limitations.” We have consensus and that consensus is “we
don't really know.” Unfortunately, such reservations do not make it into the news headlines.
What usually happens is more a sin of omission rather than commission. Climate modelers, and the climate science community in general, have not gone out of
their way to stress the inherent unreliability of their predictions to the lay public. In the public forum, climate science has been happy to let overly excitable reporters and
fringe eco-activists spin the GCM results into predictions of future catastrophe. This is disingenuous at best and can lead to the types of backlash recently visited on CRU and
other research organizations over mishandling and manipulation of data. Sure, the IPCC calls them scenarios and projections, not predictions, as if that gives them deniability
when the projections do not come to pass.
In 2007, the IPCC said it was “more likely than not” that man-made greenhouse gases had already altered storm activity, but the authors of the review
said more recent evidence muddies the issue. “The evidence is not strong enough that we could make some kind of statement” along those lines, Knutson said. It doesn't mean
the IPCC report was wrong; it was just based on science done by 2006 and recent research has changed a bit, said Knutson and the other researchers.
The fact is, climate scientists have continued to use models to make predictions about future climatic conditions, and by attaching those predictions to the
AGW theory they have weakened the very theory they are at pains to defend. Fortunately, Popper provides us with a way to filter truth from falsehood. The IPCC and other global
warming alarmists have a choice—they can either say that AGW makes no predictions and is therefore not a scientific theory by definition, or they can stand by their model
generated predictions and admit that their theory has been proven false time and again.
Be safe, enjoy the interglacial and stay skeptical.
The computer model says it's going to be a heck of a blow.
Post Script: This is the first of two articles that, in part, are based on the philosophy of Karl Popper. These articles were motivated by an exchange
of ideas with Doug Campbell, one of the proprietors of ClimateDebateDaily and a climate change proponent.
Correspondence with Doug has renewed my faith that good people can not only have honest differences of opinion but that they can discuss those differences in a civilized
manner. (Doug L. Hoffman, The Resilient Earth)
Researchers at Carnegie Institution say corals are being overwhelmed by rising carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (Ian Sample, The Guardian)
Corals and mollusks evolved when atmospheric carbon dioxide was up to an order of magnitude higher than today's and when temperatures ranged from 6-10 °C
warmer than today's down to an ice age. They survived periods when carbon dioxide levels plunged to be similar to those of today and rebounded to about 6 times higher
than current levels.
The "ocean acidification crisis" is a dog that will not hunt. It is even sillier than gorebull warbling and boy, that takes some doing!
LONDON - The slow recovery of the voluntary carbon market is frustrating investors as trading remains sporadic and buyers focus on either high-quality credits or large
volumes of lower-quality ones.
"There are deals out there but you have the entire market going after them," Grattan MacGiffin, head of voluntary carbon at brokers MF Global in London, told Reuters.
That's the thing about scams, you have to know when to get out...
So let me see if I have this right – President Obama’s budget proposes to increase taxes on oil and gas by $36.5
billion over the next ten years, while laying out even larger sums for more politically favored energy sources – especially wind and solar. And the reason advanced
for this is that these “subsidies [sic] are costly to the American taxpayer and do little to incentivize production or reduce energy prices.”
Neither of the claims in this statement is true. In fact, they are the opposite of truth. The oil and gas industries are major sources of revenues for
governments at all levels in the US, and production incentives have contributed to a stunning turnaround in the
country’s natural gas supplies – with higher production and lower costs a major feature.
Let’s take a look at these two myths individually.
Myth 1: The oil and gas business receives significant subsidies from the federal government.
Fact: Oil and gas production are major contributors of tax and royalty payments to all levels of government.
Fortunately, for those interested in facts, the federal government publishes a lot of them, and they tell a stubborn truth. The oil and gas production business pays
about $140 billion annually in royalties and corporate
income taxes to the US government.
In comparison, far from being a beneficiary of government subsidies, oil and gas producers receive
little–about $2.2 billion in 2008. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
There was an excellent news article on February 20 2010 in the Baltimore Sun titled “A
new smokestack cleans Baltimore’s air” by Timothy B. Wheeler. However, there is one very important error that the reporter makes. The article reads in part
“A new smokestack is not usually cause for celebration among environmentalists. But the 400-foot stack spouting white clouds at Brandon Shores power plant represents a
quantum leap in cleaning Baltimore’s air, not another source of pollution.”
I have advocated throughout my career, including my tenure on the Colorado Air Quality Control Commission, on the need to improve air quality. This is a critical threat to
human health, which is one of the five resource areas that we urge action on in our paper
Pielke Sr., R., K. Beven, G. Brasseur, J. Calvert, M. Chahine, R. Dickerson, D. Entekhabi, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, H. Gupta, V. Gupta, W. Krajewski, E. Philip
Krider, W. K.M. Lau, J. McDonnell, W. Rossow, J. Schaake, J. Smith, S. Sorooshian, and E. Wood, 2009: Climate
change: The need to consider human forcings besides greenhouse gases. Eos, Vol. 90, No. 45, 10 November 2009, 413. Copyright (2009) American Geophysical Union.
and in our focus on vulnerability as a policy framework (e.g. see
also).
The single error, in the otherwise excellent article, is in the following paragraph [where I have bold-faced the error];
“Constellation Energy has just completed work on $875 million worth of pollution “scrubbers” at its 26-year-old coal-fired power plant on the Patapsco River. One
of the plant’s two steam-generating units resumed operation with the new air-quality controls in December, and the second is cranking up now. The white clouds rising
from the stack are almost entirely water vapor. A pair of 700-foot stacks nearby, which until recently belched toxic, acidic smoke from the power plant, are quiet.”
There is an other gas in this relatively clean effluent and it is carbon dioxide! I am unclear why this is not recognized in
the article, but it is an important oversight.
The excerpts from the article given below present what are the positive benefits of the new scrubbers.
“But that’s likely to change with the installation of the twin scrubbers at Brandon Shores and pollution controls put in at Constellation’s other coal-burning
plants in the area. The Baltimore-based power company has invested more than $1.5 billion to comply with Maryland’s Healthy Air Act, which when it was passed in 2006 was
billed by state officials as the toughest power-plant pollution law on the East Coast.”
“Under the law, the state’s power plants were required to reduce harmful emissions by 70 percent to 80 percent by this year, and by 75 percent to 90 percent by 2013.
Targeted are releases of nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and mercury – byproducts of burning coal that contribute to environmental and health problems in the state.”
“Nitrogen oxides contribute to ground-level ozone pollution or smog that can make hot summer air difficult or painful to breathe. They harm water quality in the
Chesapeake Bay as they drop from the air. Sulfur dioxide is a major source of fine-particle pollution that can cause breathing difficulties or premature death.”
“Mercury is a toxic metal that, in small doses, can damage the brain, nervous system and other organs. It accumulates in fish tissue, prompting state health officials
to warn against eating too many fish caught locally.” (Climate Science)
JAKARTA - Indonesia's oil production, which has slumped in recent years, could be hit by new environment laws in Southeast Asia's biggest economy, a senior official in the
energy ministry said on Wednesday.
Indonesia has said it would produce 965,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil and condensate this year, compared with 949,100 bpd in 2009, and 1.5 million bpd in the 1990s.
"If the environment law comes into force then many oil companies could reduce activities, and oil production will fall sharply this year," Evita Legowo, director
general oil and gas, told reporters. (Reuters)
Unless the energy bill mandates tighter emissions standards for coal-fired power stations, the UK will miss its carbon-cut targets (Tim Yeo, The Guardian)
Yes Tim, um... so what? About the last thing the world needs is any form of restriction on atmospheric carbon dioxide (it's the best thing people have ever
done for the environment).
TWO new fossil fuel power plants that will increase the state's greenhouse gas emissions by between 5 and 15 per cent will move a step closer to construction this week after
developers claimed renewable energy cannot feed a growing hunger for electricity.
The carbon emissions from the power stations, which would be added to existing plants at Mount Piper near Lithgow and Bayswater in the Hunter Valley, would equal a doubling of
the number of cars on NSW roads.
But the two government-owned developers, Delta Electricity and Macquarie Generation, say they are essential to meet demand and replace older, less efficient coal-fired
generators. (SMH)
When I first began my career, a wise old-timer gave me a piece of advice that I took to heart. He said ''When you are planning and executing a project, it is important for
you to do what you say you are going to do. People are going to make investment decisions on the basis of the numbers you project. So don''t over promise and under deliver.'' [Read
More] (Energy Tribune)
When President Obama took office, gun rights advocates sounded the alarm, warning that he intended to strip them of their arms and ammunition.
And yet the opposite is happening. Mr. Obama has been largely silent on the issue while states are engaged in a new and largely successful push for expanded gun rights, even
passing measures that have been rejected in the past.
In Virginia, the General Assembly approved a bill last week that allows people to carry concealed weapons in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol, and the House of Delegates
voted to repeal a 17-year-old ban on buying more than one handgun a month. The actions came less than three years after the shootings at Virginia Tech that claimed 33 lives and
prompted a major national push for increased gun control.
Arizona and Wyoming lawmakers are considering nearly a half dozen pro-gun measures, including one that would allow residents to carry concealed weapons without a permit. And
lawmakers in Montana and Tennessee passed measures last year — the first of their kind — to exempt their states from federal regulation of firearms and ammunition that are
made, sold and used in state. Similar bills have been proposed in at least three other states. (NYT)
People suffer and die because the government "protects" us. It should protect us less and respect our liberty more.
The most basic questions are: Who owns you, and who should control what you put into your body? In what sense are you free if you can't decide what medicines you will take?
(John Stossel, Townhall)
NEW YORK - Estrogen-like compounds found in soy won't help limit body fat in post-menopausal women, new research shows.
Animal studies and small studies in humans have offered some evidence that these compounds, known as isoflavones, could help build muscle mass and reduce fat mass, Dr. Oksana
A. Matvienko of the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls and her colleagues write in the journal Menopause.
It's unclear why such compounds might have any effect on body composition, but it's possible that they might act as estrogen does, to affect hormones that play a role in fat
and sugar metabolism. (Reuters Health)
Nothing annoys ideological green doomsayers more than pointing out that most global environmental trends are positive. And few people arouse green ire more than Bjorn
Lomborg, author of The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of the World (2001) and Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming (2007).
Newsweek's science reporter (and Al Gore fangirl) Sharon Begley is now touting the latest effort to "debunk" Lomborg: Howard Friel's The Lomborg Deception which will
be published by Yale University Press next month. (Ronald Bailey, Reason)
To do so is simply to exchange our technological, industrial, and energy superiority for a lie.
February 24, 2010
- by AWR Hawkins
For decades now, pressure has been building for America to “go green.” From the Kyoto Protocol the Senate refused to ratify, to the moratoriums on domestic drilling, to the
construction of thousands upon thousands of eyesores known as wind turbines that now blemish our landscape, environmentalists in high places have been intent on driving our
capitalist economy off the proverbial cliff of eco-friendliness.
To date, it’s all been done under the guise of trying to halt man-made global warming, a scientific theory which has become a quasi-religion for treehuggers and America
haters the world over.
Yet during the past few months, as Climategate has unfolded, the idea of trading in a nine-passenger Ford Excursion for a hybrid that seats three adults and a dog comfortably
in order to save the planet has lost much of its luster. And now that Phil Jones, the mind behind the man-made global warming myth, has admitted he lost the data to back up his
theory, it seems like a good time to ask why any sane capitalist should give even a thought to going green. (PJM)
CORVALLIS, Ore. –With a changing climate there’s a good chance that forest fires in the Pacific Northwest will become larger and more frequent – and according to one
expert speaking today at a professional conference, that’s just fine.
The future of fire in this region is difficult to predict, will always be variable, and undoubtedly a part of the future landscape. People should understand, however, that fire
is not only inevitable but also a valuable part of forest ecosystems and their management, says John Bailey, an associate professor in the Department of Forest Engineering,
Resources and Management at Oregon State University. (OSU)
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson laid out the timetable for regulating greenhouse gas emissions Monday, writing in a letter to lawmakers that
she plans to start targeting large facilities such as power plants next year but won't target small emitters before 2016.
The letter makes it clear the Obama administration will move ahead with curbing global warming pollution under the Clean Air Act unless Congress moves to stop it. Jackson
emphasized that the administration was required to act under a 2007 Supreme Court decision that said greenhouse gases from motor vehicles qualified as a pollutant under the
40-year-old air-quality law. Jackson was responding to a letter several coal-state senators sent her late Friday.
"I share your goals of ensuring economic recovery at this critical time and of addressing greenhouse-gas emissions in sensible ways that are consistent with the call for
comprehensive energy and climate legislation," she wrote. (Juliet Eilperin, Washington Post)
Pledges Post Copenhagen Unlikely to Keep Temperatures Below 2 Degrees Celsius by Mid Century
UNEP Year Book Also Launched Today Outlines Growing Governance Challenge from Climate to Chemicals
Bali (Indonesia), 23 February 2010 - Countries will have to be far more ambitious in cutting greenhouse gas emissions if the world is to effectively curb a rise in global
temperature at 2 degrees C or less.
This is the conclusion of a new greenhouse gas modeling study, based on the estimates of researchers at nine leading centres, compiled by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).
(Press Release)
BONN, Germany - Agreeing on a U.N. climate treaty in 2010 will be "very difficult" despite a new push to spur negotiations after the Copenhagen summit, the head of
the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat said on Tuesday.
Yvo de Boer, a Dutch citizen who announced plans last week to stand down in July after four years, also suggested to Reuters Television that his successor should be from a
developing nation. (Reuters)
BEIJING - President Hu Jintao said on Tuesday China was committed to fighting climate change, both at home and in cooperation with the rest of the world, but stopped short
of offering any new policies. (Reuters)
DALLAS - Many Americans are skeptical about global warming and that makes it harder to get a bill through Congress.
"My personal leanings are that it's more cyclical than a permanent trend," said Jimmy Pritchard, a Southern Baptist pastor in a Dallas suburb.
"And I think It's a little presumptuous to put so many resources and energy into something that may change direction in the next few years."
Such views, widespread in the U.S. heartland, drive conservative opposition to President Barack Obama's bid to get a bill through Congress that would cap U.S. emissions of the
greenhouse gases linked to climate change.
"It's a very different debate in Europe, where there is no discussion about whether climate change is occurring. But in the United States it is about whether it
exists," said John Wright of pollster Ipsos.
It is a skepticism that stands in contrast with prevailing views in Europe and has been linked to the influence of U.S. talk radio, the "oil lobby", an enduring love
affair with cars, and a history founded on limiting the role of government. (Reuters)
Inhofe intends to ask for a probe of the embattled climate scientists for possible criminal acts. And he thinks Gore should be recalled to explain his prior congressional
testimony. (Click here
for the just-released Senate Environment and Public Works report behind Inhofe's announcement.) (Charlie Martin, PJM)
The emails (and the data and computer code released to the public) were written by the world's top climate scientists, many of whom had been lead authors and contributing lead
authors of various sections of the IPCC reports and were thus intimately involved in writing and editing the IPCC's science assessments. This is no small matter. As noted
science historian Naomi Oreskes wrote, the "scientific consensus" of climate change "is clearly expressed in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change." According to one top Obama Administration official, the IPCC is "the
gold standard for authoritative scientific information on climate change because of the rigorous way in which they are prepared, reviewed, and approved...
These scientists work at the most prestigious and influential climate research institutions in the world. For example, Dr. Phil Jones was director of the CRU until he was
forced to temporarily resign because of his role in the scandal. According to the Congressional Research Service (CRS), CRU is "among the renowned research centers in the
world" on key aspects of climate change research. It also has "contributed to the scientific assessments of climate change conducted by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC)." CRU's CRUTEM3 is one of the key datasets of surface temperatures utilized by the IPCC in its Fourth Assessment Report...
The IPCC's work serves as the key basis for climate policy decisions made by governments throughout the world, including here in the United States...
In short, the utility and probity of the IPCC process and its results are crucial to policymaking with respect to climate change here in the United States. (Inhofe EPW Press
Blog)
Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) crowed Tuesday that recent events prove he was right seven years ago when he called global warming the “greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the
American public.”
Inhofe, the ranking member on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and Public Enemy Number 1 in the eyes of climate bill advocates, pointed to recently uncovered
errors in a widely cited U.N. climate change study, hacked “Climategate” emails that suggest climate scientists suppressed dissenting views, and comments by a leading
climate scientist that the planet has not warmed significantly in the past 15 years to support his contention that the whole thing is, in fact, a giant hoax.
But Lisa Jackson, administrator of EPA, said issues Inhofe and other Republicans raised at an EPW hearing on Tuesday do not undermine the overwhelming scientific evidence that
the planet is warming and humans are a leading cause. (Jim Snyder, E2 Wire)
U.S. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson today defended the science underpinning pending climate regulations despite Senate Republicans' claims that global warming data has been
thrown into doubt. (Greenwire)
The world’s largest private sector coal business, the Peabody Energy Company (PEC) has filed a mammoth 240-page “Petition for Reconsideration,” a full-blown legal
challenge against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The petition must be answered and covers the entire body of leaked emails from ‘Climategate’ as well as those other ‘gate’ revelations including the frauds allegedly
perpetrated under such sub-headings as ‘Himalayan Glaciers,’ ‘African Agricultural Production,’ ‘Amazon Rain Forests,’ ‘Melting Mountain Ice,’ ‘Netherlands
Below Sea Level’ as well as those much-publicized abuses of the peer-review literature and so called ‘gray literature.’ These powerful litigants also draw attention to
the proven criminal conduct by climate scientists in refusing to honor Freedom of Information law (FOIA) requests.
I am posting Benchmarking US Air Emissions (2006), a joint
report by Ceres, NRDC, and PSEG, because it apparently is no longer available on the Internet, and it contains research relevant to the climate policy debate.
For example, many of the nation’s biggest CO2 emitters (e.g. American Electric Power) are also leading advocates of cap-and-trade. Does this make Waxman-Markey
a “polluter-crafted” bill, and recipients of AEP campaign contributions “polluter-funded” politicians? Yes, if you apply green “logic”
without fear or favor.
Let’s wait until the economy recovers a little before we step on it with costly environmental regulations. That was the message from Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson in a response to eight Democratic senators from industrial coal states the authority of the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases. Administrator
Jackson said by April she will “take actions to
ensure that no stationary source will be required to get a Clean Air Act permit to cover its greenhouse gas emissions in calendar year 2010.”
As the Clean Air Act is currently written, the EPA could regulate sources or establishments that emit 100 or 250 tons or more of a pollutant per year. The EPA is proposing a
“tailoring rule” that would amend the CAA so that only entities that emit 25,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent per year would be affected. But even the 25,000 ton
threshold is subject to change said Jackson: “I expect the threshold for permitting will be substantially higher than the 25,000-ton limit that EPA originally proposed.”
These regulations for the largest of emitters are expected to take place between the latter half of 2011 and 2013.
What a difference 12 months makes. Almost exactly one year ago, the popular, newly minted president, Barack Obama, was
telling Congress that he wanted “legislation that places a market-based cap on carbon pollution and drives the production of more renewable energy in America.”
The Democrats, fully confident of their new president and their grip on both houses of Congress, were certain that they could pass yet another big energy bill that would
finally push hydrocarbons off their pedestal and replace them with wind turbines, solar panels, and every other type of alternative energy.
An Unstimulated Economy
But a lot has happened since Obama delivered his first State of the Union address. The global economy has continued to show lackluster growth. And perhaps most important:
unemployment rates in the U.S. remain stubbornly high and are expected to stay high for at least the next two years. The massive stimulus, in short, has been expensive
and unstimulating.
On Sunday, the New York Timesreported
that “roughly 2.7 million jobless people will lose their unemployment check before the end of April unless Congress approves the Obama administration’s proposal to extend
the payments.” The same story, written by Peter S. Goodman, also contained this astonishing fact: Some 6.3 million Americans have “been unemployed for six months or longer,
the largest number since the government began keeping track in 1948. That is more than double the toll in the next-worst period, in the early 1980s.”
Real estate foreclosures in the U.S. are soaring, with up to 3.5
million homeowners facing the threat of foreclosure this year. And of course, there’s the changing balance of power in Congress. The Democrats’ brief stint with a super
majority has ended in the Senate, where a Republican, Scott Brown, now sits in the chair held by the late Ted Kennedy.
Other Problems for Climate Alarmism
Meanwhile, sloppy work has tarnished the reputation of the UN-sanctioned Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), perhaps irretrievably so. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
The global-warming industry is getting several bailouts, none of which it wants. Last week, three major corporations - Conoco/Phillips, BP and Caterpillar - bailed out on
the U.S. Climate Action Partnership lobbyist collaboration. Arizona bailed on the Western Climate Initiative (WCI) cap-and-trade plan. The Utah House presumably wants to bail
on WCI, too, because it overwhelmingly passed a resolution requesting the Environmental Protection Agency to bail on its planned regulation of carbon dioxide under the Clean
Air Act. Texas and Virginia also want the nation's top environmental regulator to cease and desist. (Paul Chesser, Washington Times)
From Hurricanes to Arctic Warming: Carbon Dioxide or Multi-Decadal Climate Variability?
Thursday, March 4, 03:30 PM
David Skaggs Research Center, Room GC402 Boulder Colorado
Increasing strength of Atlantic hurricanes, disappearance of Arctic sea ice, melting of the Greenland ice sheet, six meters flooding in coastal cities; are these impending
climate catastrophes supported by observations, or are they just results of imperfect climate modeling and the imagination of overeager climate politicians? I will present
recent analysis of North Atlantic hurricane activities to show that there is no justification for claims that hurricane intensity or numbers have increased drastically with
increasing atmospheric concentration of CO2. Similarly, Greenland temperatures in the 1930s and 1940s were as high as they are today. Finally, I will argue that the
current warming of the Arctic region is affected by multi-decadal climate variability more than by an increasing concentration of carbon dioxide. Thus we may spend hundreds of
billions of dollars on curbing CO2 emissions without having a noticeable effect on the ongoing climate change in the Arctic. (Climate Science)
A
team of researchers under the auspices of the World Meteorological Organization has published a new review paper in Nature Geoscience (PDF)
updating consensus perspectives published in 1998 and 2006. The author team includes prominent scientists from either side of the "hurricane wars" of 2005-2006:
Thomas R. Knutson, John L. McBride, Johnny Chan, Kerry Emanuel, Greg Holland, Chris Landsea, Isaac Held, James P. Kossin, A. K. Srivastava and Masato Sugi.
Hurricane counts (with no adjustments for possible missing cases) show a significant increase from the late 1800s to present, but do not have a significant trend from the
1850s or 1860s to present3. Other studies23 infer a substantial low-bias in early Atlantic tropical cyclone intensities (1851–1920), which, if corrected, would further
reduce or possibly eliminate long-term increasing trends in basin-wide hurricane counts. Landfalling tropical storm and hurricane activity in
the US shows no long-term increase (Fig. 2, orange series)20. Basin-wide major hurricane counts show a significant rising trend, but we judge these basin-wide data as
unreliable for climate-trend estimation before aircraft reconnaissance in 1944.
The paper's conclusions about global trends might raise a few eyebrows.
In terms of global tropical cyclone frequency, it was concluded25 that there was no significant change in global tropical storm or hurricane numbers from 1970 to 2004, nor
any significant change in hurricane numbers for any individual basin over that period, except for the Atlantic (discussed above). Landfall in various regions of East Asia26
during the past 60 years, and those in the Philippines27 during the past century, also do not show significant trends.
The paper acknowledges that the detection of a change in tropical cyclone frequency has yet to be achieved:
Thus, considering available observational studies, and after accounting for potential errors arising from past changes in observing capabilities, it remains uncertain whether
past changes in tropical cyclone frequency have exceeded the variability expected through natural causes.
The paper states that projections of future activity favor a reduction in storm frequency coupled with and increase in average storm intensity, with large uncertainties:
These include our assessment that tropical cyclone frequency is likely to either decrease or remain essentially the same. Despite this lack of an increase in total storm
count, we project that a future increase in the globally averaged frequency of the strongest tropical cyclones is more likely than not — a higher confidence level than
possible at our previous assessment6.
Does the science allow detection of such expected changes in tropical cyclone intensity based on historical trends? The authors say no:
The short time period of the data does not allow any definitive statements regarding separation of anthropogenic changes from natural decadal variability or the existence of
longer-term trends and possible links to greenhouse warming. Furthermore, intensity changes may result from a systematic change in storm duration, which is another route by
which the storm environment can affect intensity that has not been studied extensively.
The intensity changes projected by various modelling studies of the effects of greenhouse-gas-induced warming (Supplementary Table S2) are small in the sense that detection
of an intensity change of a magnitude consistent with model projections should be very unlikely at this time37,38, given data limitations and the large interannual
variability relative to the projected changes. Uncertain relationships between tropical cyclones and internal climate variability, including factors related to the SST
distribution, such as vertical wind shear, also reduce our ability to confidently attribute observed intensity changes to greenhouse warming. The most significant cyclone
intensity increases are found for the Atlantic Ocean basin43, but the relative contributions to this increase from multidecadal variability44 (whether internal or aerosol
forced) versus greenhouse-forced warming cannot yet be confidently determined.
What about more intense rainfall?
. . . a detectable change in tropical-cyclone-related rainfall has not been established by existing studies.
What about changes in location of storm formation, storm motion, lifetime and surge?
There is no conclusive evidence that any observed changes in tropical cyclone genesis, tracks, duration and surge flooding exceed the variability expected from natural
causes.
Bottom line (emphasis added)?
. . . we cannot at this time conclusively identify anthropogenic signals in past tropical cyclone data.
The latest WMO statement should indicate definitively (and once again) that it
is scientifically untenable to associate trends (i.e., in the past) in hurricane activity or damage to anthropogenic causes. (Roger Pielke Jr)
Fox News just revealed that on Monday, 150 employees of
the U.K. Met Office have met on a logistically convenient place of Great Britain - namely in a Turkish seaside resort of Antalya. ;-)
They agreed that their and the world's weather data (mostly the surface data) are a complete mess and they need to start from scratch. See the executive
summary (PDF, 4 pages).
The new system should be verifiable and fully accessible; using fully documented algorithms and based on peer-reviewed methodologies; using multi-team approach to the surface
data; subjected to strict audits; supplemented with seriously calculated uncertainties.
The Met Office will send the proposal to the World Meteorological Organization. The main U.K. weather institution didn't answer any further questions from Fox News. Note that
the IPCC itself was mostly born in Great Britain so this is not just an irrelevant
local event.
The Met Office was recently under a big pressure itself. For example, even their left-leaning comrades in the BBC plan to "fire it" as its source of the weather
predictions because of many recent failed predictions (typically on the warm side).
I believe that this decision could be viewed as a nice partial victory of Steve McIntyre and the Climate Audit community - whose extension incorporates this blog, too. Partial
congratulations. But the full congratulations will only arrive once a better product is available. ;-) (The Reference Frame)
At one time, some would call them "deniers." The more generous called them "skeptics." But now, increasingly, it appears that they can be called
something else: sane. Yes, the climate has certainly changed.
Even in the mainstream media, the less liberal organs are waking up. There is now a never-ending barrage of articles on the climate scam, with The
Washington Times, The Wall Street Journal
and the New York Post firing some recent salvos. And these
inconvenient truths are just adding to a case against the Climateers that has become dizzying. (Selwyn Duke, American Thinker)
It is open season on climate scientists, but such hand-wringing has allowed the creeping rehabilitation of climate scepticism (David Adam, The Guardian)
Poor old Graoniad, having a bit of difficulty setting its advocacy aside. Shame they can't see that science is actually advanced by these periodic
cleanouts of fraud and incompetence.
Once in a while I try to “review the bidding,” as my former editor Cornelia Dean liked to say when some big breaking story was threatening to overwhelm the newsroom. In
this case, it’s not breaking news but a flood of allegations and attacks on 100 years of research pointing to a growing human influence on the earth’s climate. The assaults
have been fueled by a batch of liberated/hacked/stolen climate files that, at their root, have yet to be shown to indicate much beyond ill-advised language and strong passions
among some climate scientists and by several missteps after two decades of grueling work by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
I’m not saying there’s direct cause and effect, but it’s almost as if the tidal wave of dire pronouncements about the imminent unraveling of the earth’s climate and
ecosystems several years ago hit a shore and rebounded in a way that now threatens to inundate the source. More likely, we’re seeing the explosive evolution of the
blogosphere as a disruptive force, linked up the chain to talk radio and pundits and creating an echo chamber in which noise can swamp information. (Andy Revkin, NYT)
Climate change survey raises fears it will be harder to persuade the public to support costly policies to curb emissions ( Juliette Jowit, The Guardian)
It was only a matter of time before the climate alarmists got their feet back under them. There is too much at stake politically, too many careers and reputations on the
line, too much grant money for researchers and donations for environmental groups, too much green-tax revenue for governments, too much prestige in academic circles at risk for
those who have asserted for more than a decade that man is causing damaging climate change to slink away in defeat.
So it is of little surprise that in the past couple of weeks many alarmists have begun asserting that despite all the revelations of the past three months about how key climate
scientists and the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have corrupted the scientific process in an obsessive drive to prove that climate change is
real, nothing has undermined the "fact" that the Earth is warming dangerously. (Lorne Gunter, Canwest)
It’s tough when you can’t talk evidence, and the topic is science. What’s left is just the stone-age mud-throwing campaign.
There’s a matrix-moment coming for Clive Hamilton. Skeptics are now the grassroots activists against big-money and big-lies, fighting for the poor, and for the
environment. He’s doing his damnedest to suppress community participation, promote intolerance, and effectively fight for banker
profits, corrupt scientists, and plundering
bureaucrats.
The AGW camp have on their side all the authority positions in climate science (you don’t get appointed unless you believe), all the climate and science journals, all the
government and university funding, the computer models, Nobel prizes, the western governments, all the propaganda money can buy, the Greens, the politically correct, the UN,
and all the mainstream media (at least until recently). And the skeptics have…evidence, logic, retired scientists, and donations to blogs. Clive imagines he is talking truth
to power…
Since he can’t win on the science, he tries to bully instead (ironically while whinging about
… bullies). He peddles easily refutable lies, using unverifiable words from anonymous entities. Twice, Hamilton even contradicts himself, probably because he knows
he’s making defamatory claims he can’t back up.
Hamilton realizes too late that the campaign to “out” the bullies is working More
» (Jo Nova)
Independent Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders said Tuesday that people who do not take the threat of climate change seriously remind him of those who downplayed the growing
threat of fascism and Nazism in the 1930s. (CBS News)
Since
taking the chair of the IPCC in 2002, Rajendra Pachauri's own personal research institute, The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), has enjoyed a multi-million-euro bonanza
from EU-funded research projects.
Having led the institute from 1982, in the 20 years before he assumed the IPCC chair, only four EU projects had been awarded. Since then, the institute in seven years has
shared in 17 projects worth over €56 million. For many of them, TERI had no obvious expertise or physical presence.
The rush of EU funding to Pachauri's institute – which insiders speak of producing "low quality research" – invites suspicion that the EU is seeking to influence
the IPPC chair in favour of the European climate change agenda, ensuring he pulls his punches when it comes to supporting developing countries, including his native India,
while wrong-footing the United States.
Pachauri, on the other hand – in so readily accepting millions of euros from the EU for his institute - lays himself open to the accusation of being a pawn of the Europeans,
concerned more with promoting his own financial interests than impartially representing the international community.
On the face of it, the facts are damning. Virtually unknown in the West until he became IPCC chair, Dr Rajendra Pachauri's ascension to his elevated position marked a turning
point in the fortunes of the institute which he headed as director general. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) April 2009 finding that global warming emissions are pollutants that endanger public health is coming under fire in the courts.
Oil and coal industry groups, their allies, and three states have filed 16 legal challenges to the agency's "endangerment finding." Additionally, some state
legislators in Missouri and Utah are supporting nonbinding resolutions opposing EPA action on climate change.
These court challenges are based on disingenuous, uninformed attacks against climate science. If successful, they would prevent the EPA from requiring coal-fired electric power
plants and other major polluting facilities to reduce their emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases. They also would thwart the agency from implementing new
clean car rules that, according to a Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) analysis, would save drivers tens of billions of dollars at the pump and reduce U.S. oil consumption by
some 1.3 million barrels a day by 2020, nearly as much as what the nation currently imports from Saudi Arabia. (YUKS)
Nicky da Mutt (pictured) used to be a
"concerned scientist" although he's no longer financial (I refused to keep giving the silly buggers their $20/year). You too can be a "concerned
scientist" by making a "donation" here
and filling out the form -- absolutely no qualifications required. (Join UCS as a new member for $35 or more, and you'll receive a FREE UCS mouse pad!)
UCS are more value for yuks & snickers than anything else and we use "yuks" and "ucs" interchangeably here.
On a more positive note, they do make a passing useful "smell test" -- if yuks are for [anything] then the probability that [anything] is misanthropic bullshit
is really quite high.
Nick (pictured in this old photo) is a lot older now and much less interested in sniffing out corrupt and fetid things, so it's doubtful he misses his lapsed membership.
What a pity yuks haven't grown past their old ways.
A rare thing happened on Monday's "O'Reilly Factor": a climate alarmist and a global warming skeptic debated on American television Nobel Laureate Al Gore's
favorite theory.
In the alarmist corner was Bill Nye the Science Guy.
In the skeptical corner was Accuweather meteorologist Joe Bastardi.
Moderating the event, and doing a fine job of it, was Fox News's Bill O'Reilly (video embedded below the fold with transcript): (NewsBusters)
The real sin isn’t the fraud, exaggeration, bullying, cherrypicking and stifling of dissent that went into producing the great global warming scare.
No, our university chiefs agree. The real sin is that all this has been exposed by the nasty tabloids:
UNIVERSITY leaders are pressing for a public campaign to restore the intellectual and moral authority of Australian science in the wake of the climate wars.
Peter Coaldrake, chairman of Universities Australia and vice-chancellor of Queensland University of Technology, told the HES yesterday he was “concerned about the way
the climate change debate has flowed”, and would address the role of science in the formation of public policy at his National Press Club address next week.
“It worries me that this
tabloid decimation of science comes at a time when we have a major national issue in terms of the number of people taking science at university,"Professor Coaldrake
said.
Margaret Sheil, chief executive of the Australian Research Council, said she was deeply concerned about the backlash generated by emails from the East Anglia Climate
Research Unit, the criticisms of Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, head of the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, and poor research on the rate of glacial melting in a 2007
UN report on climate change.
Professor Sheil said she feared that these black marks would spread to a “broader negative public perception” of science…
Ian Chubb, vice-chancellor of the Australian National University, said some populists had found it easy to denigrate science because many scientific conclusions in the
field of climate change rested on a balance of probability rather than incontestable proof.
“What concerns me is when you get people who are purporting to comment on the science and all they’re doing is seeking to turn themselves into celebrities.” he said.
I think some people are about to reinforce the very cynicism they deplore. A little less elitism may suit them better, just for a start. (Andrew Bolt)
Heroic, monotesticular UKIP MEP Nigel Farage was bumped off the BBC Question Time panel at the last minute last week. Shame. That particular edition was broadcast from
Middlesbrough and it would have been fascinating to hear the audience’s response to the choice things he was planning to say about the closure of their local steelworks. (
James Delingpole, TDT)
Prof. Dr. Hans Joachim Schellnhuber is the Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and Professor of Theoretical Physics at Potsdam University. He
chairs the German Advisory Council on Global Change and advises the President of the European Commission on energy and climate change issues.
The Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) has established itself as one of the world's most distinguished climate impact research institutions since its
foundation in 1992. What key research priorities has PIK set? (Research In Germany)
PIK was set up after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Potsdam was in East Germany and their first offices were in the old Stasi building. It seems that old
habits die hard and controlling the population takes on a new mantle.
Thousands of snow-clearing machines have been working to dig the Russian capital Moscow out of a record-breaking fall of 63cm (nearly 25 inches).
After a weekend of heavy snow showers, the regional weather centre announced that the previous record of 62cm, set in 1966, had been broken. (BBC News)
Pigs still can't fly, but this winter, the mayor of Moscow promises to keep it from snowing. For just a few million dollars, the mayor's office will hire the Russian air
force to spray a fine chemical mist over the clouds before they reach the capital, forcing them to dump their snow outside the city. Authorities say this will be a boon for
Moscow, which is typically covered with a blanket of snow from November to March. Road crews won't need to constantly clear the streets, and the traffic — and quality of
life — will undoubtedly improve.
The idea came from Mayor Yury Luzhkov, who is no stranger to playing God. In 2002, he spearheaded a project to reverse the flow of the vast River Ob through Siberia to help
irrigate the country's parched Central Asian neighbors. Although that idea hasn't exactly turned out as planned — scientists have said it's not feasible — this time,
Luzhkov says, there's no way he can fail.
Controlling the weather in Moscow is nothing new, he says. Ahead of the two main holidays celebrated in the city each year — Victory Day in May and City Day in September
— the often cash-strapped air force is paid to make sure that it doesn't, well, rain on the parades. With a budget of $40 billion a year (larger than New York City's
budget), Moscow can easily afford the $2 million to $3 million price tag to keep the skies blue as spectators watch the tanks and rocket launchers roll along Red Square. Now
there's a new challenge for the air force: Moscow's notorious blizzards. (Time, October 16, 2009)
German oceanographers in Antarctica used underwater microphones this month to listen in on a massive iceberg crashing into the Antarctic ice-shelf, which cause a 2 000-
metre crack, the ice lab headquarters said on Monday.
The devices picked up the tremendous noise of the collision as well as the alarmed cries of seals and whales, according to the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) in Bremerhaven,
Germany.
The moment when the 400-million-ton iceberg crashed was observed on February 11 from AWI's Neumayer III ice station about 10km away.
The 54-kilometre-long iceberg, code-named B-15-K, repeatedly nudged the coast over a nine-hour period. The force of each shunt was equivalent to up to 10 tons of high
explosive.
B-15-K is a fragment of an 11,000-square-kilometre section of the Ross Ice Shelf which broke off in 2000 and drifted away on a coastal current.
An institute spokeswoman said it was sensational to see exactly what happens to ice when it is rammed with such force. The ice shelf sustained a crack 2 000 metres long and
lost a 700-metre wide fragment during the movement. (MercoPress)
How long do you suppose before this morphs into "gorebull warbling causes ice shelf collapse"?
From CO2 Science Volume 13 Number 8: 25 February 2010
Medieval
Warm Period Record of the Week
Was there a Medieval Warm Period? YES, according to data published by 805
individual scientists from 479 separate research institutions in 43
different countries ... and counting! This issue's Medieval Warm Period Record of the Week comes from Victoria
Land Coast, Antarctica. To access the entire Medieval Warm Period Project's database, click here.
Subject Index Summary "Little" Medieval Warm Period: In addition to the voluminous evidence that continues to
accumulate for the occurrence of higher-than-present temperatures during the Roman Warm Period of 2000 years ago and the Medieval Warm Period of 1000 years ago, a growing body
of evidence is beginning to indicate there was a period of time some 500 years ago when temperatures were also warmer than they are currently.
Plant Growth Data
This week we add new results of plant growth responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment obtained from experiments described in the peer-reviewed scientific
literature for: Red Algae (Zou and Gao, 2009), Reed
Grass (Zhao et al., 2009), Trout Lily (Gandin et al., 2009), and White
Clover (Johnson and McNicol, 2010).
Solar-Precipitation Connections on the Tibetan Plateau: Cyclical variability in solar activity drives cyclical
variability in precipitation regimes (both positive and negative) over different portions of the Northeast Tibetan Plateau.
Coral Reefs of Tanzania: How susceptible are they to the predicted deleterious consequences of global warming?
In less than four months since launch, the first calibrated images are being delivered by ESA’s SMOS mission. These images of 'brightness temperature' translate into clear
information on global variations of soil moisture and ocean salinity to advance our understanding of the water cycle.
Launched on 2 November, the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission is improving our understanding of Earth’s water cycle by making global observations of soil
moisture over land and salinity over oceans. By consistently mapping these two variables, SMOS will not only advance our understanding of the exchange processes between
Earth’s surface and atmosphere, but will also help to improve weather and climate models.
In addition, the data from SMOS will have several other applications in areas such as agriculture and water resource management. (ESA)
In 1996, President Clinton created an outcry in western states with the
words:
NOW, THEREFORE, I WILLIAM J. CLINTON, President of the United States of America, by the authority vested in me by section 2 of the [Antiquities] Act of June 8, 1906 (34
Stat. 225, 16 U.S.C. 431), do proclaim that there are hereby set apart and reserved as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, for the purpose of protecting the
objects identified above, all lands and interests in lands owned or controlled by the United States within the boundaries of the area described on the document entitled
“Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument” attached to and forming a part of this proclamation
By presidential proclamation he set nearly 1,700 square miles of Bureau of Land Management lands in Utah off limits with his surprise designation of the Grand Staircase –
Escalante National Monument and, with it, access to over 11
billion tons of recoverable, low sulfur, high btu (energy) coal. Several more such designations followed in what many felt was a War on the West. Continue
reading...
The U.S. Department of Energy announced Feb. 17 that researchers in the agency’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, or NETL, have received patents for several new
technologies, all targeted at the cleaner and more efficient use of fossil fuels.
“The far-reaching innovations address a range of fossil-fuel issues, including hydrocarbon production; carbon dioxide capture and sequestration; emissions controls; and
making fossil-fuel systems, such as boilers, turbines and fuel cells, more efficient,” DOE said. (Alan Bailey, GoO)
Annual wind power contribution in the Falkland Islands is set to rise to 40% of total energy generated with the installation of three new wind turbines, which started going
online on 15 February. The installation of the first three wind turbines in 2007 has resulted in the displacement of 26% of annual fuel consumption and the aim with the three
new turbines is to reach 40% fuel displacement. (MercoPress)
A report to be released in the first half of this year finds that Australia can use solar and wind power to produce 100 percent of its electricity in 10 years using
technologies that are available now.
The study is being compiled by the Victoria–based advocacy group Beyond Zero Emissions and is based on the research of engineers and scientists.
"We have concluded that there are no technological impediments to transforming Australia’s stationary energy sector to zero emissions over the next 10 years,"
said Matthew Wright, executive director of Beyond Zero Emissions.
(Stacy Feldman, Solve Climate)
Oh, I can think of an impediment or two and not merely technical:
We Aussies are not stupid enough to waste the vast sums involved transforming a perfectly good and rather cheap electricity supply to an expensive waste of resources.
Even if we were stupid enough to waste the vast sums involved transforming a perfectly good and rather cheap electricity supply to an expensive waste of resources
K.Rudd and his Kommie co-travelers have squandered our societal surplus and put us into debt for a least a decade, probably a generation or two, so we can't afford this
absurd pipe-dream anyway.
LONDON/SAN FRANCISCO - Technology to generate energy by harnessing the earth's inner heat is finally getting respect and looks on track to test ways to expand the industry,
thanks to new U.S. government funding.
But steep startup costs and financing remain barriers, and new geothermal technology to pump cold water into hot rock also has sparked worries about the risk of manmade
earthquakes, dimming prospects for near-term expansion. (Reuters)
Modular nuclear reactors are gaining momentum. Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Babcock & Wilcox, a division of Houston-based McDermott International,
had signed agreements with a trio of companies that could help Babcock & Wilcox get federal approval for its proposed modular reactor, a unit that would generate up to 140
megawatts. [Read More] (Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune)
Is man-made global warming happening? Can nuclear waste be stored safely? Do concealed handguns reduce violence? Think about those questions for a minute. Then think about
your thinking: Why do you hold those particular views on these controversial issues? And do scientific experts agree with you? (Ronald Bailey, Reason)
The treatment of peer-reviewed science as an unquestionable form of authority is corrupting the peer-review system and damaging public debate.
Suddenly, the esoteric system of peer review has hit the headlines.
The Lancet, a leading British medical journal, has acknowledged that it made a serious error in publishing a study suggesting a link between the MMR vaccine and autism
and bowel disease. Earlier this month, a group of leading stem cell researchers wrote an open letter pointing out the systematic abuse of peer review by a small cabal of
scientists, whom they accuse of using their position to slow down the publication of the findings of their competitors.
Then there is the scandal surrounding the leaked emails of the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in England, and the dubious data published by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which further exposes a worrying trend towards the corruption of peer review.
Peer review is a system that subjects scientific and scholarly work to the scrutiny of other experts in the field. Ideally it ensures that research is only approved or
published when it meets the standards of scientific rigour and its findings are sound. At its best, peer review guarantees that it is disinterested science which informs public
discussion and debate. When established through peer review, the authority of science helps to clarify disputes and injects into public discussion the latest findings and
research. Peer reviewing depends on a community of experts who are competent and committed to impartiality. It depends on the commitment and collaboration of scientists and
scholars in a given field.
However, the individuals who constitute a ‘community of experts’ also tend to be preoccupied with their own personal position and status. Often, the colleagues they are
reviewing and refereeing are their competitors and sometimes even their bitter rivals. The contradiction between working as a member of an expert community and one’s own
personal interests cannot always be satisfactorily resolved.
Unfortunately, even with the best will in the world, peer reviewing is rarely an entirely disinterested process. All too often the system of peer review is infused with vested
interests. As many of my colleagues in academia know, peer reviewing is frequently carried out through a kind of mates’ club, between friends and acquaintances, and all too
often the question of who gets published and who gets rejected is determined by who you know and where you stand in a particular academic debate. (Frank Furedi, spiked)
WASHINGTON - Researchers who mixed together bird flu and ordinary flu viruses created three extremely virulent new strains, a reminder that influenza viruses can swap genes
to create dangerous offspring.
Their experiment, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, demonstrates that as H1N1 swine flu wanes, other forms of flu continue to circulate and could
make surprise appearances.
A World Health Organization experts committee was meeting on Tuesday to try to decide whether the H1N1 swine flu pandemic has peaked. But experts agree H1N1 might change or
come back in a different form or recombine with another flu strain.
And H5N1 avian influenza is still circulating. It has infected 478 people and killed 286 of them since it re-emerged in Asia in 2003.
That particular strain especially frightens flu experts because it is so deadly when it does infect humans. They worry that H5N1 could either mutate or re-assort with another
flu strain to become more easily able to spread among people. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON - Genetically altered mosquitoes that cannot fly may help slow the spread of dengue fever and could be a harmless alternative to chemical insecticides, U.S. and
British scientists said on Monday.
They genetically altered mosquitoes to produce flightless females, and said spreading these defective mosquitoes could suppress native, disease-spreading mosquitoes within six
to nine months.
There is no vaccine or treatment for dengue fever, which is endemic in the tropics and is particularly prevalent in Asia and the western Pacific. The disease, which causes
severe flu-like symptoms and can kill, is spread through the bite of infected female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes.
"This could be the first in a new wave of products that might supplant insecticides," researcher Anthony James of the University of California, Irvine, said in a
telephone interview.
There are an estimated 50 million cases of dengue fever each year and about 2.5 billion people - two-fifths of the world's population - are at risk, mostly in Africa and
southeast Asia, according to the World Health Organization. (Reuters Life!)
HONG KONG - A leading scientific journal will no longer publish research papers that receive any funding from tobacco companies, its editorial board said on Tuesday.
"While we continue to be interested in analyses of ways of reducing tobacco use, we will no longer be considering papers where support, in whole or in part, for the study
or the researchers come from a tobacco company," states an editorial in PLoS Medicine (Public Library of Science).
The magazine expressed concern at "the industry's longstanding attempts to distort the science of and deflect attention away from the harmful effects of smoking."
(Reuters)
NEW YORK - Cigarette smokers have lower IQs than non-smokers, and the more a person smokes, the lower their IQ, a study in over 20,000 Israeli military recruits suggests.
Young men who smoked a pack of cigarettes a day or more had IQ scores 7.5 points lower than non-smokers, Dr. Mark Weiser of Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer and his
colleagues found.
"Adolescents with poorer IQ scores might be targeted for programmes designed to prevent smoking," they conclude in the journal Addiction.
While there is evidence for a link between smoking and lower IQ, many studies have relied on intelligence tests given in childhood, and have also included people with mental
and behavioral problems, who are both more likely to smoke and more likely to have low IQs, Weiser and his team note in their report. (Reuters Health)
Earlier this month, President Obama created a task force on childhood obesity to be headed by Michelle Obama, who has taken up the issue as her public-service cause under
the banner "Let's Move."
Pointing to the nearly one-third of U.S. children who are either obese or overweight, the administration will pursue a legislative agenda to support its efforts, expanding the
federal school-lunch program by $10 billion over 10 years and spending $400 million to bring grocery stores to so-called food deserts, urban and rural areas without adequate
food stores. (Marybeth Hicks, Washington Times)
Study suggests the increased dumping of used computers, mobile phones and other electronic equipment poses a serious threat to health and the environment ( Bobbie Johnson,
The Guardian)
One thing the Gaia nuts never mention is that resource-rich "waste" represents significant opportunity for the very poor (much the same way as
flipping burgers was considered an opportunity in my day, although generation Y seems to think it beneath them).
Van Jones, the environmental justice advocate who relinquished his post as a White House adviser five months ago after coming under fire from conservative activists, is
reemerging on the public policy stage to push for green jobs.
In his first interview since stepping down as President Obama's environmental adviser on Sept. 5, Jones said that a green jobs policy represents the best chance of both aiding
poor Americans and bridging the political divide. (Juliet Eilperin, Washington Post)
A preview of the Census of Marine Life has revealed that the project has discovered over 5,000 new species. These include bizarre and colourful creatures, as well as many
organisms that produce therapeutic chemicals. (MercoPress)
Brazil and Argentina, the biggest soybean producers after the US, may harvest as much as a combined 120 million metric tons of the oilseed this year as rain boosts yields,
Cargill Inc.’s Jose Luiz Glaser said. (MercoPress, February 19th 2010)
Argentina’s record soybean crop may yield less than expected as continued downpours threaten to cause beans to rot and fungal diseases to spread, according to a Buenos
Aires Cereals Exchange official quoted on Monday. (MercoPress, February 22nd 2010)
Thomas Karl, the head of Obama's new Climate Change office has been criticized for trying to suppress contradictory scientific data on climate change. (Ed Barnes,
FOXNews.com)
WASHINGTON—Eight Democratic Senators from coal and manufacturing states warned the Obama Administration Monday that the Environmental Protection Agency's plans to regulate
greenhouse gases could hurt the economy.
The lawmakers, including prominent Senators Max Baucus, (D., Mont.), Carl Levin, (D., Mich.) and John Rockefeller, (D., W.V), warned EPA chief Lisa Jackson in a letter that
"ill-timed or imprudent regulation of [greenhouse gases] may squander critical opportunities for our nation, impeding the investment necessary to create jobs."
The letter could boost a Republican effort led by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, (R., Alaska), to prevent the EPA from regulating stationary greenhouse gas emitters such as power plants,
refineries, steel mills, chemical plants and cement kilns. (WSJ)
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said on Monday it was considering reducing the number of big industrial plants that would be required to get permits to
fight climate change.
In September, the EPA said it would require large facilities, like coal plants and refineries, emitting more than 25,000 tons a year of greenhouse gases to obtain permits
demonstrating they were using the best technology available to reduce emissions blamed for warming the planet.
"EPA is considering raising that threshold substantially to reflect input provided during the public comment process," the agency said in a release. (Reuters)
... real world respondents suggested EPA may take a flying leap at itself.
The head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Monday the agency would delay subjecting large greenhouse-gas emitters such as power plants and crude-oil refiners
to new regulations until 2011, and would raise the threshold for using the Clean Air Act to regulate carbon dioxide emissions.
After an outcry from state regulators and members of Congress, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said the agency would also limit regulations for the first half of 2011 to
emitters already required to apply for new construction and modification permits under the Clean Air Act.
Between 2011 and 2013, "I expect the threshold for permitting will be substantially higher than the 25,000-ton limit that EPA originally proposed," Ms. Jackson told
lawmakers in a letter. (WSJ) | Read EPA Chief's Letter
In my last post, I pointed out a problem with the EPA’s major finding that:
Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic GHG [greenhouse gas]
concentrations.
I showed that it could be reasonably and straightforwardly argued that less than half of the warming since 1950 contained in the “observed” global temperature history
can be attributed to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. This is bad for the EPA, as this finding was simply parroted by the EPA from the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report
(AR4)—a report relied on heavily by the EPA in underpinning its Endangerment Finding (that greenhouse gases released by human activities “threaten the public health and
welfare of current and future generations.”). When the IPCC is wrong, so is the EPA.
Another new problem with
the IPCC’s AR4 was reported earlier this week. This one involved the IPCC’s reliance on a book chapter instead of the peer-reviewed literature to conclude that sea ice
extent around Antarctica had changed little since the late 1970s. In fact, it is well-established in the scientific literature, dating both prior to and subsequent from the
production of the AR4, that there has been a statistically significant increase in the extent of sea ice in the Antarctic. That the IPCC AR4 projects Antarctic sea ice
declines to accompany global warming, it is little wonder why the IPCC AR4 Chapter 4 authors wanted to downplay the actual behavior of Antarctic sea ice.
The Antarctic sea ice problem adds to an ever growing list of problems uncovered recently (since the EPA’s Endangerment Finding) that exist within the IPCC AR4 reports.
Other errors involve IPCC findings on Himalayan glaciers, Amazon rainforests, African agriculture, Dutch geography, attribution of extreme weather damages, and several others.
And none of these problems have been exposed as a result of the Climategate email release. Well, maybe as a general result of the heightened nature of inquisitiveness that
the Climategate emails evidenced as being warranted, but not as a direct result of the content of the any particular email.
But, don’t let this leave you thinking that the Climategate emails are just much ado about nothing, as many IPCC apologists would like you to believe. Far from it. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
Looks like the great climate-change unraveling came none too soon.
Three states last week filed papers challenging the Environmental Protection Agency's scheme to use global-warming fears to seize sweeping power over much of the US economy.
Officials in Texas, Virginia and Alabama charge that recent revelations challenging the scientific "consensus" that humans are causing catastrophic warming also
undermine the EPA's decision to regulate greenhouse gasses as a pollutant -- which would give it inordinate power over nearly every industry in the country.
But what about that warming? Certainly, it hasn't been a good few months for climate alarmists. (NYP)
WASHINGTON - Senator Max Baucus, whose committee oversees aspects of climate control legislation, said on Monday there did not appear to be momentum yet for passing a bill.
"If you actually read the tea leaves...it looks like it's not getting a head of steam," Baucus told Reuters during a short interview.
Climate legislation aimed at controlling greenhouse gas emissions had been a top priority of the Obama administration but like his efforts to reform the expensive health care
system, it has stalled in Congress.
Countries around the world are waiting to see what the Unites States will do on battling global warming but there is growing doubt there are enough votes in Congress to get
pass the legislation in this congressional elections year. (Reuters)
There are numerous possible reasons for UN climate chief Yvo de Boer’s decision to resign—from his inability to cobble together a new climate treaty last December in
Copenhagen (where he wept on the podium), to recent revelations of his agency’s mishandling of climate change data.
What the climate science community and the public should focus on now are the ramifications of de Boer’s resignation. For one thing, it signals that hope is dead for a
UN-brokered global treaty that would have any meaningful effect on global temperatures. It also means that the UN intends to keep its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
pretty much intact under the leadership of the scientifically compromised Rajenda Pauchari, who should have resigned along with de Boer.
This development guarantees that the Obama administration will have an unmitigated mess on its hands when signatories to the Framework Convention sit down in Mexico City this
November in yet another meeting intended to produce a climate treaty. The Mexico City meeting convenes six days after U.S. midterm elections, in which American voters are fully
expected to rebuke Obama for policies including economy-crippling proposals to combat climate change.
In short, Mexico City is about as likely to produce substantive policy decisions as the TV show ‘The View.’ Backers of radical climate change measures are now paying the
price for over two decades of telling the public—in this case literally—that the sky is falling. (Patrick J. Michaels, Cato @ liberty)
OSLO - Germany will host an extra session of U.N. climate talks in April but it is too early to say if the world will agree a new treaty this year after falling short at a
summit in Copenhagen in December, Denmark said on Monday.
"The negotiations are picking up speed again after Copenhagen," Danish Climate and Energy Minister Lykke Friis, who presides over the U.N. negotiations, told Reuters
by telephone.
She said that 11 representatives of key nations decided at a one-day meeting at the headquarters of the Bonn-based U.N. Climate Change Secretariat to add an extra session of
senior officials from 194 nations in the Germany city from April 9-11.
"There was a positive and constructive atmosphere and all parties were eager to move forward with the negotiations," she said of the first formal meeting since
Copenhagen. (Reuters)
AUSTRALIAN green groups have called a strategy meeting to devise ways to hit back at the climate sceptics movement, amid fears they are losing the PR war.
The groups, including Greenpeace, the Wilderness Society, World Wide Fund for Nature, Australian Conservation Foundation and Friends of the Earth, have acknowledged that the
public mood has shifted following the collapse of the Copenhagen climate talks and blows to the credibility of the IPCC.
James Norman, of the Australian Conservation Foundation, said the strategy of ignoring climate change sceptics had not worked as it had been taken as confirmation of their
claims. ''The stakes are too high to remain silent or disorganised in the face of this systemic disinformation campaign,'' Mr Norman said. (The Age)
The really alarming thing is that the media still take these misanthropic nitwits seriously.
The
warmists have been continuing to huff and puff about the terrible sceptics who are calling their religion into question, one of the latest broadsides coming from The
Guardian yesterday, headed: "Do climate change sceptics give scepticism a bad name?"
The details need not detain us, other than to note that this is an authored piece by Adam Corner, a research associate at Cardiff University. His interests, we are told,
"include the psychology of communicating climate change".
It might help though if Corner told us that his "interests" were slightly more formal than his casual description would imply. His University is in fact a partner in
an EU-funded project called PACHELBEL,
funded to the tune of €1.68 million, researching "consumer behaviour" in relation to climate change.
Corner's work comes on the back of an earlier survey which
addresses resistance to the climate change message, making this apparently independent academic a paid servant of the EU, charged with fighting climate scepticism.
Although not always picked up directly, it is this patina of dishonesty shrouding the warmists that is breaking though. Nothing they say is now regarded as trustworthy.
(Richard North, EU Referendum)
There has never been a time at WUWT that I’ve used the word “slimy” in a headline. This is a special case. I thought of about a half dozen words I could have used and
finally decided on this one. I chose it because of precedence in a similar situation where Steve McIntyre wrote his rebuttal to a similar piece of amateur journalism entitled Slimed
by Bagpuss the Cat Reporter.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is the Director of The
Earth Institute at Columbia University
Last week, the Guardian invited me to participate in their new online story forum. They were seeking the input from climate sceptics on issues they were writing about. They
especially wanted my input. I said I’d consider it, but was a bit hesitant given the Guardian’s reporting history. But, after some discussion with one of the reporters, it
seemed like a genuine attempt at outreach. I suggested that if they really wanted to make a gesture that would make people take notice, they should consider banning the use of
the word “denier” from climate discourse in their newspaper. Nobody I know of in the sceptic community denies that the earth has gotten warmer in the past century. I surely
don’t. But we do question the measured magnitude, the cause, and the scientific methods.
Now, any progress that has been made in outreach by the Guardian has been dashed by the most despicably stupid newspaper article I’ve ever seen about climate skeptics. The
Guardian for some reason thought it would be a good idea to print it while at the same time trying to reach across the aisle to climate skeptics for ideas. Needless to say,
they’ve horribly botched that gesture with the printing of this article.
Here’s the headline and link to the Guardian article:
It’s full of the kind of angry, baseless, stereotypical innuendo I’d expect Joe Romm to write. Instead, the writer is Jeffrey D Sachs. who is professor of economics and
director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, home to NASA GISS. (WUWT)
Anthony
Watts over at Watts up with
that is a tad miffed with The Guardian - and rightly so.
But we are all getting a little weary with the desperation of the warmists to pin their conspiracy meme on us – the constant prattling about climate sceptics being funded by
corporate interests.
As with just about everything associated with these people, there is a fundamental dishonesty about their argument. They pick up on the sceptic funding, ignoring the fact that
most activists are entirely self-funded and working on a shoe-string, and ignore completely their own funding.
Yet, when it comes to corporate funding, one of the biggest "corporates" of them all is the European Union. In the run-up to the IPCC's AR4 (2002-2006), it threw
€2.3 billion – yes BILLION – at climate change under its FP6-SUSTDEV
programme.
Taking account matched funding from institutions and member state governments, plus separate national programmes (such as the £243 million the UK has allocated to the Met
Office), and you are almost certainly talking about a sum in the region of €5 billion, out of Europe alone.
We do not have the specific figures for US research in that very narrow period (2002-2006), but Joanne
Nova offers a sum of $36 billion for climate research over 20 years.
Given inputs from Canada, Australia and other developed countries – all within the same nexus – and the huge flow of funds from the giant US charitable foundations, plus corporate
spending and the NGOs, and you can easily make a case for expenditure on pushing the climate change agenda in the run-up to AR4 exceeding $10 billion ... or £10 billion if
you prefer, as long as we are in ballpark figures.
It is virtually impossible to work out the level of sceptic spending, but even if you put the total figure at £100 million (and that would take a giant leap of faith), that
gives a spending ratio of something like 100:1 in favour of the warmists.
One could, of course, take the warmist paranoia over sceptic funding as a compliment. Despite the torrent of funds, they are on the back foot, run ragged by a citizen army,
many equipped with no more than a laptop and a brain.
On the other hand, you can see where the warmists are coming from. Having thrown money at their new religion and been unable to prove their case, for them to admit that they
are being defeated by so slender an opposition must be the ultimate humiliation.
Hence, for their own self-esteem, they have to invent their "well-funded, highly organised conspiracy" meme. To admit to reality would be more than they could cope
with – they would probably suffer collective nervous breakdowns if they confronted the truth.
Speaking of which, does anyone know where Moonbat is? (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The scientists, they have been saying it for a while, and we’ve been saying it in the media for a while… but I think the scientists have lost a little bit of patience
almost. I mean one said to me here that we’re sick of having our carefully constructed messages lost in the political noise. You know this is the scientific community
standing up and saying enough is enough, we’ve lost patience, get your act together.
Climate sceptics are recycled critics of controls on tobacco and acid rain. We must not be distracted from science’s urgent message: we are fuelling dangerous changes in
Earth’s climate.
Do climate change sceptics give scepticism a bad name? There is a crucial difference between scepticism and non-belief in the face of overwhelming evidence.
Sachs and Corner, like many alarmists, are continuing to hide behind the idea that the climate debate divides on a single point of difference: “Climate change is
happening” versus “climate change isn’t happening”.
Even as shorthand, this is a clumsy, clumsy polarisation of the debate. There are many points of disagreement between perspectives within each putative ‘side’, and many
points of agreement across them.
The implication is that people framing the debate in this way – as between people saying “climate change is happening”, and “climate change isn’t happening”
reduce themselves to the level of their least sophisticated opposition. Very, very few commentators in the ‘sceptic’ camp in fact make such an argument. (Climate
Resistance)
The Washington Post this morning has a strong story on the collapse of the movement to stop climate change through a binding treaty negotiated under UN auspices. And even
the normally taciturn New York Times is admitting that the resignation of the top UN climate change negotiator suggests that no global treaty will be coming this year.
Short summary: the current iteration of the movement–with its particular political project and goals–is dead. This will not be news to readers of this blog where the news
was announced on February 1, but never mind.
Anyway, as the Post now belatedly acknowledges, the movement to stop climate change through a Really Big and Comprehensive Grand Global Treaty is dead because there is no
political consensus in the US to go forward. It’s dead because the UN process is toppling over from its own excessive ambition and complexity. It’s dead because China and
India are having second thoughts about even the smallish steps they put on the table back in Copenhagen.
Yvo de Boer’s resignation on Thursday after nearly four tumultuous years as chief steward of the United Nations’ climate change negotiations has deepened a sense of
pessimism about whether the world can ever get its act together on global warming. Mr. de Boer was plainly exhausted by endless bickering among nations and frustrated by the
failure of December’s talks in Copenhagen to deliver the prize he had worked so hard for: a legally binding treaty committing nations to mandatory reductions in greenhouse
gases.
His resignation comes at a fragile moment in the campaign to combat climate change. The Senate is stalemated over a climate change bill. The disclosure of apparently trivial
errors in the U.N.’s 2007 climate report has given Senate critics fresh ammunition. And without Mr. de Boer, the slim chances of forging a binding agreement at the next round
of talks in December in Cancún, Mexico, seem slimmer still.
Yet his departure is hardly the death knell for international negotiations. It is not proof that such talks are of no value or that the U.N. negotiating framework in place
since 1992 should be abandoned. Even Copenhagen, messy as it was, brought rich and poor nations closer together than they had been. And more than 90 countries representing 83
percent of the world’s greenhouse gases promised, at least notionally, to reduce their emissions.
But his resignation does remind us that the U.N. process is tiring, cumbersome and slow. It reinforces the notion that some parallel negotiating track will be necessary if the
world is to have any hope of achieving the reductions scientists believe are necessary to avert the worst consequences of climate change. (NYT)
Can you hear me? You’ve been incognizant, but it’s over and you’re going to be OK. Take deep breaths and relax until your vision clears.
The world is not going to end because of climate change, at least not in the near future.
You are a most fortunate individual. You have been a participant in the biggest inter-dimensional cross rip since the Tunguska blast of 1909! No wait, that’s Ghostbusters.
Let me put it differently: There has never been anything quite like this — ever.
The entire world has been embroiled in a persistent, free-floating global fervor (and a really nasty one, too) allegedly based on fervor-less, dispassionate science.
Recently, there was a huge explosion in the climate change orthodoxy factory that was set off by objective evidence we have been deceived and manipulated.
The evidence was the leaked e-mails of the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU), which are now subject to several official investigations, forcing the head
of the CRU to step aside. The e-mails tell a lurid tale of unbecoming, unwarranted, organized and fierce hostility to skeptical climatic researchers, as well as data tampering,
anti-scientific secrecy, manipulations of scientific journals, and distortions of peer review that make George Orwell look like a prophet. (Christopher Essex, Toronto Sun)
The meltdown of the climate change movement is entering a new phase as the European left turns on the UN climate change office and the IPCC.
The German left wing press, one of the world’s strongest supporters of the ‘climate change movement’ is turning against the scientists and UN bureaucrats responsible for
leading the movement. A round-up of German press coverage over the unexpected resignation of UN climate chief Yvo de Boer offers a perspective on the failures of the climate
change movement that is both more scathing and more frank than anything the mainstream US press has yet brought itself to utter. (The American Interest)
A man called who experienced what is evolving from the lies and deceptions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) used to perpetrate the agenda of Maurice
Strong. A group of citizens attended a public briefing on the British Columbia government’s climate change plans. I met them and all were concerned, frustrated and determined
to do something. They asked about the science, but the main question was what could they do. Around the world similar plans are filtering down which give government control
over almost every aspect of people’s lives using their money. Climate change as the major vehicle for political control requires a popular revolt because most politicians
aren’t listening. (Tim Ball, CFP)
Mass media have been a key vehicle by which climate change contrarianism has traveled, according to Maxwell Boykoff, a University of Colorado at Boulder professor and fellow
of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, or CIRES.
Boykoff, an assistant professor of environmental studies, presented his research today at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San
Diego. He spoke during a panel discussion titled "Understanding Climate Change Skepticism: Its Sources and Strategies."
Boykoff's segment was titled "Exaggerating Denialism: Media Representations of Outlier Views on Climate Change" and discussed prominent pitfalls. (University of
Colorado at Boulder)
Climate hysteria is basically a media construct and these guys blame the media for failing to sufficiently indoctrinate the populace!
If you have strong nerves, you should look what has happened with once fine popular science magazine, Scientific American. The most recent four months have shown
everyone that the IPCC has distorted the available evidence in order to claim that the climate change is going to be - or already is - scary.
Well, there's one magazine that has the balls to tell you that the IPCC is actually too conservative:
Yes, to give you an additional hint about their competency, they put "IPPC" instead of "IPCC" in the title.
The article claims that the warming and sea level trends predicted by the IPCC in 1990, 1995, 2000 were exceeded in reality. Well, that's surely a bizarre statement given the
fact that the trend since 2001 has been cooling and there has been no statistically significant global warming since 1995, as Phil Jones recently admitted, while the IPCC has
surely predicted a statistically significant global warming for the last 15 years. The story about the sea
level rise is similar. Yesterday, The Guardian reported
that an IPCC-consistent paper claiming up to an 80+ centimeter sea level rise in a century has been withdrawn due to major errors.
So you may ask: how did the folks in Scientific American justify such a strange claim? Well, they wouldn't find any sane person - and not even any climate scientist -
who would say such a thing (perhaps James Hansen could also do the job, but his lack of sanity is already too well-known a fact). But they find the predetermined conclusions to
be so important that the writers considered it appropriate or necessary to quote a guy from the Harvard Medical School!
To make things worse, his name is James McCarthy - at least it wasn't Joseph McCarthy. ;-)
Well, if you look at the affiliation, you will learn that the Harvard Medical School has its own center for "health and the global environment". In the recent years,
the AGW cancer has become so widespread that separate units (or tumors) of global warming alarmism are growing - and are being funded - even in the medical schools.
Needless to say, not only McCarthy's propositions are manifest lies, but as his page shows,
he also has no qualifications to make statements about this physical science. Since 1982 for 20 years, he's been the director of a museum of comparative biology, and he has
been a member of most bureaucratic bodies trying to justify the carbon regulation policies with the plankton. His field was biological oceanography.
By the way, the oceans are doing very well and will be doing just fine even if the unlikely case that a significant warming would take place, see e.g. a new finding by the
folks at the Penn State University about the diversity of coral
reefs advertised by One India a few days ago. But this kind of research isn't what Scientific American likes: you have to go to India to learn about this research
done in Pennsylvania. The rotten self-described science journalists in the U.S. prefer a non-research - deluded unjustified and unjustifiable opinions of an outsider twisted by
his huge career interests.
It has finally happened, many thanks to a volunteer in California who through the inter-library loan system found a copy of the Martin Marietta 1991 edition DoE book
published by CDIAC – and has scanned the entire book. (Warwick Hughes)
An interesting article from the New Zealand Herald, looking at the divergence
problem. What particularly fascinated me was the explanation of the issue from Andy Reisinger, who some will remember as being a man who is very
close to Rajendra Pachauri.
Reisinger is a climatologist, but not, if I remember correctly, a paleo guy. It's odd then to see him being the expert interviewed on the subject of the divergence problem.
It might also explain the explanation he gives for this inconvenient effect:
Dr Andy Reisinger, a climate researcher at Victoria University who has followed the progress of proxy temperature reconstructions, said it could be that a lack of rain in
recent decades had stunted tree growth in some high-altitude spots - or that when temperatures reached a certain point, trees began to react differently.
Whatever the cause, "the relationships [between tree-rings and temperature] that we've developed for the last 500-100 years may not apply in the last 50," he
said.
Now correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought that paleoclimatologists picked trees that were sensitive to temperature rather than precipitation when they set about recreating
temperatures of the past. If a drop in rainfall can cause a drop in growth now, then it could have caused a drop in the past. In other words, the paleo guys will have to admit
that they know absolutely nothing about temperatures before the nineteenth century. (Bishop Hill)
First, I want to apologise for my long silence. I have been overwhelmed by the volume and quality of the comments on this and other blogs, and just keeping up with
them, while writing and also meeting other urgent commitments, has been a full time job. I had nearly completed this when my daytime job ran into emergency phase, and I
was delayed a bit further. I am not at all afraid to put my point of view and see what happens.
The next thing to say is that I believe that my critics and I are fundamentally on the same side. The basic motivation for our design of post-normal science was to
help maintain the health and integrity of science under the new conditions in which it now operates. I believe that my critics share this concern. I can learn from
them how I might have expressed myself better, or even how I have been just wrong in this case as sometimes in the past, or perhaps that our disagreements on practical issues
are just too deep to be bridged.
Since my history is relevant to the debate, let me make a few very brief points. I did grow up in a left-wing household in the ‘thirties, and I recall that it took
about a decade, from my teens onwards, for me to make a complete sorting out of political Marxism. Remembering this process gives me perspective on disagreements that
take place now; both I and my interlocutor are (hopefully) moving and learning even if we do not show it. A very big event for me was attending Swarthmore College, where
I was exposed to the Quaker approach to living and discussing, and also to the way of non-violence. As with other influences, this one took decades to mature. I
went to Cambridge, England and did a Ph.D in pure mathematics, settled here and later seized the chance to move to Leeds to study and teach the History and Philosophy of
Science. Read the
rest of this entry » (WUWT)
The
German public television station ZDF has put together a nice segment (in German, available
here) on the substantive problems in the IPCC, including the issue of catastrophe losses. In it Mojib Latif, a prominent German climate scientist, comments on the
misrepresentation of the science of disasters and climate change in very strong terms:
"This is clearly a fraud to the public and to the colleague. Everybody has to reject such a behaviour. We have to take care, those things won't happen again."
UPDATE: In the comments Richard Tol offers some helpful details on the translation (original above by a native German speaker, FYI):
Latif uses the word "Betrug", which can mean fraud, but also deceit, deception, cheating, fooling, swindle, fiddle, or scam.
I would think that "Betrug" is somewhat softer than "fraud", but then English is my second language and German my third.
German is my first language,too, and I would translate Mojib Latif's sentence like this:
"This is a very obvious fraud, on the public and on the colleague in question. One has to categorically reject such a thing and we must now try, should such things
really have happened, to make sure they don't happen again next time."
On a sliding scale of words refering to matters of dishonesty, "Betrug" is the strongest and most serious accusation, used in the sense of criminal deception. As
even in Germany libel cases are no longer quite so rare, using this word can be quite risky. Note that the ZDF itself calls this "dubious goings on" ("unsauberes
Handeln") and does not itself accuse the IPCC of fraud. Mojib Latif, who is entirely apologetic about the other mistakes pointed out in the ZDF report, uses "Betrug"
very deliberately, when referring to the IPCC's misrepresentation of Roger's work, but covers himself when he adds "wenn sie [solche Dinge] tatsaechlich vorgekommen sind"
- "wenn" could be translated even stronger as "if" and not just "should have" but it's unclear from his words how much doubt he meant to throw
in there.
There is a news article today by Ed Barnes of Fox News titled “New
Climate Agency Head Tried to Suppress Data, Critics Charge“. The article accurately summarizes issues associated with the appointment of Thomas
Karl as the head of a new Climate office. As reported in the article, he
”has been criticized for trying to suppress contradictory scientific data on climate change.”
I documented the process by which Tom Karl excluded other viewpoints in my Public Comment
which I wrote after I resigned from the CCSP Committee (not the IPCC Committee as given in the article).
Excerpts from the Executive Summary of my report read
“The process for completing the CCSP Report excluded valid scientific perspectives under the charge of the Committee. The Editor of the Report [Tom Karl] systematically
excluded a range of views on the issue of understanding and reconciling lower atmospheric temperature trends. The Executive Summary of the CCSP Report ignores critical
scientific issues and makes unbalanced conclusions concerning our current understanding of temperature trends”
and
“The process that produced the report was highly political, with the Editor taking the lead in suppressing my perspectives, most egregiously demonstrated by the
last-minute substitution of a new Chapter 6 for the one I had carefully led preparation of and on which I was close to reaching a final consensus. Anyone interested in the
production of comprehensive assessments of climate science should be troubled by the process which I document below in great detail that led to the replacement of the Chapter
that I was serving as Convening Lead Author.
Karl’s narrow and incorrect view of the climate issues is illustrated yet again in the quote from the Fox News article where it is written
“Responding to the criticism, Karl told the Washington Post, “the literature doesn’t show [Pielke's] ideas about the
importance of land use are correct.”
This statement, if he was quoted correctly, shows just one example of why he is ill-suited to serve as head of a new climate office.
The literature is extensive on the major role of land surface change within the climate system as documented, for example, in the multi-authored assessment reports
Pielke Sr., R., K. Beven, G. Brasseur, J. Calvert, M. Chahine, R. Dickerson, D. Entekhabi, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, H. Gupta, V. Gupta, W. Krajewski, E. Philip
Krider, W. K.M. Lau, J. McDonnell, W. Rossow, J. Schaake, J. Smith, S. Sorooshian, and E. Wood, 2009: Climate
change: The need to consider human forcings besides greenhouse gases. Eos, Vol. 90, No. 45, 10 November 2009, 413. Copyright (2009) American Geophysical Union.
For Tom Karl to cavalierly dismiss the peer-reviewed evidence of the major role of land surface processes documents his inaccurate narrow view on the climate
issue.
It is disappointing that he has chosen to use his position to promote this particular perspective, as well as deliberately worked to exclude other views.
(Climate Science)
With
CO2 driven global warming becoming more discredited by new scientific evidence every day, the world's meddling climate regulators are casting about
for a new gas to demonize. Last year the US Environmental Protection Agency was reportedly thinking of even classifying water vapor as a pollutant, due to its central role in
global warming. Because water vapor is the dominant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, accounting for the majority of the Earth's natural greenhouse effect, water vapor
emissions during human activities—such as the processing and burning of fossil fuels—are again coming under increasing scrutiny by government regulators.
Recent research has shown that water vapor, gaseous H2O,
plays an important part in regulating Earth's temperature. It has long been known that H2O is responsible for the majority of “greenhouse”
warming. In fact, calculations show that removal of all greenhouse gases, leaving only water vapor, would decrease the absorption of infrared energy re-radiated by Earth's
surface by only 34 percent. While water vapor in the atmosphere is highly variable, ranging from only trace amounts to as much as 4%, the overall average amount of H2O
has been rising in recent decades.
According to a PNASreport by B, D. Santer et al. the
recent increase in water vapor is primarily due to human-caused increases in GHGs and not to solar forcing or volcanic eruptions. Satellites have observed an increase in
atmospheric water vapor of about 0.41 kg/m2 per decade since 1988. Observations show the increase in water vapor is around 6 to 7.5% per degree
Celsius warming of the lower atmosphere. The study described the research this way:
Results from current climate models indicate that water vapor increases of this magnitude cannot be explained by climate noise alone. In a formal detection
and attribution analysis using the pooled results from 22 different climate models, the simulated "fingerprint" pattern of anthropogenically caused changes in water
vapor is identifiable with high statistical confidence in the SSM/I data. Experiments in which forcing factors are varied individually suggest that this fifingerprint
‘‘match’’ is primarily due to human-caused increases in greenhouse gases and not to solar forcing or recovery from the eruption of Mount Pinatubo. Our findings
provide preliminary evidence of an emerging anthropogenic signal in the moisture content of earth’s atmosphere.
Here SSM/I data refers to microwave radiometry measurements made with the satellite-borne Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I). According to the
researchers, the observed changes in temperature, moisture, and atmospheric circulation fit together in an internally and physically consistent way. Results from the SSM/I
dataset can be seen in the figure below, taken from the paper.
Figure 1. from Santer et al./PNAS
The lower curve, labeled (B), represents the stratospheric aerosol optical depth (SAOD), which registers the amount of small particles in the atmosphere.
SAOD can be seen to peak after after major volcanic eruptions, events that are known to have a cooling effect on climate. Naturally Santer et al. found a “discernible
human influence” on water vapor levels which, of course, has implications for ongoing anthropogenic global warming. “These findings, together with related work on
continental-scale river runoff, zonal mean rainfall, and surface specific humidity, suggest that there is an emerging anthropogenic signal in both the moisture content of
earth’s atmosphere and in the cycling of moisture between atmosphere, land, and ocean,” they conclude. Then again, they attributed all water vapor from evaporation due to
rising global temperatures rise to humans—direct emissions are another story.
The US EPA's 2009 report on the Atmospheric
Concentrations of Greenhouse Gases states, “water vapor is not tracked in this indicator, as it is generally accepted that human activities have not increased the
concentration of water vapor in the atmosphere.” Furthermore, “no emissions control measures could significantly and directly affect atmospheric concentrations of water
vapor.” No kidding. But this has not stopped the EPA from thinking about regulating water
vapor for some time now.
According to EPA Director of the Department of Pollutant Decrees, Ray Donaldson: “Back before carbon dioxide was dangerous, we simply assumed that water
vapor was also benign. But all reputable scientists now agree that the increased water vapor content of the atmosphere from such sources as burning of fuels and power plant
cooling towers will also enhance the greenhouse effect, leading to potentially catastrophic warming.” Of course the EPA and various green NGOs find pollutants in every human
activity. Asked for their position on the matter, Greenpolice spokesperson Rainbow Treetower stated, “Our basic policy is, if it's good for people, it's bad for the
planet.” Thank goodness Mr. Donaldson added, “right now, we are not so concerned about the water vapor exhaled by people. That is low on our list of priorities.” I guess
we can all continue to exhale.
The World Resources Institute (WRI) estimates that nearly two out of every three gallons of fresh water used in the Southeastern US is used to cool power
plants. This amounts to around 40 billion gallons of water daily—about equal to the freshwater used for public supply across the entire country. One can draw similar
conclusions for other regions in the developed world. During the heat waves in Europe a few years back France had to reduce output from several of its nuclear plants because
for lack of cooling water. Does this mean that the EPA is right, that we humans need to rein in our H2O emissions?
When you think about the amount of energy released in a typical tropical storm, all of which comes from water vapor condensing back into liquid or solid H2O,
it seems improbable that direct human water vapor emissions from cooling towers could have much of an impact on climate. To put this in perspective, a DOE white paper, “Water
Vapor from Thermoelectric Power Plants, Does it Impact Climate?,” found that the total amount of water released from processing and burning all the world's fossil
fuel reserves at once would yield about 1 x 1016kg of water vapor. Spreading the effect of the conversion over 100 years gives a water vapor emissions
rate of 1 x 1014kg water vapor per year. The current amount of water vapor in the atmosphere is 1.3 x 1016kg water. By this
estimation, human emissions from power generation is less than 1% of the total amount of water vapor in the atmosphere or 0.02% of annual rainfall worldwide (5 x 1017kg
water).
Not so bad after all. The Limerick Nuclear Generating Station, PA. Photo by J. Royersford.
This estimate only accounts for power generation. Estimates for cooling water vapor emissions come in at around 25 gigatons per year, boosting the human
“industrial activity” total to 125 gigatons, still under 1% and still just a drop in the bucket. Others would include evaporation from the surface of man-made reservoirs
and waterways, but this is the beginning of a slippery slope. If you want to find the largest source of water vapor directly attributable to humans look to crop irrigation,
which uses 70% of the freshwater consumed world wide. But that opens the door to arguments of how much water would have evaporated if left undisturbed.
The evaporation of irrigation water has been estimated to cause a globally averaged surface cooling of 0.15 Wm–2. The surface
cooling rate can be as large as 30 Wm–2 in highly irrigated areas. Of course this means that somewhere else within the atmosphere all that latent
heat will get released when the water vapor turns into precipitation. The heat doesn't disappear, it just gets moved to somewhere else in the troposphere—this process is heat
neutral with respect to total climate system energy. Besides, if the choice is between irrigation and mass starvation any would be regulators would risk being drawn and
quartered. It is plain to see why even climate change fanatics have stayed clear of water vapor regulation in the past.
Irrigation makes Arizona crops flourish.
As it turns out, despite the clamoring of green alarmists, nuclear power plants circulate significant volumes of water in the process of generating
electricity but actually consume a small amount of water relative to other uses. Nuclear power plants circulate water to cool equipment, continuously returning the water to its
source—comparatively little is turned into water vapor that is released into the atmosphere. For comparison, a combined cycle gas turbine plant needs only about one third as
much engineered cooling as other thermal plants, since much heat is discharged in the turbine exhaust (along with a lot of that nasty CO2).
All power plants require some type of cooling, water is just usually the most convenient method. In fact, where availability of cooling water is limited,
cooling does not need to be a constraint on new nuclear generating capacity. Alternative cooling options for nuclear and other types of power plants are available, though at
slightly higher cost. It also seems that the WRI report was rather selectively myopic in its comparison.
Of all the freshwater consumed in the United States, electricity generation accounts for 3.3 percent—less than half of the freshwater consumed by
residential use (6.7 percent), according to the U.S. Geological Survey. What is seldom mentioned by the diehard anti-nuke crowed is that nuclear power plants consume less water
per unit of energy produced than some forms of renewable energy.
Water required for energy production. Source Dominguez-Faus et al.
Bottom line, unless you are willing to make the stretch and blame evaporation from the oceans due to the past century's temperature rise on humans, people
just are not a major impact on atmospheric water vapor. The reasons why water vapor levels rise and fall remain a mystery. In particular, scientists are at a loss to explain
why variations in the stratosphere can have such an impact on temperatures at the surface. According to NOAA researcher Susan Solomon, “it’s a thin wedge of the upper
atmosphere that packs a wallop from one decade to the next in a way we didn’t expect.” With science befuddled a number of climate change adherents are sticking with CO2,
no matter what the research says.
Dave Britton from the UK Met Office reportedly
said that the new water vapor research highlights the complexity of climate science. “But it does not challenge the basic science that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases released from human activity are warming the planet,” he said.
In a similar vein, Dr Vicky Pope, head of climate science at the Met Office, said: “Whatever's causing this change from decade to decade is having an
influence at the surface. But it is a small variation on top of the long term increase in man-made greenhouse gases.” While +30 to -25% doesn't sound like a small variation
to this observer, it's good to know that many of the climate change faithful are sticking with CO2—perhaps they will all go down with that rapidly
sinking ship.
Be safe, enjoy the interglacial and stay skeptical. (Doug L. Hoffman, The Resilient Earth)
I was just reading over the question from Dan Hughes on this site dated Feb. 9, 2010. The
question asked whether instrumentation having sufficient spatial and temporal coverage and measurement accuracy will ever be available to validate the expected
TOA radiative energy balance. It was, as you stated on your blog, a very good question. A similar question could be raised with respect to theoretical calculations
of the TOA outgoing irradiance. (Climate Science)
WASHINGTON - Climate change is melting the floating ice shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula, giving scientists a preview of what could happen if other ice shelves around
the southern continent disappear, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said on Monday.
The ice has retreated so far from the land mass that Charcot Island, which has long been connected to the peninsula by an ice bridge, emerged as a real island again last year,
a USGS scientist said.
"This is the first time since people have been observing the area, since the 1800s, that that ice shelf has not hitched together Charcot Island and the peninsula,"
scientist Jane Ferrigno said in a telephone interview.
The Antarctic Peninsula extends further northward than the rest of the roughly circular ice-covered continent, and it is warmer than the rest of Antarctica. But even in the
peninsula's coldest, southern part, ice shelves are vanishing.
Research by the USGS was the first to show that every ice front on the southern section of the peninsula has been retreating from 1947 to 2009, with the most dramatic changes
since 1990. (Reuters) | Ice Shelves Disappearing on Antarctic Peninsula (USGS)
So a mixture of current changes and waves knocked out some ice shelves on a peninsula that extends north of the Antarctic Circle, what about it? The
Antarctic is really cold. It remains really cold. Sea ice is increasing around the frozen continent. Why exactly do they think we should panic over slightly less severe
conditions on a peninsula closer to South America than the South Pole?
SAN DIEGO – Protect yourself from the summer sun is good advice to children who want to play outside on a hot summer day and it is good advice to cities as a way to
mitigate the phenomenon known as urban heat island.
For children, a hat, long sleeves and sun block provide protection. For cities, it might be canopies, additives to construction materials and smarter use of landscaping that
helps protect it from the sun, said Harvey Bryan, an ASU professor of architecture.
Bryan presented several possible strategies a city could use to help it fight urban heat island (UHI) in a presentation he made at the annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, held in San Diego, Feb. 18 – 22. Bryan's presentation, "Digital Simulations and Zoning Codes: To Mitigate Urban Heat
Island," was presented on Feb. 21 in a session on Urban Design and Energy Demand: Transforming Cities for an Eco-Energy Future.
Urban heat island is a phenomenon experienced by large cities, especially those located in desert areas, where the constant heat of the day is absorbed by the buildings,
pavement and concrete. The result is a rise in nighttime low temperature for a city's core from the stored heat of the day. (Arizona State University)
The most extreme drilling in the world isn’t even penetrating the surface of the earth.
Right now, crews at the Extreme Drilling Laboratory in Morgantown, W. Va., part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, are testing a system
that simulates some of the deepest oil and natural gas reservoirs on the planet.
The Ultra-deep Drilling Simulator allows researchers to test drilling operations at pressures of 30,000 pounds per square inch and temperatures above 480 degrees, conditions
similar to those in ultra-deep reservoirs located 20,000 feet underground.
The information gleaned from those tests goes far beyond what government researchers currently know about deep wells. Testing conducted through the Deep Trek Program, also
funded by the Department of Energy, topped out at 15,000 psi and 250 degrees. (Eric Lidji, GoO)
CHURCHVILLE, VA—My wife is complaining about our increased costs at the supermarket. I remind her that every pound of meat, milk, and butter we buy requires several pounds
of corn to produce—and biofuel mandates have shoved the corn price up from about $ 2 per bushel to $3.60. Many hog producers, dairymen, and egg farms have gone bust due to
the inevitably higher cost of feed for livestock.
The higher food costs come on top of the already-higher prices we pay at the pump for the lower-energy ethanol being mixed with our gasoline.
Now, comes word of another failing biofuel “miracle.” Thousands of farmers in the developing world were told that biofuel from an oily tree fruit, jatropha, could be grown
on marginal land. Thus it could produce massive amounts of renewable fuels without competing with food crops. (CGFI)
Blame it on technology, infrastructure or policy. But it's going to take many years for new technologies to make much of a dent in our current energy mix. (WSJ)
The journey this bill made to passage illustrates the power of special interest money to move the legislative process.
Thanks to a new federal law beginning February 22, people who can legally carry concealed handguns according to state law can also carry within national parks and forests in
that state, too. While this may help protect visitors from the parks’ burgeoning crime problem, the story of this law’s journey through Congress provides a lesson in
campaign contributions and anti-liberty special interests. (Howard Nemerov, PJM)
WASHINGTON - H1N1 swine flu is still circulating around the world and still killing people, although it is on the decline everywhere, global health officials said on Friday.
The H1N1 strain is the dominant form of influenza globally, but some seasonal strains are starting to emerge in China and Africa, the World Health Organization reported.
The United States remains one of the hardest hit countries, but many Americans seem unconcerned and most have rejected the vaccine, according to a poll by the Harvard School of
Public Health released on Friday. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON - Pneumonia and blood-borne infections caught in hospital killed 48,000 patients and cost $8.1 billion in 2006, according to a report released on Monday.
The study is one of the first to put a price tag on the widespread problem, which is worsening and which some experts say is adding to the growing cost of healthcare in the
United States.
"In many cases, these conditions could have been avoided with better infection control in hospitals," said Ramanan Laxminarayan of Resources for the Future, a think
tank that sponsored the study.
Sepsis - a blood infection - killed 20 percent of patients who developed it after surgery, Laxminarayan and colleagues reported in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
They studied hospital discharge records from 69 million patients at hospitals in 40 U.S. states between 1998 and 2006, looking for two diagnoses - hospital-acquired pneumonia
and sepsis. (Reuters)
LONDON - Britain should end its state funding for homeopathic treatments because they are "scientifically implausible" and work no better than placebos, an
influential parliamentary panel said on Monday.
The Science and Technology committee said homeopathic products are not medicines and should no longer be licensed by medicines regulators.
Homeopathy producers should not be allowed to make medical claims on product labels without evidence they work, it added.
The committee accused the government of sending out mixed messages about homeopathic remedies by saying that while there is no evidence to back them, they can still be paid for
by Britain's public National Health Service (NHS).
"It sets an unfortunate precedent for the department of health to consider that the existence of a community which believes that homeopathy works is 'evidence' enough to
continue spending public money on it," committee chairman Phil Willis said in a statement. "This also sends out a confused message, and has potentially harmful
consequences."
An election is due in Britain later this year and political leaders are under pressure to come up with any saving they can to bring down the country's ballooning public
deficit.
Ministers estimate the NHS spends around 152,000 pounds ($235,000) - a tiny fraction of its around 100 billion pound budget - on homeopathic remedies each year.
In its report on homeopathy, the committee agreed with the government that evidence shows homeopathy is not efficacious - meaning it works no better than a placebo, or dummy
pill.
"Explanations for why homeopathy would work are scientifically implausible," it said. (Reuters)
Obesity? Big Feet? Blame Darwin - Evolution Helped Humans Have
Children and Survive, But It Also Led to Modern-Day Maladies, Scientists Say
Evolution, the theory goes, guarantees survival to the fittest. But we can blame evolution for some of today's most pressing health problems, such as cancer, obesity,
diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
A 2009 Gallup poll found that 44% of Americans believe that God created human beings in their present form within the past 10,000 years. Many of them also think the human body
is perfectly designed.
But most scientists—including biologists, anthropologists, paleontologists and geneticists—see the 21st century human body as a collection of compromises, jury-rigged by
evolution as our ancestors adapted to changing conditions.
"In many ways, we are maladapted for modernity," says Stephen Stearns, a Yale evolutionary biologist. He and others in the field are urging medical schools to include
more evolutionary thinking when teaching doctors about modern diseases. (WSJ)
There has been a "dramatic rise" in deaths in England in which obesity was a contributory factor, figures suggest.
Analysis of death certificates by a University of Oxford team found a year-on-year increase in obesity-related deaths between 2000 and 2006. ( BBC News)
Obesity rates a mention because its popular/topical?
California legislators recently pledged to pass a soda tax, and similar proposals have surfaced in other states. Beverage company lobbyists face an uphill struggle to oppose
them all. (LA Times)
HEALTH authorities hope a mandatory calorie count label on fast food will spark a fat-busting war among retailers as consumers switch to healthier options.
The Victorian government is set to enter into discussions with the fast food industry over plans to force outlets to disclose the calorie content in fatty and sugar-laden
foods.
The proposal comes as new figures reveal Melbourne's western suburbs are a hot spot for preventable type 2 diabetes, with one in seven residents aged over 55 developing the
disease.
Diabetes Australia Victoria chief executive Professor Greg Johnson said a calorie disclosure program in New York was successful in changing consumer habits, leading to
competition among fast food outlets for healthier alternatives.
"In one study, 82 per cent of people indicated that having that nutritional information on the fast food menu would change their choice and we're starting to see the fast
food companies change their content to reduce the caloric content from market pressure, so there is evidence that that may make a difference," he said. (AAP)
Restaurants will be forced to serve standard-size portions under a new blueprint to tackle Scotland’s “obesity time bomb” that will see unprecedented state intrusion
into people’s diets. (TDT)
FORT STEWART, Ga. — Under crystalline winter skies, a light infantry unit headed for Iraq was practicing precision long-range shooting through a pall of smoke. But the
fire generating the haze had nothing to do with the training exercise.
Staff members at the Army post had set the blaze on behalf of the red-cockaded woodpecker, an imperiled eight-inch-long bird that requires frequent conflagrations to preserve
its pine habitat.
Even as it conducts round-the-clock exercises to support two wars, Fort Stewart spends as much as $3 million a year on wildlife management, diligently grooming its 279,000
acres to accommodate five endangered species that live here. Last year, the wildlife staff even built about 100 artificial cavities and installed them 25 feet high in large
pines so the woodpeckers did not have to toil for six months carving the nests themselves.
The military has not always been so enthusiastic about saving endangered plants and animals, arguing that doing so would hinder its battle preparedness.
But post commanders have gradually realized that working to help species rebound is in their best interest, if only because the more the endangered plants and animals thrive,
the fewer restrictions are put on training exercises to avoid destroying habitat. (NYT)
Avoid planetary destruction by using Gaiaceptives:
An environmental group is distributing hundreds of thousands of free condoms with hopes that it will educate the public about the impact of human overpopulation on
endangered species.
The condoms are enclosed in colorful packaging bearing images of endangered species like polar bears, jaguars and the Puerto Rico rock frog. The images are accompanied by
slogans like “Wrap with care, save the polar bear,” and “Cover your tweedle, save the burying beetle.”
Tweedle? According to one definition: “To lure by or as by music: The Pied Piper tweedled the children into
following him.” Well, at least they won’t be breeding. That PR amphibian offers better rhyming possibilities: “Put it in a sock, dogg! Save the Puerto Rico rock
frog.” (Tim Blair)
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — The Obama administration has developed a five-year blueprint for the Great Lakes, a sprawling ecosystem plagued by toxic contamination, shrinking
wildlife habitat and invasive species.
The plan envisions spending more than $2.2 billion for long-awaited repairs after a century of damage to the lakes, which hold 20 percent of the world’s freshwater.
Lisa Jackson, the Environmental Protection Agency administrator, released the blueprint at a news conference on Sunday in Washington.
Among the goals is taking a “zero-tolerance policy” toward future invasions by foreign species, including the Asian carp, a ravenous fish that has overrun parts of the
Mississippi River system and is threatening to enter Lake Michigan. (AP)
SAN DIEGO—When fisheries have plummeted or collapsed, one approach to fix the situation is to set up a marine reserve where fishing is banned. The idea is to provide
relief to stressed fish stocks by providing safe habitat where fish can reproduce, and then spread out. But banning fishing when a fishing industry is already struggling can be
controversial. Yesterday and tomorrow, at two sessions here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (which publishes ScienceNOW),
researchers presented new data that marine reserves help fish recover. (ScienceNow)
SOHIAN, India—India's Green Revolution is withering.
In the 1970s, India dramatically increased food production, finally allowing this giant country to feed itself. But government efforts to continue that miracle by encouraging
farmers to use fertilizers have backfired, forcing the country to expand its reliance on imported food. (WSJ)
SAN DIEGO—In the next 50 years, humans will have to produce as much food as we have over the entire history of civilization. The planet’s ever-expanding population
demands it. Yet productive farmland is scarce, and other resources such as water and fertilizer (which is made from fossil fuels) become more constrained by the day. (SciAm)
Root systems are the basis of the second Green Revolution, and the focus on beans and corn that thrive in poor growing conditions will help some of the world's poorest
farmers, according to a Penn State plant scientist.
"Africans missed the Green Revolution of the '60s because they typically do not eat wheat and rice, which was its focus," said Jonathan Lynch, professor of plant
nutrition.
The First Green Revolution was an effort to create dwarf wheat and rice plants that could prosper with more fertilizer. While this approach worked in Asia and other places
where rice and wheat are the staple crops, it did not affect Africa.
"Just as the Green Revolution was based on crops responsive to high soil fertility, the Second Green Revolution will be based on crops tolerant of low soil
fertility," Lynch told attendees at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, today (Feb. 20) in San Diego, Calif. (Penn State)
Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli took a gutsy and intelligent step Feb. 17 when he petitioned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider its
ill-advised "finding" that carbon dioxide creates an endangerment for human health. The endangerment finding would let the EPA battle alleged global warming by
regulating emissions of CO2, which of course is the gas that every animal and person exhales with every breath. The finding was ludicrous from the start, and now Mr.
Cuccinelli makes a reasonable case that it also was unlawful.
"Attorney General Cuccinelli believes that the EPA acted in an arbitrary and capricious fashion and failed to properly exercise its judgment by relying almost
exclusively on reports from the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, an arm of the United Nations] in attributing climate change to [human-caused] greenhouse
gas emissions," the AG's office explains. "The IPCC is an international body that is not subject to U.S. data quality and transparency standards and the IPCC
prepared their reports in total disregard to U.S. Standards." (The Washington Times)
When the infamous hockey-stick graph that purported to prove that human activities are causing runaway global warming was finally broken, there is some irony in the
fact that a couple of Canadians did the breaking. Retired mining engineer Steve McIntyre and Ross McKitrick, Professor of Economics at the University of Guelph, have been
a thorn in the side of global warming alarmists for years. McIntyre, McKitrick and, more often, the acronym “M&M” to refer to the pair, are the subject of many
discussions in the e-mails released from the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU) last November. (Rich Trzupek, Frontpage)
SAN DIEGO, California, February 20, 2010 - A panel of eminent U.S. and European scientists has confirmed the widespread scientific consensus that the Earth's climate
is warming due to human activities, but said they and their colleagues should have responded more quickly and effectively to news of an error in a major climate report
and hacked researcher e-mails.
In a symposium Friday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement Science, AAAS, the scientific leaders acknowledged errors in a 2007 report
from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and possibly impolitic email exchanges by East Anglian University climate researchers.
But they expressed shock at the political effects of the disclosures and said the impact was far out of proportion to the overwhelming evidence that human activity is
changing the Earth's climate. (ENS)
KERRY EMANUEL’S Feb. 15 op-ed “Climate
changes are proven fact’’ is more advocacy than assessment. Vague terms such as “consistent with,’’ “probably,’’ and “potentially’’ hardly
change this. Certainly climate change is real; it occurs all the time. To claim that the little we’ve seen is larger than any change we “have been able to
discern’’ for a thousand years is disingenuous. Panels of the National Academy of Sciences and Congress have concluded that the methods used to claim this cannot be
used for more than 400 years, if at all. Even the head of the deservedly maligned Climatic Research Unit acknowledges that the medieval period may well have been warmer
than the present.
The claim that everything other than models represents “mere opinion and speculation’’ is also peculiar. Despite their faults, models show that projections of
significant warming depend critically on clouds and water vapor, and the physics of these processes can be observationally tested (the normal scientific approach); at
this point, the models seem to be failing.
Finally, given a generation of environmental propaganda, a presidential science adviser (John Holdren) who has promoted alarm since the 1970s, and a government that
proposes funding levels for climate research about 20 times the levels in 1991, courage seems hardly the appropriate description - at least for scientists supporting such
alarm.
Richard S. Lindzen Cambridge
The writer is Alfred P. Sloan professor of atmospheric sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Boston Globe)
As the debate over climate change heats up and some scientists continue to maintain that global warming is caused by humans, others are claiming it is all part of a
clever marketing scheme.
Head of National Energy Security Fund Konstantin Simonov said to RT, “The global warming theme is a fine opportunity to sell goods with an ecological margin. I mean
you come to a shop and see expensive merchandise. You ask: Why so expensive? They reply: Friend, it's ecologically clean merchandize. Purchase it and you will save the
planet. And this sort of thing is happening everywhere.”
One India, BBC,
and Science Now describe a meeting organized by Ralph
Cicerone, the boss of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, that discussed the "climate crisis", i.e. the leaked information showing that the climate science
ceased to be an honest scientific discipline.
Note the amazing differences between the three stories.
Remotely related: John Coleman's second show about the AGW pseudoscience. Playlist: 50 minutes divided to 9 parts. Stars: Somerville, Watts, Christy, ... If he
avoided ludicrous propositions such as that "the Himalayas cover one tenth of the Earth's surface" in the second part (it's 1/200), and if he learned what the
word "deficient" meant at 5:40, eighth part :-), he would be an excellent popularizer of science.
View this video to learn about the National Academies America's Climate Choices study from the experts who are working on it.
In response to a request from Congress, the National Academies have launched America's Climate Choices, a suite of studies designed to inform and guide responses to
climate change across the nation. Experts representing various levels of government, the private sector, nongovernmental organizations, and research and academic
institutions have been selected to serve on four panels and an overarching committee.
The Summit on America's Climate Choices, held March 30-31, 2009 in Washington, D.C., provided an
opportunity for study participants to interact with major thought leaders and key constituencies to frame the questions and issues that the study will address.
Four panels of experts will release consensus reports in 2010:
The Committee on America's Climate Choices will issue a final report in 2010 that will integrate the
findings and recommendations from the four panel reports and other sources to identify the most effective short-term actions and most promising long-term strategies,
investments, and opportunities for responding to climate change. (National Academies)
“I’m like Punxsutawney Phil, but do you know what it means when I see my shadow? It means the earth is dying. Have you been outside today? It’s 60 degrees in
late November. I mean there’s a Christmas tree in front of this building and guys are wearing flip-flops. You can’t say this isn’t real.” -Al Gore on Saturday
Night Live, November 2009
It was all laughs for Al Gore last November when he hit the media circuit to promote his new book and educate the ignorant masses about the imminent threat of
catastrophic climate change. He had the rapt attention of the politicians and the pundits and the celebrities. He’d won an Academy Award! The former Vice-President and
presidential hopeful had built a new career as the voice of the Green Movement, and business was booming. What a difference three months makes. (Ken Connor, Townhall)
'Unequivocal." That's quite a claim in this skeptical era, so it's been enlightening to watch the unraveling of the absolute certainty of global warming caused by
man. Now even authors of the 2007 United Nations report that "warming of the climate system is unequivocal" have backed off its key assumptions and dire
warnings.
Science is having its Walter Cronkite moment. Back when news was delivered by just three television networks, Walter Cronkite could end his evening broadcast by
declaring, "And that's the way it is." The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report likewise purported to proclaim the final word, in 3,000 pages
that now turn out to be less scientific truth than political cover for sweeping economic regulations.
Equivocation has replaced "unequivocal" even among some of the scientists whose "Climategate" emails discussed how to suppress dissenting views via
peer review and avoid complying with freedom-of-information requests for data. (L. Gordon Crovitz, WSJ)
Yvo de Boer, the United Nations' top climate-change official, announced his resignation yesterday. Good riddance. The bureaucrat's departure is no surprise because his
pseudo-scientific global warming religion was proved to be a hoax on his watch. (The Washington Times)
The latest Science magazine has an extended interview with Dr. Phil Jones. In this post,
I’ll keep away from issues related to Climategate, whether this was a softball interview (given that, for example, there is no discussion of deletion of files, if any)
or whether, by refusing to share data with skeptics, Professor Jones was undermining the scientific method (because the scientific method relies, among other things, on
giving one’s skeptics the opportunity to disprove one’s conclusions). Instead I will focus on phenological arguments that have been advanced to argue that global
warming indeed exists.
These arguments are the subject of the second question posed to Dr. Jones:
”Q: Let’s pretend for a second that we threw out the CRU dataset. What other data are available that corroborate your findings about temperature rise?
“P.J.: There’s the two other datasets produced in the U.S. [at NASA and NOAA]. But there’s also a lot of other evidence showing that the world’s warming, by
just looking outside and seeing glaciers retreating, the reduction of sea ice … overall, the reduction of snow areas in the northern hemisphere, the earlier [annual]
breakup of sea ice and some land ice and river ice around the world, and the fact that spring seems to be coming earlier in many parts of the world.” Read
the rest of this entry »
What I find amazing is the high degree of logical inconsistency in his reasoning. On one hand, he thinks that the alarmed climate scientists are the "David"
who fights against a gigantic "Goliath" who is very well organized and funded (by the fossil fuel industry, of course!).
And the poor "David" is so weak and discriminated against... The media have never helped to promote the opinions of the alarmed climate scientists, as Michael
Mann remembers the history of the last 20 years. Poor alarm about climate change: you know, the hypothetical threats have never been mentioned in the evil media, at least
if you omit those 50,000 articles a month on Google News! There's a huge injustice by the "Goliath" and a suffocating conspiracy working against the nice
"David" of the climate alarm.
On the other hand, he thinks that the opponents of the climate alarm are a couple of disorganized fringe lunatics.
» Don't Stop Reading » (The Reference Frame)
Nature News is carrying an interview with Professor Martin Parry, co-chair of IPCC WG II during the preparation of its Fourth Assessment Report (AR4), titled Setting
the Record Straight. Unfortunately, he is not asked about, nor does he address, any sins of omission. He does say, however, “I don’t think there’s a
problem in the robustness, rigour and veracity of the entire volume. I don’t think there’s any systemic problem with the way the authors undertook their work.”
But can this be said for the Summary for Policy Makers, perhaps the only piece that policy makers and their advisors ever read?
In two previous posts I noted a number of the sins of omissions in the IPCC’s WG II Summary for Policy Makers: Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
By By Walter C. Oechel
Sunday, February 21, 2010 at 12:01 a.m.
The message from five decades of scientific research, the public-at-large and even most politicians is clear: Climate change is real and we must act now. Our future
health, economic well-being and national security are at risk if we don’t.
“But what about the debate?” There really isn’t one. The following are facts:
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that acts to warm the planet.
Carbon dioxide is being emitted from fossil fuels by human activity.
The amount of carbon dioxide emitted from fossil fuel use is increasing.
The climate is getting warmer, more unstable, and the climate extremes are greater.
This can only be adequately explained by including human carbon dioxide emissions.
More than 90 percent of the U.S. and international scientific communities agree that while there has always been climate variation, the recent historic warming is due
to human activities, particularly from fossil fuel overuse. (San Diego Union-Tribune)
Walter is trying to use his own facts :) Try some reality:
Carbon dioxide is a minor greenhouse gas that acts trivially to warm the planet and is an essential trace gas supporting most surface and oceanic
life on earth.
Carbon dioxide is being emitted from fossil fuels by human activity but nowhere near as much as is naturally emitted from oceans, soils, crustal weathering and
biological activity.
The amount of carbon dioxide emitted from fossil fuel use is increasing and that is a very good thing for humanity and green plants (and everything that
depends on them for food and shelter).
The climate is possibly getting (slightly) warmer (fortunately), but not more unstable, and the climate extremes are nothing at all
unusual.
This can only be adequately explained by including human carbon dioxide emissions. Deleted as simply too silly for words.
Atmospheric CO2's recovery from critically low levels is a major boon to life on earth and is highly desirable, not disastrous.
Human emission of carbon dioxide is the best thing we have ever done for life on earth (pity it had to be an accidental side effect).
By Jack Henderson
Sunday, February 21, 2010 at 12:01 a.m.
First, to set the record straight, examination of ice core samples from the arctic shows that cyclical global warming and cooling has been going on for hundreds of
thousands or even millions of years. It is the sun’s emissions that provide the heat, and greenhouse gasses trap that heat, warming the Earth. As the sun goes through
cycles of more or less emission, the Earth goes through cycles of warming and cooling.
Water vapor is Earth’s most significant greenhouse gas. About 95 percent of the greenhouse effect is from naturally occurring water vapor, and about 5 percent of it
from other gasses. Of the other gasses, carbon dioxide is about 3 percent. Of that portion, about half is man-made. (San Diego Union-Tribune)
"Denialists" U-Trib? Sheesh! What a way to headline it.
A climate agreement looks remote following the chaos of the Copenhagen summit and now United Nations climate chief Yvo de Boer has thrown in the towel. UN chief Ban Ki-moon
is on the lookout for a suitable successor -- someone who won't be daunted by the mammoth task ahead. (Spiegel)
Yvo de Boer, the UN's climate chief, has announced his resignation. In the wake of an unsuccessful summit in Copenhagen he plans to leave diplomacy altogether and join
a big-business consultancy as a climate expert. German papers aren't sure what's worse -- his departure from the UN, or the disappointments of Copenhagen. (Spiegel)
WASHINGTON — Top researchers now agree that the world is likely to get stronger but fewer hurricanes in the future because of global warming, seeming to settle a
scientific debate on the subject.
But they say there's not enough evidence yet to tell whether that effect has already begun.
Since just before Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana and Mississippi in 2005, dueling scientific papers have clashed about whether global warming is worsening hurricanes and
will do so in the future. The new study seems to split the difference. A special World Meteorological Organization panel of 10 experts in both hurricanes and climate
change - including leading scientists from both sides - came up with a consensus, which was published online Sunday in the journal Nature Geoscience. (CP)
All this from a gorebull warming guesstimate... looks like it's going to be a very long time before we finally come to our senses about PlayStation®
Climatology.
Q: As the controversy swirling around the IPCC deepens at the same time some are questioning the significance of global warming now that large portions of the U.S. are
buried under record-breaking snow, what kind of information do policymakers need to make decisions about climate change?
Any risks of global warming need to be weighed against the risks of global warming policies. Policymakers must have accurate information on both sides of the equation
in order to avoid measures that do more harm than good. Most of the recent proposals — the Senate’s Boxer-Kerry cap-and-trade bill, a new UN treaty, EPA’s
regulatory scheme — fail to accurately weigh the risks because they are based on the false premise that climate change is a dire threat.
Solar cycles of magnetic fields and sunspots have become a popular foothold for climate change skeptics. A new study
in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, however, shows that even if predictions of an extended minimum of solar activity are accurate, it will have only a tiny
effect on the Earth’s climate in comparison to the current track of human-caused warming. (Solve Climate)
02/17/2010 - As a “special tribute for exceptional scientific contributions”, Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam-Institute for Climate Impact Research was elected
Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU). The honorary fellowship is bestowed on only one in each thousand members in any given year, who have attained
“acknowledged eminence in the Earth and space sciences”. (PIK)
While some other bloggers and journalists insist that recent winter snows are proof of global warming effects, they miss the fact that models have been predicting less
snow in the northern hemisphere. See this 2005 peer reviewed paper:
It says exactly the opposite of what some are saying now. – Anthony
=====================================
Guest post by Steven Goddard
A 2005 Columbia University study titled “WILL
CLIMATE CHANGE AFFECT SNOW COVER OVER NORTH AMERICA?” ran nine climate models used by the IPCC, and all nine predicted that North American winter snow cover would
decline significantly, starting in about 1990.
In this study, current and future decadal trends in winter North American SCE (NA-SCE) are investigated, using nine general circulation models (GCMs) of the global
atmosphere-ocean system participating in the upcoming Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (IPCC-AR4)…
all nine models exhibit a clear and statistically significant decreasing trend in 21st century NA-SCE
Some of the models predicted a significant decline in winter snow cover between 1990 and 2010. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
This fits right in to what I’ve been blogging about for two years. the 2007 record minimum ice extent was wind driven not melt driven. A significant portion of the
ice did not melt in place. It was pushed south by the wind where it melted.
Here’s where the wind is a factor in pushing past the ice arches:
Large, thick floes of ice can be seen breaking off of the Arctic sea ice cover before entering the Nares Strait in this Dec. 23, 2007 radar image from the European
Space Agency's Envisat satellite. Click for large image. Credit: European Space Agency
PASADENA, Calif. – In 2007, the Arctic lost a massive amount of thick, multiyear sea ice, contributing to that year’s record-low extent of Arctic sea ice. A new
NASA-led study has found that the record loss that year was due in part to the absence of “ice arches,” naturally-forming, curved ice structures that span the
openings between two land points. These arches block sea ice from being pushed by winds or currents through narrow passages and out of the Arctic basin. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
The impact of global warming on food prices and hunger could be large over the next 20 years, according to a new Stanford University study. Researchers say that higher
temperatures could significantly reduce yields of wheat, rice and maize – dietary staples for tens of millions of poor people who subsist on less than $1 a day. The
resulting crop shortages would likely cause food prices to rise and drive many into poverty.
But even as some people are hurt, others would be helped out of poverty, says Stanford agricultural scientist David Lobell. (Stanford University)
We're still hoping for warming since cooling is much harder to deal with but our chances are only 1:2
Arguably the most important data used for documenting global warming are surface station observations of temperature, with some stations providing records back 100
years or more. By far the most complete data available are for Northern Hemisphere land areas; the Southern Hemisphere is chronically short of data since it is mostly
oceans.
But few stations around the world have complete records extending back more than a century, and even some remote land areas are devoid of measurements. For these and
other reasons, analysis of “global” temperatures has required some creative data massaging. Some of the necessary adjustments include: switching from one station to
another as old stations are phased out and new ones come online; adjusting for station moves or changes in equipment types; and adjusting for the Urban Heat Island (UHI)
effect. The last problem is particularly difficult since virtually all thermometer locations have experienced an increase in manmade structures replacing natural
vegetation, which inevitably introduces a spurious warming trend over time of an unknown magnitude.
There has been a lot of criticism lately of the two most publicized surface temperature datasets: those from Phil Jones (CRU) and Jim Hansen (GISS). One summary of
these criticisms can be found here. These two datasets are based upon
station weather data included in the Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN) database archived at NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), a reduced-volume and
quality-controlled dataset officially blessed by your government for climate work.
One of the most disturbing changes over time in the GHCN database is a rapid decrease in the number of stations over the last 30 years or so, after a peak in station
number around 1973. (Roy W. Spencer)
Policymakers in Europe and United States are markedly underestimating the changes needed to mitigate CO2 emission required to prevent dangerous climate change
because they work in 'silos,' according to pioneering research
Policy makers in Europe and United States are markedly underestimating the changes needed to mitigate CO2 emission required to prevent dangerous climate change because
they work in 'silos', according to pioneering research.
Dr Sebastian Carney, from The University of Manchester, discovered that the lack of communication between government departments, NGOs and other authorities has resulted
in significant differences over who is responsible for what. (University of Manchester)
They operate in 'silos' alright -- if they emerged to the real world they'd find carbon dioxide is actually an essential trace gas, whose increasing
abundance benefits life on earth.
Lambert has claimed a major win over his use of a voice recording (Monckton’s
McLuhan Moment). As usual, it all sounds incredibly clear cut and impressive until the bluff gets hit with a 5 minute test…
The bottom line? The infamous “Pinker tape” turns out to be a reenacted piece of cherry-picking exaggeration, where lines are taken out of context
to imply something important, or to frame it as if it was significant.
It’s true Monckton did get Pinker’s sex wrong (golly), and there was a point about fluxes being at the surface vs top of the atmosphere, but nothing Pinker or
Lambert said makes much difference to the point that matters: Climate Sensitivity. (When the top of atmosphere problem emerged, Monckton recalculated the climate
sensitivity on the spot, it changed from “very low” to “even lower”.) Pinker herself acknowledges that Monckton’s approach is reasonable.
Monckton has over the years, pointed to many reasons why climate sensitivity is low. The Pinker paper is just another one of these corroborating pieces (and it looks a
doozy). Using satellite measurements, Pinker showed that more sunlight is reaching the surface of the Earth, (possibly due to less clouds over the ocean). Over the
18 years, the increase in energy amounts to almost 3W/m2. If this is the case, there is just not much room for greenhouse gases to be heating the world after
the effect of this extra surface sunlight is taken into account.
Computer models show how skyborne seawater particles change cloud brightness, temperature, rain patterns
SAN DIEGO -- Ships blowing off steam are helping researchers understand how manmade particles might be useful against global warming. New results from modeling clouds
like those seen in shipping lanes reveal the complex interplay between aerosols, the prevailing weather and even the time of day the aerosol particles hit the air,
according to research presented Saturday morning at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's annual meeting.
"We've seen ship tracks affect the reflectivity of clouds," said Phil Rasch, chief climate scientist at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory in Richland, Wash. "We want to know if we can do the same thing when we want to, on purpose, and how that might be helpful in countering some of the
effects of global warming.
"We decided to see how the reflectivity of clouds is influenced by particles in a very detailed model that treats clouds much more realistically than we are able to
do in a typical climate model." (DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)
Not the stuff that we wipe off the coffee table on a regular basis, but the tiny particles floating around in the earth's atmosphere, which originate primarily from
deserts in North Africa and the Middle East.
It can affect the oceans, impact the carbon cycle and even have an effect on global temperature.
Dust, and its impact on our planet, will be the focus of a symposium at the upcoming American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting, in San
Diego, California. The discussion will begin with a presentation by NSERC-funded researcher Dr. Karen Kohfeld from Simon Fraser University. (Natural Sciences and
Engineering Research Council)
Residents of the southern United States and the Caribbean have seen it many times during the summer months—a whitish haze in the sky that seems to hang around for
days. The resulting thin film of dust on their homes and cars actually is soil from the deserts of Africa, blown across the Atlantic Ocean.
Now, there is new evidence that similar dust storms in the arctic, possibly caused by receding glaciers, may be making similar deposits in northern Europe and North
America, according to Joseph Prospero from the University of Miami in a February 19 presentation to the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
"Our recent work in Iceland has shown that most of the dust events there are associated with dust emitted from glacial outwash deposits, which may be carried into
the northern latitudes and into Europe by synoptic weather events," says Prospero, professor of marine and atmospheric chemistry at the University of Miami
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, in his talk "Intercontinental Dust Transport: The Linkage to Climate and its Environmental Impact."
Satellite data have shown large dust plumes in the arctic, but persistent cloud cover has made finding the origins difficult. The glaciers have been retreating in Iceland
for decades, and the trend is expected to continue with the changing climate. Prospero predicts that dust activity from the newly exposed glacial deposits will most
likely increase in the future in Iceland and possibly from other glacial terrains in the Arctic. (University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric
Science)
There is a very important research contribution that is relevant to the effect of the siting of surface temperature instrumentation with respect to the
assessment of spatially representative long-term trends. The implications of her study goes beyond that of cattle grazing, as this is the first study, to my
knowledge, of the effect on surface temperatures of vegetation/soil patterns on the scale of a few meters. This, of course, assures that the overlying atmosphere is
essentially identical such that any differences in the soil temperatures, and other climate metrics are due to the details of the immediate land surface
characteristics.
The study is in an M.S. thesis (which is a peer reviewed contribution) under the direction of Peter D. Blanken
of the University of Colorado in Boulder.
Forget CDOs and other inventions of the great credit bubble. That’s all old hat. Investment bankers are moving on to an area of securities trading that is
potentially even more lucrative, and what’s more, even has a social value – saving the planet. Or supposedly so, anyway. I’ve long had my suspicions about the great
carbon trading bubble, and I’ve had them pretty much confirmed by a brilliant article which has
been drawn to my attention by one Mark Schapiro in Harper’s magazine. (Jeremy Warner, TDT)
There’s a plan out there that will create jobs, collect revenue for state and federal governments and improve the environment. And it won’t come at any cost to the
taxpayer but if the administration doesn’t act, it will be a net drain on the economy. 1.) What is it? 2.) Why haven’t Congress and the administration acted? The
answers are increased oil and natural gas production in the United States and we have no idea.
The costs of the ban: A new study commissioned by the National
Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) details the social, economic and environmental effects of oil and natural gas exploration on and beneath federal
lands. The report estimates that consumer energy costs will increase and cumulative
gross domestic product (GDP) will decrease by $2.36 trillion over the next two decades.
The other cost on inaction is an environmental one and specifically relates to offshore drilling. Off the coast of Santa Barbara and elsewhere, oil seeps from the
ocean floor release oily bubbles or droplets of oil. The non-profit organization Stop Oil Seeps (SOS) California details
that these “Oil slicks of varying thickness form on the sea surface and spread out under the influence of wind and currents. As the oil loses its lighter fractions
and undergoes weathering, some of it sinks to the ocean floor, some is dispersed by wave agitation into the water column, and some eventually washes up on shore or sticks
to rocks near the high tide line.”
Over the past few weeks, with more dents accumulating in the armor of warmism, a new battle line is taking shape: ” The U.S. economy is ill, energy is
important, green jobs will save us, promote green jobs, give us your money.” Or something like that.
In fact, the shock troops of the green job army are now promoting the phrase “global
weirding” to replacing global warming. There is also terminological retreat on the green jobs side. You see green tech is not actually going to do much
positive for the economy, you should think of it rather as a form of “insurance,” against global weirding, I suppose.
As we limp into our second year of crony capitalism under Barack Obama, with small businesses loath to risk their funds in what is increasingly a rigged
crapshoot, and the importance of having friends in Washington all the more vital, government-backed green jobs appear to many as the only way out. (MasterResource)
By Allen Brooks, ET guest columnist
Feb. 19 2010, 12:34 EST
Conventional wisdom says the United States is blessed with 100 years of natural gas supplies due to the success in applying horizontal drilling and hydraulic
fracturing technologies to gas shale formations that underlie many of the oil and gas producing formations throughout the country. [Read
More] (Energy Tribune)
Allen Brooks is to be complimented for writing this piece to stimulate discussion on the gas capacity and economics of one of the most important new reservoirs, the
Haynesville Shale.
I rarely respond to our guest commentators but in this case I wear two hats. I happen to be, as many of you know, a petroleum production engineer, with more than 25
years of experience in hydraulic fracturing. I was also among the first people in the industry to have used this type of well completion on horizontal wells.
The deployment of these two technologies, along with geosteering, new instrumentation, and advances in completion and stimulation fluids, is arguably one of the most
resounding successes of the petroleum industry in the last two decades, on par with the ability to find, drill and produce oil in 10,000 feet of water and another 20,000
to 25,000 of earth below that.
I understand Allen’s qualified skepticism, but let me remind all that as late as 2005, the US Geological Survey was rating both the Haynesville and the Marcellus
Shales at about 1 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas. There have been some astonishing escalations of these numbers, published by reputable people, larger than any
other in memory: up to 300 Tcf for the Haynesville, and more than 500 Tcf for the Marcellus. These volumes would put them at the #2 and #3 positions in world natural gas
reservoirs, below the combined Iranian South Pars, yet undeveloped, and the Qatari North fields, but ahead of the Urengoy field, Russia’s largest. Even the most
conservative estimates put the two US shale gas fields at a minimum of 30 Tcf, truly remarkable in any case. (Michael Economides, Energy Tribune)
BINGHAMTON, New York - Technological advances that have unlocked natural gas from shale rock deep beneath the surface have outpaced advances in water waste disposal,
meaning that gas drilling could begin in New York state before a waste disposal program is in place.
"There is a shortage of treatment facilities that can handle this very salty water, so that's going to become a bit of a bottleneck for the industry when they do
start issuing drilling permits," said hydrogeologist John Conrad, head of the environmental consulting firm Conrad Geoscience Corp.
The booming shale gas business accounts for 15 to 20 percent of U.S. natural gas production and is seen increasing fourfold over the next 15 years, providing a relatively
clean energy source for a country sensitive to its dependence on foreign oil and looking for ways to reduce carbon emissions.
But millions of gallons of water are needed for each shale gas well, leaving drillers to deal with the tainted waste water. Some companies such as Chesapeake Energy have
employed a "closed-loop" system that reuses water, which experts and environmental critics see as part of the solution. (Reuters)
Environmentalism
is the religion of the left, but many on the right blindly follow a misguided dogma of their own
By Lawrence Solomon
Environmentalism is the religion of the left, commentators often pronounce: “The Church of the Environment,” as conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer puts it.
I have no argument with them here. Many environmentalists have taken leave of their senses, making a ritual of recycling and a demon of carbon dioxide, a colourless,
odourless and tasteless gas that is indispensable to all life on Earth. By conducting mystical inquisitions into our imagined carbon footprints instead of focusing on
core issues such as protecting our air and water, environmentalists hurt their cause.
But those on the right, particularly in the U.S., have their own dogma, one that is equally irrational and that also hurts their cause. The religion of the right is
Nuclear Power.
[Editor’s note: With the author's permission, MasterResource reprints a probing analysis of a recent study by the Department
of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, The Impact of Wind Power Projects on
Residential Property Values in the United States. Albert Wilson critically examines a genre of analysis used by wind proponents, including
government bodies and environmentalists, that produces a desired result. Comments are invited on this paper as well as on other examples of where methodological
tricks are used to justify wind power and other politically dependent energy technologies. (Mr. Wilson's Bio is at the end of the article.)]
GLAND, Switzerland, February 19, 2010 - The risk that biofuel crops will become invasive and outcompete native species is increasing as more advanced biofuel crops are
planted, according to new research into this previously neglected but potentially costly problem.
A new report by the nonprofit International Union for the Conservation of Nature, IUCN, finds it is "likely that the cost of an invasion by a biofuel feedstock or
associated pest would, in the long run, outweigh any economic benefit offered by biofuel development." (ENS)
WASHINGTON - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack urged Congress on Thursday to reinstate the $1 a gallon biodiesel tax credit, calling it "an important credit"
and "a support mechanism" for renewable fuels.
The credit expired at the end of 2009.
Farm groups and allies in Congress are seeking a revival retroactive to January 1, but do not have a legislative vehicle for it.
At the Agriculture Department's annual Outlook forum, USDA chief economist Joe Glauber said the future of soyoil as a feedstock for biodiesel is dependent on the future
of the credit. Without it, other vegetable and animal oils will be more economical, he said.
USDA forecasts 2.2 billion lbs of soyoil will be used to make biodiesel this marketing year and 2.4 billion lbs in the 2010/11 marketing year, which opens Oct 1.
The United States produces about 19 billion lbs of soyoil annually. (Reuters)
Virginia finally is poised to repeal its unusual law that prohibits law-abiding citizens from buying more than one gun per month. It's about time, because the red tape has
not had the desired effect in lowering crime. There is no academic research by criminologists or economists that shows that one-gun-a-month regulations reduce crime in either
the states that pass them or their neighbors. The laws have merely inconvenienced honest Americans who want to buy guns.
Besides Virginia, only Maryland, California and New Jersey still have these laws. South Carolina was the first state to adopt the restrictions in 1976 but repealed the limit in
2004. New Jersey has had the law on the books for less than two months now.
Contrary to the nanny-state notion that gun control is good, gun limitations are actually harmful. The book "The Bias Against Guns" shows that one-gun-a-month rules
significantly reduce the number of gun shows, because they reduce the number of sales that can occur. For the same reason, it's likely the regulation reduces the number of gun
dealers. The reduction in legal sources to buy guns can raise the cost of law-abiding citizens buying guns relative to criminals, and thus disarm good people relative to
criminals. The book "More Guns, Less Crime," the only peer-reviewed research on one-gun-a-month restrictions, from the University of Chicago Press, shows the laws
either have no effect or a detrimental effect on violent crime. (The Washington Times)
Toronto, June 30, 2004 - KPMG International, the global network of professional services firms providing audit, tax and advisory services, today announced that it has been
named the Global Founding Partner of the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo, Norway, as a demonstration of its global commitment to inspire leadership, ethics and responsibility.
(Media Release)
GENEVA - Flu experts will advise next week whether the world is in a post-peak phase of the H1N1 pandemic, signalling infections are falling in most countries but new waves
may still occur, the World Health Organisation said on Friday.
The U.N. agency declared last June that the new virus was causing the first influenza pandemic in more than 40 years and raised the alert level to the maximum 6.
The WHO's emergency committee, comprising 15 experts, will review the situation by teleconference on Tuesday but will not declare an end to the pandemic, WHO spokesman Gregory
Hartl said.
"We stay at phase 6 or we move to post-peak, those are the only two possibilities," Hartl told a news briefing.
"The post-peak means basically a transition period where most countries have probably seen the peak of activity but it doesn't mean that all countries have. We could see
additional waves," he said. (Reuters)
NEW YORK - While some research has suggested that obese women have an increased risk of having a baby with a birth defect, a new study shows that diabetes may at least
partly account for the link.
Studies on whether obesity raises the odds of birth anomalies such as spina bifida, cleft palate and heart defects have so far come to conflicting conclusions. One question is
whether obesity, per se, is the problem -- or whether certain factors associated with obesity are at work.
Type 2 diabetes, which is closely related to obesity, has been linked to a heightened risk of birth defects in a number of studies.
The new study, of nearly 42,000 women who gave birth between 1991 and 2004, found no association between mothers' obesity and the risk of any major birth defect. However, there
was a link seen with diabetes. (Reuters Health)
Ensuring that the food provided to children in schools is consistent with current dietary recommendations is an important national focus. Various laws and regulations govern
the operation of school meal programs. In 1995, Nutrition Standards and Meal Requirements were put in place to ensure that all meals offered would be high in nutritional
quality.
School Meals reviews and provides recommendations to update the nutrition standard and the meal requirements for the National School Breakfast and Lunch Programs. The
recommendations reflect new developments in nutrition science, increase the availability of key food groups in the school meal programs, and allow these programs to better meet
the nutritional needs of children, foster healthy eating habits, and safeguard children's health.
School Meals sets standards for menu planning that focus on food groups, calories, saturated fat, and sodium and that incorporate Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the
Dietary Reference Intakes. This book will be used as a guide for school food authorities, food producers, policy leaders, state/local governments, and parents. (NAP)
PHILADELPHIA - In an effort to fight childhood obesity, the U.S. government launched a program on Friday to encourage supermarkets in low-income areas to increase access to
healthy food.
The Obama Administration said it would provide $400 million for its Healthy Food Financing Initiative, which is modeled on a successful Pennsylvania program that in the last
five years has led to more than 80 supermarkets being set up in "food deserts" - areas that were previously underserved by sellers of healthy food. (Reuters Life)
As the public health threat of childhood obesity has become clear, the issue has become the focus of local, state, and national initiatives. Many of these efforts are
centered on the community environment in recognition of the role of environmental factors in individual behaviors related to food and physical activity. In many communities,
for example, fresh produce is not available or affordable, streets and parks are not amenable to exercise, and policies and economic choices make fast food cheaper and more
convenient than healthier alternatives.
Community efforts to combat obesity vary in scope and scale; overall, however, they remain fragmented, and little is known about their effectiveness. At the local level,
communities are struggling to determine which obesity prevention programs to initiate and how to evaluate their impact.
In this context, the Institute of Medicine held two workshops to inform current work on obesity prevention in children through input from individuals who are actively engaged
in community- and policy-based obesity prevention programs. Community perspectives were elicited on the challenges involved in undertaking policy and programmatic interventions
aimed at preventing childhood obesity, and on approaches to program implementation and evaluation that have shown promise. Highlights of the workshop presentations and
discussions are presented in this volume. (NAP)
The prevalence of childhood obesity is so high in the United States that it may reduce the life expectancy of today's generation of children. While parents and other adult
caregivers play a fundamental role in teaching children about healthy behaviors, even the most positive efforts can be undermined by local environments that are poorly suited
to supporting healthy behaviors. For example, many communities lack ready sources of healthy food choices, such as supermarkets and grocery stores. Or they may not provide safe
places for children to walk or play. In such communities, even the most motivated child or adolescent may find it difficult to act in healthy ways. Local governments--with
jurisdiction over many aspects of land use, food marketing, community planning, transportation, health and nutrition programs, and other community issues--are ideally
positioned to promote behaviors that will help children and adolescents reach and maintain healthy weights.
Local Government Actions to Prevent Childhood Obesity presents a number of recommendations that touch on the vital role of government actions on all levels--federal, state, and
local--in childhood obesity prevention. The book offers healthy eating and physical activity strategies for local governments to consider, making it an excellent resource for
mayors, managers, commissioners, council members, county board members, and administrators. (NAP)
Once upon a time, you kicked us Brits out when we tried to tell you how to run your affairs. It’s time to do the same with Jamie Oliver. (Rob Lyons, spiked)
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Eating lots of vegetables and fruits during pregnancy may lower the chance of having a baby with certain allergies, hint study findings from
Japan.
Greater intake of green and yellow vegetables, citrus fruit, and veggies and fruits high in beta carotene (generally those colored red and orange) may lessen the risk of having
a baby with eczema (itchy, dry, red patched skin), Dr. Yoshihiro Miyake at Fukuoka University and colleagues found.
Foods high in vitamin E, found in some green vegetables, similarly may lessen the risk of having a wheezy infant, they report in the journal Allergy.
Beta carotene and vitamin E are two of many vegetable and fruit antioxidants thought to benefit health. But prior investigations of maternal antioxidant intake and childhood
allergies offered conflicting findings. This area of research "is still developing," Miyake noted in an email to Reuters Health.
What's Silly Sammy doing now? (more of our irregularly featured Samuel S. Epstein watch)
CHICAGO, IL, February 16, 2010 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- The Cancer Prevention Coalition notes with approval that on February 9, the Food and Drug Administration announced that it
would take stringent action to regulate "the most potent forms of medical radiation," particularly those from increasingly popular CT scans.
Cancer Prevention Coalition Chairman Samuel S. Epstein, M.D. commends the FDA for warning that such radiation is unsafe and equivalent to that of about 400 chest X-rays, 0.4
rads (radiation absorbed dose), and "can increase a person's lifetime cancer risk."
However, says Dr. Epstein, "the FDA remains strangely unaware that radiation from routine premenopausal mammography poses significant and cumulative risks of breast
cancer." (Press Release)
CHICAGO, IL, February 2, 2010 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- On January 29, 2010, with three other scientific experts, Samuel S. Epstein, MD, Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition,
filed a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Petition seeking an urgent ban on hormonal meat, as it poses unrecognized risks of hormonal cancers. (Press Release)
Cancer Prevention Coalition CHICAGO, IL, January 15, 2010 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- In May 2007, Samuel S. Epstein, MD, Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition, and four other
leading national experts on genetically-engineered, recombinant bovine growth hormone (rBGH) milk filed a Petition to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), "Petition
Seeking the Withdrawal of the New Animal Drug Application Approval for Posilac®-Recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH)." (Press Release)
Cancer Prevention Coalition CHICAGO, IL, January 6, 2010 --/WORLD-WIRE/-- The Cancer Prevention Coalition notes with alarm that on January 2 this year, in a heavily
advertised special health-theme issue of People Magazine, Kraft announced a new campaign on Crystal Light, a sugarless powdered drink mix which can easily be poured into tap
and bottled water drinks. Crystal Light's ingredients include the artificial sweetener aspartame, under the trademark names of NutraSweet and Equal, besides citric acid and
sodium citrate.
Cancer Prevention Coalition Chairman Dr. Samuel S. Epstein warns that, based on scientific evidence published in peer-reviewed journals and presented to the U.S. Congress,
aspartame is both toxic and carcinogenic. The coalition is calling upon the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban all dietary uses of aspartame. (Press Release)
Article after article after article now tells us that human overpopulation of the planet is the Great Unmentionable. Hmm, something doesn’t add up. (Brendan O’Neill,
spiked)
Warned of 'Unpredictable climatic effects' -- Called on U.S. to 'de-develop'
Friday, February 19, 2010
A 1972 article about “The Population Bomb” biologist Paul Ehrlich reveals a nascent environmental movement grappling with mass sterilization, climate fears,
“international policy planning” and redistribution of wealth. The article reveals dramatic parallels to today's modern environmental movement.
According to the June 16, 1972 article in the Boca Raton News. The article, part of the Newsweek Feature Service, was written by William J. Cook and was titled “Expert on
population pleased by response.” (Marc Morano, Climate Depot)
Most people in the US are probably unaware that back in 1984, Solano County, California passed a law prohibiting "non-local" garbage from being brought into county
landfills. Since this is in clear violation of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, it was never enforced by county authorities.
Recently, though, this law—Measure E—has been invoked by so-called environmentalists, who are trying to block the expansion of the county's Potrero Hills landfill. Talk
about being behind the curve!
I guess these self-proclaimed Greenies didn't get the memo that landfills are actually environmentally sound, especially since landfill gas contains methane, and has been used
to generate significant amounts of power—with no pollution. Oh yeah, there is also some carbon dioxide in landfill gas, but it tends to stay in the ground, and last time I
checked, CO2 is essential for plant life. Not sure what sort of moron would consider that a "pollutant."
Another point to consider in the double digit unemployment rate in the county. The landfill expansion would bring in new Green jobs, along with plenty of revenue.
I cover this story in my latest HND piece. Read the complete article. (Shaw's Eco-Logic)
Geoengineering solutions to environmental problems must take into account social and cultural impacts
TEMPE, Ariz. – The adage says that to discover the right solutions to a problem you first have to ask the right questions.
As Arizona State University engineering professor Brad Allenby sees it, our search for technological solutions to large-scale environmental problems sometimes gets off on the
wrong track largely because we're posing the wrong questions.
Particularly in the debates about how to respond to atmospheric greenhouse gas buildup, climate change and humankind's impact on the global environment, Allenby says, "We
are often framing the discussion from narrow and overly simplistic perspectives, but what we are dealing with are systems that are highly complex. As a result, the policy
solutions we come up with don't match the challenges we are trying to respond to."
Allenby will offer his recommendations for reframing the approach to such challenges in his Feb. 19 presentation, "Technological Change and Earth Systems: A Critique of
Geoengineering," at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (Arizona State University)
"Restoring natural systems" is a wrongheaded aim to begin with. There is nothing particularly useful to humans about "natural systems"
-- they are usually hostile to us. We go to a lot of effort to make the world suit people and so we should. "Natural" simply means "not yet adapted for
humanity" and therefore a work in progress.
SALEM, Oregon, February 18, 2010 - Removal of four dams on the Klamath River and the largest river restoration project in U.S. history moved closer to accomplishment today
with the signing of two agreements between federal, state, utility and tribal officials.
The four dams owned by the electric utility PacifiCorp - three in California and one in Oregon - produce enough power for 70,000 people, but they have blocked 350-mile-long
salmon runs, preventing the fish from swimming upstream to spawn.
The Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement outlines activities that would restore and sustain wild salmon populations to support in-river and ocean fishing industries and provide
water supply certainty to communities and water users in the Basin. (ENS)
WASHINGTON - A year after President Barack Obama proposed a plan to clean up the Great Lakes, the government Sunday laid out its plan to improve the ecology of the major
bodies of water that support much of U.S. agriculture and industry.
Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson met with governors of states that touch the inland waterways to describe an "action plan" that will focus
on eliminating invasive species, cleaning up pollutants, and remediating more than a half million acres of the area's wetlands, she told reporters.
"It's about creating a new standard of care for the Great Lakes system," Jackson said. "Instead of minimizing harm, our new standard of care is to leave the
Great Lakes better for the next generation than the condition in which we inherited them." (Reuters)
WEATHER experts say they have a tip that could give up to 14 months' warning before the onset of an El Nino, the weather anomaly that whacks countries around the Pacific,
including Australia, but also affects southern Africa and even Europe. (AFP)
OSLO/SINGAPORE - Efforts to extend the Kyoto climate pact framework risk collapse in a setback to years of diplomatic bargains, as chances fade that the United States will
join other rich nations in capping emissions.
December's U.N. climate conference in Denmark failed to cite the U.N.-brokered Kyoto pact as a touchstone -- sapping hopes for a global carbon price to guide billions of
dollars in investments from nuclear plants to solar panels.
"We are probably seeing the beginning of the end for the Kyoto Protocol in its current form," said Johan Rockstrom, head of the Stockholm Resilience Center at
Stockholm University.
"But it's also very clear that we are still in a situation where there is no alternative. So we are in a fix."
Plans to extend the Kyoto Protocol, the world's main pact for fighting climate change, beyond 2012 hinge on bridging a divide between rich and poor countries over the cost of
switching from carbon-intensive technologies. (Reuters)
Now, next order of business is to get rid of UNFCCC altogether since that is the ultimate root cause of all this nonsense. We have an awfully long way to
go to dismantle the watermelons misanthropy framework.
It’s hard to tell right now which part of global warming policy is in the fastest free fall — the economics, the politics or the science. The politics seemed to be
winning the race yesterday. At least five major U.S. corporations have pulled out of the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, an agglomeration of business and green groups lobbying
Washington for climate legislation. High on USCAP’s agenda is a cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions. (National Post)
A revolt against economic hardship imposed by unelected bureaucrats based on junk science is brewing. This Tea Party movement wants the faulty finding on carbon dioxide to
be reviewed and dumped. (IBD)
What a difference 12 months makes. Almost exactly one year ago, the popular, newly minted president, Barack Obama, was telling Congress that he wanted “legislation that
places a market-based cap on carbon pollution and drives the production of more renewable energy in America.” [Read
More] (Energy Tribune)
Establishment figures intone about the substantial "body of science" supporting the notion of man-caused global warming. But based on recent events, they need to
check the body's pulse. The body is dead, and rapidly wasting away before our very eyes. (Peter Ferrara, American Spectator)
Let's hope others besides Phil Jones abandon their "gut feeling" and start behaving like scientists again.
February 18, 2010
- by Steven Mosher
Three months after the release of the Climategate emails and fresh on the heels of the publication of Climategate: The Crutape Letters, Dr. Phil Jones — head of the Climate
Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia — took questions from Climategate’s version of David Frost: Roger Harrabin of the BBC.
That interview and a question and answer session indicate that Jones has since made some concessions after painful reflection. During this same period, the UK press has
reexamined the ground covered in The Crutape Letters. However, the U.S. press has largely ignored the incident despite the involvement of New York Times journalists in the
files.
Initial reactions are of two views. Fear-peddling alarmists argue that nothing in the emails changes the science; global warming contrarians scream fraud. A close reading of
the emails shows that these views don’t explain anything — they merely restate entrenched views.
The truth of what has occurred is more subtle. (PJM)
Just had a pleasant conversation with a published European researcher of considerable experience. Can’t write any detail to back up my claim yet, but let me try to claim
precedence. AGW theory is dead and I am not talking about politics here. A research institute is likely to let the wheels come off the wagon, at last.
Eventually, climate science will replace it with a new theory combining solar, orographic and hydrodynamical studies. The greenhouse effect will not be repudiated, rather
downsized to a more appropriate status. When? Not before a lot of effort will come to nothing, and plenty of people will be killed, let to die or forced into poverty for no
reason at all.
Horner looks further into the NASA emails, and finds stunning examples of politicized science and institutional hypocrisy. (This is Part Two of a four-part series. Read
Part One here.) Update:
Don't miss Chris Horner's PJTV interview here.
February 18, 2010
- by Christopher Horner
(On December 31, 2009, NASA finally provided the Competitive Enterprise Institute with the documents I requested from them with an FOIA in August 2007. My request asked NASA
to release their internal discussions regarding errors of theirs materially effecting their temperature claims caught by Steve McIntyre. NASA had stonewalled my request for
more than two years.)
Dr. James Hansen has an extraordinary history of alarmism and dodgy claims: He has testified in support of the destruction of private property in the name of global warming
alarmism and referred to coal rail cars as the equivalent of Nazi death trains, all while insisting that any president named George Bush was muzzling him. He has proven himself
a global warming zealot leading a taxpayer-funded institute. (PJM)
In recent years, I have been working on a book trilogy inspired by the rise and fall of Enron, easily a top-ten event in
the history of commercial capitalism. I worked at Enron for 16 years and knew Ken Lay (a nice, albeit subtly flawed, man) well. No, I did not know the extent of the company’s
problems (very few did), but I should have known more. Still, I was very critical of the company’s political business
model and in particular, Enron’s climate alarmism and investments in (uneconomic, unreliable, unprofitable) wind power and solar power.
Book 1 in the trilogy, Capitalism at Work: Business, Government, and Energy (2009), spends several chapters on best business practices and sustainable corporate
culture under capitalism proper–and the perils for the same from political capitalism. It was through the wisdom of
several books, beginning with Adam Smith’s The Theory of Moral Sentiments and continuing with Charles Koch’s Science of Success (2007) that I found the
worldview that explained the why-behind-the-why of Enron’s collapse–the philosophic
failure behind the financial failure).
AAAS Panel on Climategate Tomorrow
Today, a friend alerted me about the annual conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San
Diego and Friday’s panel on Climategate. One of the panelists is my friend Jerry North, who was part of two global warming debates we had here in Houston last month. (The
Rice University debate between Richard Lindzen and North is online here.)
I was incited to write Jerry the email that is reproduced below. Perhaps this communication should have gone to the panel leader Ralph
J. Cicerone, president of the National Academy of Sciences. It would certainly apply to the other three panelists in addition to North given their topics:
Francisco J. Ayala, UC Irvine, “The Practice and Conduct of Scientific Research”
Sheila Jasanoff, Harvard, “Science in Society”
Gerald R. North, Texas A&M, “The Data Behind Climate Research”
Phillip A. Sharp, MIT, “Data Use and Access Across Disciplines”
At Climate Audit, Steve McIntyre is critical of both North and the chosen panel for its lack of
intellectual diversity. He wrote in part:
Gerry North told the Penn State Inquiry that he hadn’t read the Climategate emails out of “professional respect”. This apparently qualified him as an “expert” on
the topic.
Cicerone appears to have been quite careful not to invite any speakers that actually knew anything about the controversy. It sounds like it will be totally uninformative
– an ideal Sir Humphrey outcome.
Seven Questions for Climategate Discussants
Here is my email to Dr. North which he kindly responded to by saying that his presentation was narrow and already sent in. Still, there is plenty of discussion to come where
these hard questions, in part or whole, can be brought up and debated. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
There is an extended interview with Phil Jones in Sciencemag. I think it's fair to say that people
are going to take issue with some of the things he has to say. (Bishop Hill)
Leftists
are inclined to believe in climate change because its “solutions” — central control and wealth redistribution — are things they already desire
By Peter Foster
Those who once called skeptics about catastrophic man-made climate change “deniers” are themselves now in a state of denial as both the science and public opinion shifts
against them. Last week, The Globe and Mail carried a combative piece by Gerald Butts, president and CEO of WWF Canada, an organization whose professional alarmism has
found its way into the official reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change with nary a trace of “peer review.”
Mr. Butts continues, like Davy Crockett at the Alamo, to defend his lost cause, pointing to media authorities and scientific “consensus.” Intriguingly, and with admirable
chutzpah, he cites a recent article in the magazine Nature that points out — which should come as a surprise to nobody — that we are biased in our perceptions: “We
see the world as we want to see it, not as it is.”
A funny thing has happened to the global warming and climate change establishment.
It seems India has established its own monitoring body on global warming because it “cannot rely” on the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Can’t blame India for that, given the IPCC’s record of distortion and selective science that is politically acceptable for its agenda.
But it’s somewhat embarrassing because the IPCC is headed by India’s own leading scientist, Dr. R.K. Pachauri who, along with the IPCC and Al Gore, shared the 2007 Nobel
Peace Prize.
Dr. Pachauri is on the defensive these days, as noted by the Daily Telegraph and Wall Street Journal, among others, following a supposed revelation in the IPCC’s climate
change report that Himalayan glaciers “are receding faster than any other part of the world, and if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the
year 2035 and perhaps sooner, is very high if the earth keeps warming at its present rate.” (Peter Worthington, Toronto Sun)
YVO de Boer, the top UN climate change official, announced last night that he was resigning after a tumultuous four years in the job, marked by the failure to convince
governments to agree on a post-Kyoto deal and revelations of a series of blunders in the UN's 2007 report on climate change.
His departure as head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change takes effect on July 1, five months before 193 nations are due to reconvene in Mexico for another attempt
to reach a binding worldwide accord on controlling greenhouse gases.
Mr de Boer is known to be disappointed with the outcome of the last summit in Copenhagen, which drew 120 world leaders but failed to reach more than a vague promise by several
countries to limit carbon emissions. However, he denied that his decision to quit was a result of Copenhagen.
Mr de Boer will become a consultant on climate and sustainability issues for global accounting firm KPMG and will be associated with several universities. (AP)
Polar bears may be doing fine, but the climate commissars of the United Nations are feeling the heat, as their claims of scientific “consensus” melt under them. Now we
have the first big UN climocrat to desert the cooling/warming/sinking ship. Yvo de Boer, head of the UN’s Framework Convention on Climate Change, has announced he will be
resigning as of July 1, 2010.
De Boer’s departure can’t come soon enough. For almost four years, this ramped-up Dutch bureaucrat has been one of the chief purveyors of climate alarmism, carbon-emitting
his way around the globe from Bonn to Bali to Copenhagen, pushing UN plans for a global “climate change regime.” (Claudia Rosett, PJM)
The United Nations' global warming chief is resigning. Now how about firing the head of its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and dismantling that worthless agency?
Yvo de Boer, the Austrian executive secretary of the U.N.'s Framework Convention on Climate Change, will leave his position July 1 to join the consulting group KPMG as global
adviser on climate and sustainability.
We realize he'll be replaced by another functionary just as obsessed with forcing an emissions-restriction regime on developed nations. But we'd like to see the U.N. follow up
the resignation by dismissing Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC. (IBD)
De Telegraaf, the Netherlands' largest daily newspaper, has totally vindicated the country's most prominent global warming denier in a prominent article entitled "Henk
Tennekes - He was right after all."
Tennekes was the director of the Netherlands Meteorological Institute, KNMI, until the early 1990s, when his skepticism of the climate science coming out of the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change led to his forced resignation. A translation into English of De Telegraaf's vindication appears here.
(Financial Post)
There is no need for any government action on CO2, global warming or climate change. But as usual governments are making the situation worse as they waste billions preparing
for warming when cooling is the future. The misdirection is caused by the corrupted science of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change particularly their omission of
major solar changes. My last article identified the Milankovitch Effect, a solar mechanism excluded from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
This article examines the second major solar mechanism ignored and identifies the machinations used to avoid or exclude the research and evidence. (Tim Ball, CFP)
Dirty power plants exert temporary protective effect.
Image from SEAWIFS: An often opaque layer of polluted air covers much of eastern China in this image which was collected on 2 January 2000
Jeff Tollefson
The grey, sulphur-laden skies overlying parts of Asia have a bright side — they reflect sunlight back into space, moderating temperatures on the ground. Scientists are now
exploring how and where pollution from power plants could offset, for a time, the greenhouse warming of the carbon dioxide they emit.
A new modelling study doubles as a thought experiment in how pollution controls and global warming could interact in China and India, which are projected to account for 80%
of new coal-fired power in the coming years. If new power plants were to operate without controlling pollution such as sulphur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOX),
the study finds, the resulting haze would reflect enough sunlight to overpower the warming effect of CO2 and exert local cooling.
But this effect would not be felt uniformly across the globe and would last only a few decades. In the long run, CO2 would always prevail, and the world could
experience a rapid warming effect if the skies were cleaned up decades down the road. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
AUSTRALIA'S most iconic beaches, including Bondi, Bells and those on the Sunshine Coast, could erode away or recede by hundreds of metres over the coming century, according
to Climate Change Minister Penny Wong.
But locals aren't so sure.
Bondi veteran Lee Boman has swum at the beach for more than 30 years and was adamant he had seen "no change" to the coastline over that period. "Nothing too
drastic that indicates it is going to be changed in the future," said Mr Boman, 53.
Bob Carter, a geologist and environmental scientist with James Cook University in Queensland, said Senator Wong's comments appeared to be an attempt to panic the public.
Pointing to historical rates of sea level rise of an average 1.6mm per year globally over the past 100 years, Mr Carter said it was reasonable to expect a total rise of 16cm in
a century. (The Australian)
In
Australia yesterday, Climate Change Minister Penny
Wong gave a speech is which she discussed the claims that the IPCC had misrepresented the science of disaster costs and climate change. She stated:
Another claim is that the IPCC exaggerated economic losses from catastrophes attributed to climate change.
The IPCC has described these claims as “misleading and baseless". The scientist has gone on the record to say his peer-reviewed scientific paper was correctly
represented in the IPCC report.
Presumably, the "scientist" that she refers to is Robert Muir-Wood. In the paper that Wong refers to, Muir-Wood
and colleagues write:
We find insufficient evidence to claim a statistical relationship between global temperature increase and normalized catastrophe losses.
If Wong thinks that paper suggests a linkage between rising temperatures and catastrophes, then that is pretty good evidence that the IPCC did not in fact accurately
represent the paper. It is interesting how the issue is now about how a paper was represented, and not the science of disasters and climate change.
. . . could be misinterpreted and should not have been included in these materials.
Obviously, from Wong's remarks misinterpretation is more than just a possibility. The IPCC also made
up stuff about my views and ignored its reviewers who explained that the graph was
misleading and should be reviewed.
The bottom line is that there is no scientific evidence linking rising global temperatures to the increasing catastrophe losses around the world. Ironically enough, the
scientific evidence includes the paper cited by Wong to suggest the opposite. Despite this fact, and the obvious IPCC misrepresentations on this subject, Australia's Penny Wong
concludes:
There may well be dispute about the cost of catastrophes, but the science on the link between these catastrophes and climate change has not
been credibly challenged.
Score that as one fully duped policy maker by the IPCC's spin and misdirection. (Roger Pielke Jr)
ANOTHER BOLD PREDICTION OF AN ICE-FREE ARCTIC
Guest post by Mark Johnson
Former Vice President Al Gore in his home office in Nashville, TN. (Time magazine)
Al Gore trumpets the latest conclusions of Climate Change Advocate David Barber. “Sea ice in Canada’s fragile
Arctic is melting more quickly than anyone expected,” says University of Manitoba Prof. David Barber, the lead investigator of the Circumpolar Flaw Lead System study released
Friday. Barber is the lead investigator in the largest climate change study done in Canada. Barber said before the expedition, scientists were working under the theory that
climate change would happen much more slowly. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
Several people keep asking why am I focused on winter snow extent. This seems fairly obvious, but I will review here:
Snow falls in the winter, in places where it is cold. Snow does not generally fall in the summer, because it is too warm.
Winter snow extent is a good proxy for winter snowfall. Snow has to fall before it can cover the ground.
So what about summer snow cover? Summer snow cover declined significantly (from the 1970s ice age scare) during the 1980s, but minimums have not changed much since
then. As you can see in the graph below, the overall annual trend since 1989 has been slightly upwards.
DITCHLING, England -- While British climate scientists are dueling with skeptics over evidence of global warming, winemakers here have been sampling some evidence of their
own. Much of it tastes like champagne, and it seems to be rapidly improving.
This century could see a river of new English wine if climate scientists are right in their predictions of rising global temperatures, with vines being grown possibly as far
north as Scotland, and with the south of England possibly even becoming too hot, according to geologist and wine expert Richard Selley.
"If the predictions are correct, then there will be a heyday for English wine in southern England over the next 20 years or so. But then it will move steadily north,"
he told E&E. (Climatewire)
... the way the sun is going ice wine might be the only option.
MU researchers are studying whether high levels of carbon dioxide and higher global temperatures could lead to more frequent atmospheric blocking
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Whether it's never-ending heat waves or winter storms, atmospheric blocking can have a significant impact on local agriculture, business and the environment.
Although these stagnant weather patterns are often difficult to predict, University of Missouri researchers are now studying whether increasing planet temperatures and carbon
dioxide levels could lead to atmospheric blocking and when this blocking might occur, leading to more accurate forecasts.
"In this research, we're trying to see if increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the resulting atmospheric warming will affect the onset and duration of future
blocking events," said Tony Lupo, professor and chair of the atmospheric science department at the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources. "We're
hoping that the research will add cues that could help fellow forecasters better predict blocking and warn people in cases of long-lasting, severe weather." (University of
Missouri-Columbia)
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Several Midwestern states could be facing increased winter and spring flooding, as well as difficult growing conditions on farms, if average
temperatures rise, according to a Purdue University researcher.
Keith Cherkauer, an assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering, ran simulation models that show Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan could see as much
as 28 percent more precipitation by the year 2070, with much of that coming in the winter and spring. His projections also show drier summer and fall seasons. (Purdue
University)
Pumping nutrient-rich water up from the deep ocean to boost algal growth in sunlit surface waters and draw carbon dioxide down from the atmosphere has been touted as a way
of ameliorating global warming. However, a new study led by Professor Andreas Oschlies of the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR) in Kiel, Germany, pours cold
water on the idea.
"Computer simulations show that climatic benefits of the proposed geo-engineering scheme would be modest, with the potential to exacerbate global warming should it
fail," said study co-author Dr Andrew Yool of the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS).
If international governmental policies fail to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide to levels needed to keep the impacts of human-induced climate change within acceptable limits
it may necessary to move to 'Plan B'. This could involve the implementation of one or more large-scale geo-engineering schemes proposed for reducing the carbon dioxide increase
in the atmosphere. (National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (UK))
The latest findings from research on Antarctica's rich marine life are presented this week at the American Association for the Advancement of Science
The latest findings from research on Antarctica's rich marine life are presented this week at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Marine Biologist
Huw Griffiths from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) is involved in a major international investigation into the distribution and abundance of Antarctica's vast marine
biodiversity – the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML).
Griffiths presents results from the census – which began in 2005 – and describes how the investigation provides the benchmark for future studies on how the extraordinary
and diverse range of sea-floor creatures living in Antarctica's chilly waters will respond to predicted environmental change. (British Antarctic Survey)
The world’s pre-eminent climate scientists produced a blunt assessment of the impact of global warming on the US yesterday, warning of droughts that could reduce
the American south-west to a wasteland and heatwaves that could make life impossible even in northern cities.
In an update on the latest science on climate change, the US Congress was told that melting snow pack could lead to severe drought from California to Oklahoma. In the
midwest, diminishing rains and shrinking rivers were lowering water levels in the Great Lakes, even to the extent where it could affect shipping.
“With severe drought from California to Oklahoma, a broad swath of the south-west is basically robbed of having a sustainable lifestyle,” said Christopher
Field, of the Carnegie Institution for Science. He went on to warn of scorching temperatures in an array of cities. Sacramento in California, for example, could face
heatwaves for up to 100 days a year.
“We are close to a threshold in a very large number of American cities where uncomfortable heatwaves make cities uninhabitable,” Field told the Senate’s
environment and public works committee.
In the span of just a couple years, the U.S. has gone from very high drought conditions to the lowest amount of drought in the last 10 years, [Doug LeCompte of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association] says. “It’s only a few times, really, in the last century that we’ve had this little of the country in drought. That
is unusual.”
The Government department set up to tackle climate change has paid for more than 1,000 internal flights around Britain despite telling the public to cut down on air travel.
(TDT)
The drive to extract and store CO2 from coal-fired power plants is gaining momentum, with the Obama administration backing the technology and the world’s first capture and
sequestration project now operating in the U.S. Two questions loom: Will carbon capture and storage be affordable? And will it be safe? (David Biello, e360)
Wrong questions David: "Why do it at all?" is the one that really needs answering.
Yesterday, I listened to an interesting lecture on the economics of carbon capture and sequestration at my UCLA Institute of the Environment. As world electricity demand
continues to rise, developing nations will use coal fired power plants to supply a big share of this demand. Under "business as usual", this will increase greenhouse
gas emissions to levels that Jim Hansen would say are quite scary.
If Carbon Capture and sequestration (CCS) could safely work, then this would be a way for the developing countries to achieve a "win-win" of access to electricity
without the resulting greenhouse gases.
Listening to the talk, CCS raises a host of legal liability issues and spatial economics issues. A whole infrastructure of collecting the coal gas and injecting it into pipes
will be needed and these pipes will then have to go somewhere for injection under the ground.
Will for profit insurance companies be willing to write insurance contracts for these unknown hard to quantify risks? If not, then government will need to step in and thus the
taxpayers will bear the risk of this as yet unproven technology.
Similar issues arise with geo-engineering. If China unilaterally engages in some geo-engineering experiment and this affects the United States through affecting our air quality
or climate conditions, is there an international court where we could sue them?
It would interest me whether lawyers are optimistic concerning whether legal institutions evolve fast enough to stay a step ahead in a world where technological progress (i.e
human cloning etc) is moving fast and opening up potentially tricky new contentious issues.
I know that young lawyers are worried today about their job prospects at the leading firms but this discussion has me thinking that there will be plenty of demand for their
services in the future. (Matthew Kahn, CSM)
The Obama administration proposed new rules Thursday for how federal agencies should apply one of the nation's signature environmental laws, a move that could affect
construction of new coal-fired power plants and other government-approved projects that produce large amounts of greenhouse gases.
The White House Council on Environmental Quality announced the draft guidelines at an event celebrating the 40th anniversary of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),
which requires federal agencies to analyze potential environmental health impacts before approving major projects such as road construction.
The new guidelines set uniform standards, for the first time, on how federal agencies must consider the causes and effects of climate change as part of their environmental
analyses. They require analyses under NEPA of the greenhouse gas emissions of any project expected to emit the equivalent of at least 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide a
year – roughly 4,600 cars' worth of carbon. (Baltimore Sun)
WASHINGTON - The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee said on Thursday it was investigating the potential impact of hydraulic fracturing on the environment and human
health.
Some members of Congress want to pass legislation giving the Environmental Protection Agency authority to regulate fracking.
"As we use this technology in more parts of the country on a much larger scale, we must ensure that we are not creating new environmental and public health problems,"
said committee chairman, Representative Henry Waxman.
"This investigation will help us better understand the potential risks this technology poses to drinking water supplies and the environment, and whether Congress needs to
act to minimize those risks," he said. (Reuters)
Peabody Energy Corp. said today that it has signed an agreement with Cambridge, Mass.-based GreatPoint Energy to develop plants that would convert coal to synthetic gas and
hydrogen.
The number of plants, cost and location weren’t specified, but Peabody and GreatPoint indicated they would pursue projects in and outside the U.S., the companies said in a
joint statement.
The companies plan to use Peabody’s coal reserves and GreatPoint’s technology to produce pipeline-quality synthetic gas, which could be used to heat homes or run factories.
Hydrogen produced at the plants would be sold to industrial customers or for generating electricity. (St Louis Post-Dispatch)
A TURF war has erupted over Australia's multi-billion-dollar oil and gas sector, with Western Australia using its constitutional powers to resist plans by the Rudd
government to snatch control of the state's approval rights for lucrative new projects.
Resources Minister Martin Ferguson wants to establish a powerful national regulator, but in a stand-off that threatens to derail attempts to save billions in reducing approval
backlogs, WA Premier Colin Barnett has written to Kevin Rudd telling him to back off.
The impasse has been described by senior figures in the petroleum industry as a "turf war" that could add to the complex bureaucracy and high costs involved in the
approvals process.
Last night, the peak body representing the oil and gas industry called on both governments to sort out their differences and devise a streamlined model for a sector on the
verge of an unprecedented boom. (The Australian)
Britain’s biggest power station has suspended its plan to replace coal with greener fuel, leaving the Government little chance of meeting its target for renewable energy.
Drax, in North Yorkshire, which produces enough electricity for six million homes, is withdrawing a pledge to cut CO2 emissions by 3.5 million tonnes a year, or 17.5 per cent.
The power station, which is the country’s largest single source of CO2, has invested £80 million in a processing unit for wood, straw and other plant-based fuels, known as
biomass. The unit is designed to produce more renewable electricity than 600 wind turbines, but will operate at only a fraction of its capacity because Drax says it is cheaper
to continue to burn coal.
Drax is also one of dozens of companies delaying investments in new biomass power stations because of uncertainty over the Government’s policy on long-term subsidies.
Hundreds of farmers growing biomass crops may now struggle to sell their produce. (The Times)
A good default proposition regarding the government’s role in the economy would state that the government should not loan money to an enterprise if the enterprise in
question cannot find one single market actor anywhere in the universe to loan said enterprise a single red cent. It might suggest – I don’t know – that the
investment is rather … dubious. (MasterResource)
ROME - Resumed demand for agricultural commodities for food and energy use and higher input costs on the back of rising oil prices may fuel a new food price surge, the
United Nations' food agency said on Thursday.
Food prices fell from 2008 highs due to the global economic downturn, but remained above pre-peak levels and were set to stay high at least in the medium term, the Food and
Agriculture Organization said, confirming earlier forecasts.
"At the same time, various currently latent underlying factors may cause a return to even higher food prices," the Rome-based FAO said in its key report on the State
of Food and Agriculture, stopping short of more precise forecasts.
Renewed income growth in developing countries would power demand recovery and drive commodities and food prices higher, threatening food security, especially for poor people,
FAO said.
Growing biofuels demand spurred by mandatory targets and incentives in some countries "irrespective of market conditions" would boost prices of maize and vegetable
oils used as feedstock for biodiesel and bioethanol and, in turn, of food commodities. (Reuters)
GENEVA - The coming year's seasonal flu vaccine in the northern hemisphere should include protection against three strains of flu, including the pandemic H1N1 virus, the
World Health Organization recommended on Thursday.
The composition of the vaccine, announced at the end of a closed-door four-day meeting of influenza experts that is closely followed by the world's vaccine makers, means
governments that have stockpiled doses of H1N1 swine flu vaccine may now use them for part of the seasonal flu vaccine mix. (Reuters)
LONDON - Swiss scientists have found a new class of antibiotics, offering drug developers a fresh weapon in the fight against multi-drug resistant bacteria or
"superbugs."
Researchers from a privately held Swiss biotech company Polyphor and the University of Zurich said the potential medicines are effective against a type of bacteria known as
"Gram-negative," and offer hope for new treatments for serious and often life-threatening infections.
The antibiotics work by deactivating a protein vital for the formation of the bacteria's outer cell membrane. (Reuters)
NEW YORK - While research has linked moderate drinking to better heart health, a new study suggests that those benefits disappear when drinkers add the occasional binge to
the mix.
Pooling data from 14 previous studies of moderate drinkers, researchers found that those who drank heavily every so often were 45 percent more likely to develop coronary heart
disease -- where plaque buildup in the heart arteries impedes the flow of blood and oxygen.
For comparison, overall, about 8 percent - or about one in 12 -- Americans has heart disease, according to the American Heart Association.
Occasional heavy drinking was defined as having five or more standard drinks in a day at least a dozen times per year. "Regular" heavy drinkers -- those who averaged
at least five drinks per day, were excluded from the analysis.
The findings suggest that bingeing at even irregular intervals may undo any heart benefits of lighter drinking, the investigators report in the American Journal of
Epidemiology. (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK - Reversing a trend of nearly five decades, birth weight in the U.S. may be on the decline, according to a new study.
From 1990 to 2005, birth weight decreased by 52 grams (1.83 oz) on average. The drop - from 3441 to 3389 grams - leaves the vast majority of babies in the safe range, and the
overall health consequences of this development are unclear.
"It is important to study trends in low birth weight over time because an increasing proportion of the smallest babies could lead to increased resource requirements to
address health concerns," Sara Donahue of Boston University, who worked on the study, told Reuters Health.
Small babies (usually defined as lighter than 2500 grams, or 5.5 pounds) may face problems such as low blood sugar, lower body temperatures, or an increase in red blood cells,
which can cause the blood to thicken and clot.
To track trends in birth weights, Donahue and her colleagues examined birth records for nearly 37 million newborns in the US, excluding California. (Reuters Health)
LOS ANGELES - A California lawmaker introduced legislation on Thursday that would tax sodas and other sugar-sweetened drinks and use the proceeds to bankroll programs to
fight childhood obesity. (Reuters)
Obesity has reached epidemic proportions globally, with at least 2.6 million people dying each year as a result of being overweight or obese. Once associated with
high-income countries, obesity is now also prevalent in low- and middle-income countries.
Governments, international partners, civil society, non governmental organizations and the private sector all have vital roles to play in contributing to obesity prevention. (
United Nations World Health Organization (WHO))
BUCHAREST, Romania — For post-communist Romanians a Big Mac and soda meant much more than a meal: It was a culinary signpost from the free and capitalist west — a sign
they too, at last, had arrived.
But modernity requires something different today: the Balkan country is moving to join the health conscious 21st century by proposing taxes on burgers, french fries, soda and
other fast foods with high fat and sugar content.
"We have to relearn how to eat," Health Ministry official Adrian Streinu Cercel said.
The ministry says that — in marked contrast to the situation under communism — half of Romania's 22 million people are overweight, while instances of obesity have doubled
among 10-year-olds.
Officials have refused to say how high the taxes would be. But Cercel says authorities expect to generate up to euro1 billion ($1.37 billion) in new revenues — compared with
an estimated euro16 billion in total revenues for 2010. (AP)
SOFIA - Bulgaria's ruling party has proposed watering down a new smoking ban in the country with the second highest percentage of smokers in the European Union.
The centre-right GERB party, which won general elections last July, said its proposed relaxation of a ban on smoking in all public places would avoid hurting the tourist
industry during tough economic times.
The proposed changes have the support of the Socialists but some of GERB's rightist allies in parliament said they would vote against them.
According to a draft submitted to parliament, restaurants and cafes smaller than 100 square metres (1,000 sq ft) in size will decide whether to allow smoking while larger
establishments would be required to designate separate non-smoking halls.
Similar measures were imposed as part of a partial smoking ban in 2005 but have been widely ignored. Smoking will remain forbidden in all public buildings and on public
transport.
The Balkan country of 7.6 million people has the second highest percentage of smokers in the EU after Greece. More than half of men and about a third of women smoke, surveys
show. (Reuters)
The Asian carp, a large and ravenous invasive species, has been making a so-far-unstoppable migration up the Mississippi River. It now has come to within a few miles from
the Great Lakes. Unless serious measures are taken — soon — it looks as though the carp will likely break through, using canals that connect the river to Lake Michigan.
(NYT)
South Florida farmers and local governments alike on Thursday called for federal regulators to back off tough new water pollution rules they argue would cost too much to
follow.
The Environmental Protection Agency proposes setting new limits on the levels of nitrogen and phosphorus in Florida waters, including rivers, lakes and the drainage canals
relied on to protect South Florida from flooding. (Sun Sentinel)
By Aaron Kiess, Executive Director, California Alfalfa & Forage Association
Last month’s column ( http://westernfarmpress.com/alfalfa/alfalfa-restrictions-0113/index.html )
ended with a few words about the Federal EPA’s pending restrictions for chlorypyrifos, plus malathion and diazinon. The agency’s action is linked to a Biological Opinion (BiOp)
that the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) designed to protect endangered and threatened salmon and steelhead.
The use limitations are the result of measures outlined in NMFS’s November, 2008 BiOp, a biological opinion that has been controversial and difficult to swallow for growers
who will be affected in California, Oregon, Idaho and Washington. The NMFS BiOp indicated that a standard buffer of 500 feet for ground applications and 1,000 feet for aerial
application of “salmonid” habitat is needed to protect these species. They also indicated that a 20-foot vegetative buffer needs to be established next to salmon waters, a
recommendation the EPA will substitute with “variable buffers.” (Farm Press)
ONLY now is this royal commission getting close to the true scandal behind the devastating Black Saturday fires.
It’s this: why did this Labor Government ignore so many warnings that it was burning too little of our forests?
Did its green agenda cripple the most effective technique it had to keep our bush towns safe - to burn off the fuel loads that turn a fire into an inferno?
A year after Black Saturday, the royal commission this week finally heard
its first witness on the fuel reduction burns done before Black Saturday. Or not done.
And the answers given by Liam Fogarty, assistant fire chief of the Department of Sustainability and the Environment, reinforced my suspicions.
Fogarty confirmed that over the past three years his department had burned off the excess fuel load from just 150,000ha a year. He said it should really have burned nearly
twice that much, and in the early 1980s had burned up to three times more.
So why so little, when even Fogarty said a burned buffer around a town such as Anglesea could cut the fire risk to properties by 80 per cent?
Fogarty blamed a lack of resources, saying his department was “pretty well running at capacity”, and there’d actually been “some reduction in organisational capacity
and focus” since the mid-1990s.
But, as you know, where there’s a will there’s always a way to find the staff and cash. Trouble is, since this Labor Government was elected in 1999, that will has gone
missing.
Fogarty did not put it like that, of course. He simply said there had been a distinct drop in controlled burning in Victoria over the past 15 years or so, thanks to an
“anti-forestry and anti-fire management movement”.
NEW DELHI - A senior Indian trade official on Thursday warned there was a growing trend for countries to use unreasonable environmental and health standards as a covert form
of protectionism, blocking trade already hit by global slowdown. (Reuters)
Report for the UN into the activities of the world's 3,000 biggest companies estimates one-third of profits would be lost if firms were forced to pay for use, loss and
damage of environment (Juliette Jowit, The Guardian)
Here's some sad news for you guys -- "the environment" is neither lost or damaged, merely developed or not. Its only value is that which we give
it and few if any people would agree to have their costs increased for the imagined "value" applied by misanthropic twits. There's a reason we pay less for
unimproved land and that's because development improves its utility and value. Greenies and so-called conservationists want to lock up resources
and as soon as they do the resource ceases to exist -- greenies make things valueless.
WASHINGTON, Feb 17 - President Barack Obama wants Congress to pass this year a climate control bill that has been stuck in the Senate, where it has proved difficult for his
fellow Democrats to line up the 60 votes needed to advance controversial legislation.
In an attempt to move things along, Obama this week announced a $8.3 billion loan guarantee to help reinvigorate the nuclear power industry, a top goal of many Senate
Republicans. Obama wants such funding to hit $54 billon.
A bipartisan group of senators is trying to come up with a compromise climate bill. Besides incorporating additional government incentives for nuclear power, the senators also
are looking at ways to expand domestic oil and gas drilling.
Such provisions would be coupled with government-mandated reductions in carbon dioxide emissions blamed for climate change problems. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON - The United States would remain a participant in the newly struck Copenhagen Accord on global warming even if other major polluting countries like China and
India did not formally "associate" themselves with the deal, a high-ranking U.S. official said on Tuesday.
Todd Stern, the lead U.S. negotiator in international climate talks, was asked by a reporter whether the United States might pull out of the Copenhagen Accord if China and
India do not formally sign on.
Stern responded: "No ... we have put forward our own submission. It's consistent with what President (Barack) Obama announced back in November, so I don't think it's a
question of the U.S. saying 'never mind ... that's not the plan." (Reuters)
The scientific "consensus" that man is warming the planet is cracking, and so is a group that was going to push for cap-and-trade. Some business members no longer
feel threatened by the government. (IBD)
With little fanfare, an earthquake has rippled through the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP). Three significant members, two of them being integrated oil
majors, are no longer planning the cap-and-trade (aka, cap-and-tax)
game. And if energy affordability and reliability is a metric, expect more companies to bolt. Social corporate responsibility, anyone? After all, there is no climate
gain from a unilateral U.S. cap by the alarmists’ own math.
Here is the background. According to its website, USCAP is “a group of businesses and leading environmental organizations that
have come together to call on the federal government to quickly enact strong national legislation to require significant reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.” Others of a
less charitable bent would characterize them as central headquarters of the U.S. Climate-Industrial
Complex, a group of corporate rent-seekers (the bootleggers), made whole by the environmental scaremongers (the Baptists) hell-bent on slapping the United States
into a carbon rationing scheme.
Members of USCAP include AES, Alcoa, Alstom, Boston Scientific Corporation, Chrysler, Deere & Company, The Dow Chemical Company, Duke Energy, DuPont, Environmental
Defense Fund (EDF), Exelon Corporation, Ford Motor Company, FPL Group, General Electric (GE), General Motors Corporation, Honeywell, Johnson & Johnson, Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), The Nature Conservancy, NRG Energy, PepsiCo, Pew Center on Global Climate Change, PG&E Corporation, PNM Resources, Rio Tinto, Shell, Siemens
Corporation, and the World Resources Institute (WRI).
It doesn’t take a great deal of analysis to see who hopes to get what from cap-and-trade. The environmental posse– EDF, NRDC, Nature Conservancy, Pew Center, and WRI–get their
ultimate dream: control of the U.S. economy by environmental bureaucrats who can determine who gets to buy carbon permits, who gets to sell them, how many can be
bought overseas, who gets to slurp from the giant trough of government permit sales, and so on.
It’s not much harder to figure out what the corporations get, whether it’s simply “green” bragging rights to use in commercials (PepsiCo), or the hope to sell
subsidized hybrid cars (Ford and GM), or the chance to sell new thermostats to millions of houses and businesses (Honeywell), to build nuclear plants, windmills, or solar farms
(GE, Exelon), or to get in early in the hopes of getting free permits from the government (coal, oil, and other high GHG emitters). Again, a sober comparison of social costs
and benefits should get these ‘greenwashers’ to bolt.
The coalition of major corporations hoping to get rich off cap-and-trade legislation started to crack up yesterday when BP America, Conoco Phillips, and Caterpillar dropped
out of the U. S. Climate Action Partnership (or US CAP ). Their defections end the exceedingly small remaining chance that cap-and-trade
could be enacted this year.
BP America and Conoco Phillips did not pull out because they realized that the Climategate scientific fraud scandal has revealed that global warming alarmism is based on
junk science. Nor did they pull out because they finally recognized that energy-rationing policies will wreck the U. S. economy. They pulled out when it became clear that they
were not going to get rich off the backs of American consumers…
This column was scoffing at global warming back when global warming was still cool. But even we have been surprised at the extent of the past three months'
"meltdown" of global warmism, to use the metaphor that everyone seems to have settled on.
As we've written on various occasions, we didn't know enough about the substance of the underlying science to make a judgment about it. But we know enough about science itself
to recognize that the popular rendition of global warmism--dogmatic, doctrinaire and scornful of skepticism--is not the least bit scientific. The revelations in the Climategate
emails show that these attitudes were common among actual scientists, not just the popularizers of their work.
Still, we would not have gone so far as to say that global warming was just a hoax. Surely there was some actual science to back it, even if there was a lot less certainty than
was claimed.
Now, though, we're wondering if this was too charitable a view. (James Taranto, WSJ)
Chris Horner filed the FOIA request that NASA didn't comply with for two years. Now we know what took so long. (Click here
for the NASA files. This is Part One of a four-part series.)
February 17, 2010
- by Christopher Horner
In August 2007, I submitted two Freedom of Information Act requests to NASA and its Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), headed by long-time Gore advisor James Hansen
and his right-hand man Gavin Schmidt (and RealClimate.org co-founder).
I did this because Canadian businessman Steve McIntyre — a man with professional experience investigating suspect statistical claims in the mining industry and elsewhere,
including his exposure of the now-infamous “hockey stick” graph — noticed something unusual with NASA’s claims of an ever-warming first decade of this century. NASA
appeared to have inflated its U.S. temperatures beginning in the year 2000. My FOIA request asked NASA about their internal discussions regarding whether and how to correct the
temperature error caught by McIntyre.
NASA stonewalled my request for more than two years, until Climategate prompted me to offer notice of intent to sue if NASA did not comply immediately.
On New Year’s Eve, NASA finally provided the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) with the documents I requested in August 2007.
The emails show the hypocrisy, dishonesty, and suspect data management and integrity of NASA, wildly spinning in defense of their enterprise. The emails show NASA making off
with enormous sums of taxpayer funding doing precisely what they claim only a “skeptic” would do. The emails show NASA attempting to scrub their website of their own
documents, and indeed they quietly pulled down numerous press releases grounded in the proven-wrong data. The emails show NASA claiming that their own temperature errors (which
they have been caught making and in uncorrected form aggressively promoting) are merely trivial, after years of hysterically trumpeting much smaller warming anomalies. (PJM)
Last Saturday’s BBC interview of Phil Jones, the former head of the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU) has been portrayed by some as a
“retreat”; that, in effect, Jones is backing off his claim that human activities are catastrophically effecting the climate. That’s putting too strong a face on it. The
interview was remarkable, but don’t believe for a second that Jones is trading in his alarmist badge for skeptical credentials. He’s simply engaged in damage control, but
this interview was still something of an epiphany. (Rich Trzupek, FrontPage)
Why does Climategate matter? Who cares whether the climate data on a computer at some obscure English university has been deliberately corrupted?
In one form or another, I have had to answer these questions from dozens of readers in the three months since thousands of e-mails and computer files were leaked from the
Climate Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia.
There are plenty of ways in which these disclosures have been crucial, but the principal change has been the uncertainty creeping into the remarks of former True Believers.
Some of those who for years have insisted the science is “settled,” are now admitting we don’t know all we need to before making trillion-dollar policy decisions.
(National Post)
The last few months have been cruel and wintry for global-warming true believers. The long storm began in November, when a leak of e-mails from Britain's University of East
Anglia Climate Research Unit revealed that key global-warming scientists tried to stifle dissent, politicize peer-review, which led to revelations that the researchers had
dumped much of the raw data used to bolster the alarmist argument.
Then came the news that that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007 report - you know, the one that reported that man-made global warming was
"unequivocal" - wrongly predicted that it was likely Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035, based not on peer-reviewed research, but on an article in a popular
magazine. Oh, and it turns out that the IPCC was wrong in reporting that 55 percent of The Netherlands is below sea level.
Last week, Phil Jones, the unit's director at the time of the e-mail leak, answered tough questions posed by the BBC in an interview, during which he admitted that there has
been no statistically significant warming of the planet since 1995. Jones also rejected Al Gore's mantra when he said he did not believe that "the vast majority of climate
scientists think" the debate over climate change is over.
Like the Wicked Witch of Oz, the global-warming machine is melting into a wretched puddle. (Debra J. Saunders, San Francisco Chronicle)
The absolutely stunning global warming revelations this weekend by the man in the middle of the ClimateGate scandal have gone almost completely ignored by America's press.
As NewsBusters reported Saturday, Phil Jones, the head of the British Climatic Research Unit at the heart of ClimateGate, told the BBC: the recent warming trend that began in
1975 is not at all different than two other planetary warming phases since 1850; there has been no statistically significant warming since 1995, and; it is possible the
Medieval Warm Period was indeed a global phenomenon thereby making the temperatures seen in the latter part of the 20th century by no means unprecedented.
Jones also admitted that he and his fellow scientists manipulated figures to hide a decline in crucial tree-ring data thereby questioning the validity of the entire global
warming theory.
Despite the seriousness of these revelations, much as what happened when the ClimateGate scandal first broke, with the exception of Fox News -- and a lone report by CNN --
America's media have almost totally boycotted this amazing story: (NewsBusters)
All of you deniers and flat-earthers who are exploiting the glacial temperatures and bizarre snowfall to mock global warming fears are missing the point: Weather isn't the
same as climate.
Shoddy evidence, bogus fears and a lack of transparency, on the other hand, are worth talking about. Yet the lack of skepticism by those who claim a sacred deference to
scientific integrity proves that flat-earthers aren't the only ones susceptible to some faith-based ideology.
Recently, Tim Wirth, who is the president of the U.N. Foundation and a former senator, said the manipulated evidence uncovered by the ClimateGate e-mail scandal was a mere
"opening" to attack science that "has to be defended just like evolution has to be defended."
Get it? Those unreasonable people who deny evolution -- despite the overwhelming evidence -- are the same brand of illiterate hoi polloi who won't hand over their gas-powered
lawn mowers on the word of an oracle weather model and haphazardly placed weather station. (David Harsanyi, Townhall)
Questions continue to mount over the science behind years of studies that say humans are chiefly to blame for global warming. But reflecting a trend that has been going on
for more than a year, just 35% of U.S. voters now believe global warming is caused primarily by human activity.
The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 47% think long-term planetary trends are mostly to blame, down three points from the previous survey in
January. Eight percent say there is some other reason, and 10% aren't sure.
But 56% say President Obama still believes that human activity is the main cause of global warming. That's the highest finding on that question since last March. The president
went to a United Nations summit in Copenhagen in December in hopes of reaching an international agreement that would limit human activities that some scientists say contribute
to global warming.
Belief that human activity is the primary cause of global warming has declined significantly. In April 2008, the numbers were nearly the mirror image of the current numbers. At
that time, 47% blamed human activity and only 34% named long term planetary trends as the reason for climate change.
Since July, the number who believe long-term planetary trends are the chief culprit have ranged from 47% to 50%. Those who blame human activity have ranged from 34% to 42% in
the same period. (Rasmussen Reports)
CLIMATE change threatens to reshape the face of Bondi Beach, Bells Beach and the Sunshine Coast unless "large and expensive nourishment programs" are implemented,
Penny Wong warned today.
Shortly before the government's ETS bills are to be considered by the upper house, Ms Wong mounted a vigorous defence of the Copenhagen Summit, the science behind climate
change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and suggested the future of some of the nation's most popular beaches was under threat.
The Climate Change Minister also said the government's Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme was the most effective way to take meaningful action, dismissing the Opposition
leader's rival plan.
In the address to the National Coastal Climate Change Forum in Adelaide this morning, Ms Wong said it was “possible that with climate change, and without large and expensive
nourishment programs Bondi Beach, Sunshine Coast and Bells Beach may no longer be the beaches we know today.”
Ms Wong heralded the Copenhagen Accord as an “important and welcome step toward an effective global agreement on climate change.”
For the first time, developed and developing countries agreed to take action on climate change and a consensus was forged among global leaders to hold temperature increases to
below 2 degrees Celsius, Ms Wong said.
However, the most disappointing outcome of Copenhagen was the way some politicians had “smugly exaggerated the shortcomings as a justification of their position to do nothing
on climate change”.
Claims that climate change science was unreliable had no credible foundation, said Ms Wong. (The Australian)
Disclosures of isolated errors and exaggerations in the 2007 report from the United Nations panel on climate change do not undermine its main finding: that the planet has
been warming gradually for more than a century and that human activity is largely responsible. But the misstatements have handed climate skeptics a public relations boost.
That’s not good news at a time when world leaders need to make tough decisions to control greenhouse gas emissions and when public confidence in the science is essential.
Given the stakes, the panel cannot allow more missteps and, at the very least, must tighten procedures and make its deliberations more transparent. (NYT)
Except we still haven't decided "warming relative to when" or whether that is at all important. We do not know the precise "expected"
temperature of the Earth and consequently cannot answer whether perceived warming (whether real or not) is an increase or a recovery from "unnatural" coolness.
The Crone seems impressed that the IPCC was awarded a Nobel (along with Al Gore!) but this was not a science award -- although there are Nobel Prizes for both Physics
and Chemistry -- it was a "Peace
Prize". How much scientific authority does this imply (heck, Barack Obabma got one for simply talking!)?
The only known risk is doing as the AGW zealots want and crashing the energy supply and global economy but there is no known risk from greenhouse gas emissions.
NEW DELHI: THE United Nations climate change panel chief, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, says he has every intention of remaining in the job at least until the delivery of the next
climate assessment report due in 2013-14.
Responding to questions from the Herald, Dr Pachauri said he had never considered resigning over recent criticisms of him and the panel and has vowed to make its next
assessment report as good as ''humanly possible''.
Dr Pachauri, chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said its next assessment report due in three to four years would make an important contribution
to knowledge on global warming. (SMH)
This looks interesting: a debate on global
warming scaremongering at Wellington College (a very posh school, if you are an overseas reader), which will take place on Sunday.
They told us the polar bears were going to drown; they told us the Himalayan glaciers were going to melt by the year 2035. Now we learn both claims are untrue. They
assured us they were engaged in unbiased science. And then we read their emails and found that they'd deliberately suppressed inconvenient facts. What are we to make of these
disclosures? Are they just minor scratches on the solid structure of climate change theory, or are they emblematic of something far more troubling? Can we still trust the
climate change experts or have they been guilty of exaggerating the threat in order to draw attention to their cause?
The speakers are David Davis MP and Prof Philip Stott versus Mark Lynas and David Aaronovitch. (Bishop Hill)
Yesterday, Russia Today has made two interesting and, I would say, very balanced, professional, and informative interviews - with John
Christy and Patrick Michaels.
John Christy talks about their recent paper arguing that most of the warming in the surface temperature record is due to local changes such as urbanization and
deforestation. Also, he says that the effect of the Kyoto on the climate (and even on the emissions) was zero but Kyoto has played a negative psychological role, having led the
people to false beliefs about their impact.
See also a new Russia Today interview with Pat Michaels about the fifth anniversary of the failed Kyoto
protocol. He tries to answer her good question why the people are still pushing for such things if it is so costly and has no good consequences.
This one, I couldn't resist. In June
2006, the EU decided to commission a project under the heading: "What poor information can tell: Analysis of climate policies under large uncertainty about climate
change."
The research investigated "the usefulness of imprecise probability concepts for assessing and processing the large and diverse uncertainty that needs to be considered in
climate policy analysis. Imprecise probabilities are constituted by entire sets of probability measures."
I think I understand what they are talking about (just), but in case you have problems, they go on: "They provide a satisfactory model of complete ignorance, which is an
important prerequisite for quantifying poor states of information such as encountered in climate change research. Classical probability theory faces severe difficulties in this
field as the debate around quantifying uncertainties in the IPCC Assessment reports shows."
The project consisted of a theoretical part mainly conducted at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, USA and an applicational part to be executed at the Potsdam Institute
of Climate Impact Research, Germany (return host).
And you will be pleased to learn that the theoretical part consisted of an analysis of the decision theoretical as well as evidential basis of imprecise probabilities in the
light of climate change. In the applied part, it investigated how the presence of ambiguity, i.e., imprecise information, can alter the results of model-based analyses of
climate protection strategies and policy instruments.
It seems they had their work cut out. Fortunately, the work – completed in May last year – only cost us €245,365.00 – excluding VAT of course. Mind you, I could have
provided "a satisfactory model of complete ignorance," absolutely free of change. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The
figure above shows normalized US hurricane losses for 1900 to 2009. It shows an estimate of what hurricane damages would be if each hurricane season took place in 2009. The
dark line shows the linear best fit from Excel. Obviously, there is no trend. This makes sense as there has also been no trend in U.S. landfall frequencies or intensities over
this period (in fact, depending on start date there is evidence for a slight but statistically significant decline, source
in PDF).
One indication that our methodology does a good job adjusting for societal change is that the resulting time series matches up with the time series in landfall frequencies and
intensities. If there were a significant bias in our methods (for whatever reason) it would show up as a deviation between the normalized trends and the geophysical trends. We
see no such deviation. Other reasons for confidence in our analysis is that it has been independently
replicated on several occasions and that we (and
others) can also recover an ENSO signal in the data (e.g., PDF).
You can play around with the data from the ICAT Damage Estimator. Details on the analysis can be found in the
following paper:
According to Rutgers University Global Snow Lab, last week’s Northern Hemisphere snow extent
was the second highest on record, at 52,166,840 km2. This was only topped by the second week in February, 1978 at 53,647,305 km2. Rutgers has kept records
continuously for the last 2,227 weeks, so being #2 is quite an accomplishment.
Greenland
Temperatures - last 10,000 years. Are we headed for an ice age?
David Lappi is a geologist from Alaska who has sent in a set of beautiful graphs–including an especially prosaic one of the last 10,000 years in Greenland–that he put
together himself (and which I’ve copied here at the top).
If you wonder where today’s temperature fits in with the grand scheme of time on Earth since the dinosaurs were wiped out, here’s the history. We start with the whole 65
million years, then zoom in, and zoom in again to the last 12,000 from both ends of the world. What’s obvious is that in terms of homo sapiens history, things are
warm now (because we’re not in an ice age). But, in terms of homo sapiens civilization, things are cooler than usual, and appear to be cooling.
Then again, since T-rex & Co. vanished, it’s been one long slide down the thermometer, and our current “record heatwave” is far cooler than normal. The dinosaurs
would have scoffed at us: “What? You think this is warm?”
With so much volatility in the graphs, anyone could play “pick a trend” and depending on which dot you start from, you can get any trend you want. — Jo More
» (Jo Nova)
With
prospects for U.S. cap and trade legislation now completely extinguished, it is interesting to see some of the most vocal supporters of cap and trade silent on the implications
of its failure and what should be done next on climate policy. Instead, Thomas Friedman and his favorite
climate expert have decided to fall back onto debating the science and increasing emphasis on warring with the "deniers." Friedman
writes today:
It is time the climate scientists stopped just playing defense.
Do we really need a further politicization of climate science? Haven't we had enough of that
already?
Friedman's emphasis on stirring up the climate science wars is a shame because it obscures a really important point that he makes:
Even if climate change proves less catastrophic than some fear, in a world that is forecast to grow from 6.7 billion to 9.2 billion people between now and 2050, more and more
of whom will live like Americans, demand for renewable energy and clean water is going to soar. It is obviously going to be the next great global industry.
What is this? There is good reason to decarbonize the global economy independent of uncertainties about climate change? You'll be hearing much more about this from me in coming
months. (Roger Pielke Jr)
Say what Roger? We are going to need a great deal more energy so we should throw away the greatest available source, carbon dense fuels? There is simply no
value for the planet or human society in "decarbonizing" the energy supply, only for misanthropists.
Don't misunderstand, I quite like the young fellow but he's been badly contaminated by Gaia cranks and believes the enviro dogma, which is a real shame since he could
otherwise make a valuable contribution.
WASHINGTON - The permanently frozen ground known as permafrost is retreating northward in the area around Canada's James Bay, a sign of a decades-long regional warming
trend, a climate scientist said on Wednesday.
When permafrost melts, it can liberate the powerful greenhouse gas methane that is locked in the frozen soil. The amount of methane contained in permafrost around James Bay is
slight compared to the vast stores of the chemical found in ancient, deep permafrost in the Yukon, Alaska and Siberia.
The southern edge of permafrost in the James Bay area has moved about 80 miles north of where it was 50 years ago, Serge Payette of Laval University in Quebec City said in a
telephone interview.
It's a sign that warming is taking hold in this area that straddles the Canadian provinces of Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba. Payette said the sites he has studied have warmed by
3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) in the last two decades.
And it shows what dying permafrost looks like.
"This is the end of the line for permafrost," Payette said.
To track the retreat, Payette and his colleagues looked at distinctive plant-covered mounds called palsas that form naturally over ice in the soil of northern peat bogs.
There were up to 90 percent fewer palsas in bogs around James Bay in 2005 than there were in 2004, the researchers found. And that was far fewer than those palsas shown in the
area in aerial photographs taken in 1957, Payette said.
The trend cannot be conclusively linked to climate change, Payette said, citing a lack of data in this remote area, but he noted that this is the most likely cause. The
research was published in the journal Permafrost and Periglacial Processes. (Reuters)
And besides which, deep permafrost in not in any danger of melting. Hopefully these associate everything with catastrophic warming pieces will dry up as
the idiotic scare finally collapses.
OSLO - Norway laid out ways to reach one of the world's toughest climate goals on Wednesday with measures to clean up sectors from oil to transport that it said would trim
just 0.25 percent from the economy by 2020.
The "Climate Cure," outlined by state-run agencies to guide deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, said costs would range up to 1,100 to 1,500 crowns ($188-$256) per
tonne of avoided carbon dioxide emissions. (Reuters)
Steven Chu, the Nobel prize-winning physicist, is fast discovering that science is not enough when it comes to winning the climate change debate in Washington.
A year after President Barack Obama appointed the mild-mannered Stanford academic as energy secretary, Mr Chu is struggling to convince an increasingly partisan Congress that
the US cannot afford to delay far-reaching reforms, from nuclear policy to reducing carbon emissions. (Financial Times)
The big worry is that Chu is a physicist and still professes to believe gorebull warbling, which suggests he's willing to subvert science for
ideology. Chu, of all people, should be capable of checking references and finding we lack 2 of 4 necessary numbers required to calculate the planet's precise expected mean
temperature -- we can not know whether the planet is warmer or cooler than expected. Chu should know gorebull warbling is a total crock. Not good.
WASHINGTON - The U.S. economy will lose $2.4 trillion over the next two decades if the federal government does not allow oil and natural gas drilling in restricted onshore
lands and in offshore areas previously closed to energy companies, according to a new study released on Monday.
The report, prepared for the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, also said U.S. imports of crude oil, petroleum products and natural gas would increase by
$1.6 trillion over the period without access to the energy resources.
In particular, the United States is expected to pay the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) $607 billion for an extra 4.1 billion barrels of crude, the
report said.
Separate congressional and presidential bans on drilling in most U.S. waters beyond the western and central Gulf of Mexico ended in 2008, and the Interior Department is now
considering whether to expand exploration in only a small part of the formerly closed areas. (Reuters)
BINGHAMTON, New York - New York landowners whose properties sit on the gas-rich Marcellus Shale are pushing back against calls for greater environmental regulation, saying
it has halted the U.S. gas drilling boom at the New York border.
Their concerns have opened a new front in the gas drilling wars, in which environmentalists and neighbors opposed to seeing gas wells in their back yards have put a drag on the
exponential growth of onshore U.S. natural gas production.
A group of landowners who stand to earn a windfall from leasing their property to companies like Chesapeake Energy gathered in the town of Binghamton recently to push back
against claims that drilling could pose health hazards.
"This is a very depressed area and this is something that will turn this whole community around," said Dan Fitzsimmons, 54, a leader of the Joint Landowners
Coalition, which includes 17,500 families. (Reuters)
TORONTO - A fresh wave of conservation efforts spurred by a government incentive may help to spark another drop in U.S. heating oil consumption and counter a decline in the
number of homes switching from the fuel to natural gas.
The U.S. homeowner trend away from heating oil got another prod after President Obama's 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act earmarked as much as $10 billion for energy
audits, weatherization and natural gas heating retrofits for homeowners.
In 2008, it looked as if the steady erosion in U.S. demand for home heating oil, caused by consumers switching to natural gas over the last 35 years, may have tapered off.
"There have been a lot of conservation measures that wiped away gallons." said Shane Sweet, chief executive officer for New England Fuel Institute which represents
1,100 members companies made up of distributors, retailers, and wholesalers.
"That is demand we will never get back" he said. (Reuters)
The United States Environmental Protection Agency is soon expected to make a decision that could have an enormous impact on coal-fired power plants across the nation and, by
extension, on the cost of energy and building materials. No, we’re not talking about greenhouse gas regulations here. The question that USEPA Administrator Lisa Jackson must
answer is this: Should the ash generated from the burning of coal be classified as a hazardous waste or not? It’s a decision that has the potential to pile more costs onto
the price of energy at a time we can least afford it. (Rich Trzupek, FrontPage)
By Max Schulz, ET guest columnist
Feb. 17 2010, 2:30 EST
During the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to transform America’s energy economy by creating millions of “green jobs.” Accepting his party’s
nomination at the Democratic convention in Denver, Obama proclaimed: “I’ll invest $150 billion over the next decade in affordable, renewable sources of energy wind power
and solar power and the next generation of biofuels; an investment that will lead to new industries and 5 million new jobs that pay well and can’t ever be outsourced.” [Read
More] (Energy Tribune)
WASHINGTON - U.S. corn growers expressed relief when the Obama administration unveiled new environmental rules that would boost use of corn-based biofuel, but green groups
complained the guidelines may fill the air with nitrogen, a greenhouse gas viewed as more potent than carbon.
The Environmental Protection Agency unveiled what amounted to a tweaking of the national renewable fuel standard in early February, and still found that ethanol made from corn
is still cleaner than conventional gasoline, dashing the hopes of some critics who opposed using food to create fuel.
The EPA's new assessment basically calls for corn ethanol output to rise from around 12 billion gallons this year to around 15 billion gallons annually starting around 2015,
which the industry was already on track to reach regardless of agency's action. (Reuters)
In the 2010 Dodgen Lecture at the annual meeting of the Mississippi Academy of Sciences, and in the Q&A that followed, I described four principles that must be observed
in order to successfully complete the transition away from a fossil-fuel based society. ( Jim Lane, Editor, Biofuels Digest)
Or maybe not "forget" so much as completely avoided: Why abandon useful, abundant, energy-dense fuels in the first place? I take the reason that
was omitted is because there's no rational reason to do so.
It took more than a month for the container ship Ebba Maersk to steam from Germany to Guangdong, China, where it unloaded cargo on a recent Friday — a week longer than it
did two years ago.
But for the owner, the Danish shipping giant Maersk, that counts as progress.
In a global culture dominated by speed, from overnight package delivery to bullet trains to fast-cash withdrawals, the company has seized on a sales pitch that may startle some
hard-driving corporate customers: Slow is better.
By halving its top cruising speed over the last two years, Maersk cut fuel consumption on major routes by as much as 30 percent, greatly reducing costs. But the company also
achieved an equal cut in the ships’ emissions of greenhouse gases.
“The previous focus has been on ‘What will it cost?’ and ‘Get it to me as fast as possible,’ ” said Soren Stig Nielsen, Maersk’s director of environmental
sustainability, who noted that the practice began in 2008, when oil prices jumped to $145 a barrel.
“But now there is a third dimension,” he said. “What’s the CO2 footprint?”
Traveling more slowly, he added, is “a great opportunity” to lower emissions “without a quantum leap in innovation.” (NYT)
How nifty... and if they go backwards, does it take CO2 out of the air, too? Sheesh!
WASHINGTON — There has been no more reliable cheerleader for President Obama’s energy and climate change policies than Daniel J. Weiss of the left-leaning Center for
American Progress.
But Mr. Obama’s recent enthusiasm for nuclear power, including his budget proposal to triple federal loan guarantees for new nuclear reactors to $54 billion, was too much for
Mr. Weiss.
The president’s embrace of nuclear power was disappointing, and the wrong way to go about winning Republican votes, he said, adding that Mr. Obama should not be endorsing
such a costly and potentially catastrophic energy alternative “as bait just to get talks started with pro-nuke senators.”
The early optimism of environmental advocates that the policies of former President George W. Bush would be quickly swept away and replaced by a bright green future under Mr.
Obama is for many environmentalists giving way to resignation, and in some cases, anger. (NYT)
Labor remains opposed to adopting a civil nuclear power program, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says.
Mr Rudd said the priority now was to develop effective technology for carbon capture and storage to tackle greenhouse gas emissions.
He said the people of Australia could debate anything they wanted.
"Our policy is that Australia has multiple other energy sources and we will not be heading in the direction of civil nuclear power," he told reporters.
"The coalition has a policy which I understand embraces that possibility. That is the difference between the two of us. (AAP)
PUTNEY, VERMONT — With the continuing failure of governments to reach agreements on combating climate change, the outlook for both humans and nature remains bleak.
And nowhere is the failure more conspicuous than in the avoidance of the subject of population growth. Population is a double-barreled environmental problem — not only is
population increasing; so are emissions per capita.
In 1970, when worldwide greenhouse gas emissions had just begun to transgress the sustainable capacity of the atmosphere, the world population was about 3.7 billion; today
it’s about 6.9 billion — an increase of 86 percent.
In that same period, worldwide emissions from fossil fuels rose from about 14 billion tons to an estimated 29 billion tons — an increase of 107 percent.
In other words, in 1970, such emissions were about 3.8 tons per capita; today, despite the growing awareness of climate change, they have actually risen to about 4.2 tons per
capita.
The growing fraction of energy produced by low-emission means (solar, nuclear, wind, etc.) seems merely to be slowing down the rapidly growing dependence on fossil fuels in
response to ever increasing energy demand.
Yet inexplicably and inexcusably, recommendations by the United States, the United Nations and independent research groups essentially never include — and certainly never
stress — population as a contribution to global warming. (Arthur H. Westing, IHT)
There's a good reason they're not mentioned, ya gibbering nitwit. Like population, enhanced greenhouse is a "problem" that never was.
Featured
prominently in today's Guardian
and dutifully mirrored by the BBC is a tale of woe, headlined:
"Tajikistan facing water shortages and climate extremes, report warns". The strap line reads: "Falling supplies due to rising temperatures and retreating
glaciers could spark conflict between water-stressed countries in the region, says Oxfam."
Few will actually read the Oxfam
report and fewer still will have the background knowledge to understand how fundamentally dishonest it is. In pursuing its own distorted agenda on climate change, the
charity is exploiting the misery of the peoples of Tajikstan, wilfully distorting the cause of their plight.
A taste of that dishonesty, writ through the entire 24-page production, comes at the very end, where the pompously is of quite staggering proportions:
Following up on my previous piece (which seems to be becoming a habit), another
reader tells me to have a look at Anita Swarup, the author of the Oxfam
report on Tajikstan. It turns out that the lady has "form".
Formerly a "communications officer" for the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex,
she subsequently became freelance, as a describing
herself at a UNESCO International Conference on Broadcast Media and Climate Change in Paris in September 2009 as: "Research, advocacy and communications – Climate
Change."
In her Carbon Capture bio
(above), she is described as a "climate change person," telling us that she is an Oxfam International regional research report author, "who has worked as a
consultant on climate change for Oxfam , Unicef and other organisations."
Interestingly, the Oxfam Tajikstan report was edited by John Magrath and Richard English. Magrath is a writer and researcher who has worked for Oxfam GB for over 20 years in a
range of roles, including press officer and executive assistant to the Director. For the last three years, he has researched climate change implications for Oxfam's work.
English is the campaigns manager for Oxfam.
Thus, we have a report "researched" and written by a climate change advocate, and edited by another "researcher" on climate change, overseen by a campaigns
manager for an organisation that is active in climate change activism. And it was going to report anything else, other than climate change was a problem?
More than ever, this underlines the unreliability of NGO reports – in particular from advocacy groups such as Oxfam, whose work is not worth the paper it is printed on.
(Richard North, EU Referendum)
NEW YORK - The world's second biggest tea company Tetley will source all of its branded tea from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms by 2016, both groups said on Wednesday.
(Reuters)
public hearing on a federal plan to clean up Florida's rivers and lakes drew an unexpectedly large crowd of nearly 350 people to a room with only 200 chairs Wednesday.
Whether seated or standing, most of the anxious speakers repeatedly lashed out against stiffer environmental regulations. (Orlando Sentinel)
LONDON - British scientists have found a cheap and simple way of keeping vaccines stable, even at tropical temperatures, which they say could transform immunisation
campaigns in the developing world.
The technology developed by Oxford University scientists and the privately owned Nova Laboratories would remove the need for costly infrastructure, like fridges and freezers
that require power and can break down, and highly trained staff.
"Currently vaccines need to be stored in a fridge or freezer," Matt Cottingham of Oxford's Jenner Institute, who led the study, said in a statement. "You need a
clinic with a nurse, a fridge and an electricity supply, and refrigeration lorries for distribution."
"If you could ship vaccines at normal temperatures, you would greatly reduce cost and hugely improve access to vaccines. You could even picture someone with a backpack
taking vaccine doses on a bike into remote villages."
The team's method uses a patented system from Nova called HydRIS and involves mixing the vaccine with the sugars trehalose and sucrose and leaving it to dry out on a filter or
membrane.
As the water evaporates, the vaccine mixture turns into a syrup and solidifies on the membrane, preserving the active part of the vaccine in a kind of suspended animation and
protecting it from harm even at high temperatures. (Reuters)
Researchers at Imperial College London have managed to transform sugars found in fast growing trees and grasses into a large molecule, known as a polymer, that can be used
to make plastic.
Although there are already plastics on the market made from natural materials like corn, these do not biodegrade quickly.
The new discovery would not only cut down on the use of oil, that is usually used to make plastic, but potentially enable people to compost plastic at home. (TDT)
In a study published in The New England Journal of Medicine, Associate Professor Paul Franks of Umeå University in Sweden, in collaboration with researchers in the US,
shows how childhood obesity, together with other risk factors for cardiovascular disease, affects premature death. (ScienceDaily)
Eight out of ten men and almost seven in ten women will be overweight by 2020, a study published today says.
While data suggests that childhood obesity may be levelling off, adult obesity is expected to rise. The report predicts a higher incidence of diabetes, strokes and heart
disease.
The study, led by Professor Klim McPherson, of the University of Oxford, uses figures from 1993 to 2007 to predict future levels of obesity in England. It says that about 41
per cent of men aged 20 to 65 will be obese by 2020 and 40 per cent will be overweight; 36 per cent of women will be obese and 32 per cent will be overweight.
The study said: “Unlike the recent report on child obesity, which showed some indications of a plateauing or at least a significant reduction in the rate of obesity, the
future projections for adults are less optimistic.” (The Times)
Around
1.2 million years ago, only 18,500 early humans were breeding on the planet. According to researchers, this is evidence that there was a real risk of extinction for our early
ancestors. What's more, according to a new study it took at least a million years for humans to come back from the brink. It was not until the emergence of modern humans, Homo
sapiens, around 160,000 years ago and their migration out of Africa that humanity's place on Earth was secured. Two factors helped humans to survive: an increasingly
carnivorous diet and mastery of fire.
In an on online report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), “Mobile
elements reveal small population size in the ancient ancestors of Homo sapiens,” researchers found that the ancient human effective population size 1.2 million years ago
was about 18,500, and couldn't have been larger than 26,000. This means that the population of Homo erectus, an ancestor of modern humans, was small even at a time that
the species was spreading around the world. This implies an “unusually small population size for a species spread across the entire Old World,” the authors write.
“There's this history of a precarious existence not just for our species but for our ancestors,” says co-author Lynn Jorde, a human geneticist at the University of Utah in
Salt Lake City.
On of the things that has long puzzled researchers is that modern humans lack the genetic variation found in other living primates. Compared with chimpanzees
or gorillas, human genetic variation is remarkably small, even though our current population is so much larger than any species of great ape. One explanation for this lack of
variation is that our species experienced events where a significant part of the human population were killed. Some researchers proposed that the lack of variation in our
maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA suggested these events took place relatively recently, perhaps as our ancestors were migrating out of Africa. (Doug L. Hoffman, The
Resilient Earth)
Meanwhile, the scientist at the center of Climategate now tells BBC
News that there has been no statistically significant rise in temperature in the past fifteen years and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has been forced to
admit their 2007 report substantially overstated global warning’s impact on glacier
loss, hurricane damage, and African crop failure.
So how is the Obama Administration focusing our precious national security resources? Lieutenant Colonel in the US Army Reserve (rtd) explains in The
Telegraph: Continue reading... (The
Foundry)
A trio of influential multinational corporations have decamped from the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, a 3-year-old lobby group, citing mounting concerns over the
direction of climate change legislation, particularly concessions to the politically-influential coal sector.
In separate statements, BP America, ConocoPhillips and Caterpillar all announced they were discontinuing their membership in the group, which includes chief executives from
several corporate giants as well as influential environmental organizations like The Nature Conservancy and Environmental Defense.
“All three companies have provided invaluable assistance, expertise and significant commitments of time and resources in U.S.C.A.P.’s efforts to advance comprehensive
climate and energy legislation,” the organization said in a statement that downplayed the departures.
But BP spokesman Ronnie Chappell told Green Inc. that the company feels it can do more to influence the outcome of pending House and Senate legislation on its own. “Our views
are that there are segments of the economy that are largely untouched or aren’t carrying as big a piece of the burden that they might,” Mr. Chappell said, referencing the
coal sector. (Green Inc.)
There is not now, nor has there ever been any need for anyone to carry any piece of the gorebull warbling burden.
Today,
BP America, Conoco Phillips, and Caterpillar have dropped out of the U. S. Climate Action Partnership. This is the first recognition by the many major corporations
pushing energy-rationing legislation that cap-and-trade legislation is dead in the Congress and that the scientific case for global warming alarmism is collapsing rapidly.
We hope that other major corporations will soon see the light and drop their support for cap-and-trade and other similar policies.
While these announcements are most welcome, they do not mean that we can relax our efforts to defeat and roll back energy-rationing legislation and regulations. Many
policies and proposals that would raise energy prices through the roof for American consumers and destroy millions of jobs in energy-intensive industries still pose a huge
threat. These include:
the EPA’s decision to regulate greenhouse gas emissions using the Clean Air Act;
efforts by environmental pressure groups to use the Endangered Species Act to stop energy production and new power plants;
the higher fuel economy standards for new passenger vehicles enacted in 2007;
presidential executive orders;
and bills in Congress to require more renewable electricity, higher energy efficiency standards for buildings, and low carbon transportation fuel standards. (Cooler
Heads)
WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama's 2011 budget calls for an array of regulations, subsidies and taxes aimed at cutting emissions of greenhouse gases, even as a sweeping
climate bill sits on ice in the Senate. (WSJ)
Critics of U.S. EPA's climate regulations are lining up to launch legal battles against the agency's "endangerment" finding amid a looming deadline for court
challenges.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce on Friday petitioned a federal appeals court to reconsider EPA's determination that greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare, a finding
that paves the way for broad regulations of the heat-trapping emissions. (Greenwire)
Three climate change skeptic groups today petitioned U.S. EPA to reconsider its finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare.
The petition marks the latest in a series of attacks from the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which joined the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change and the
Science and Environmental Policy Project in challenging the finding. (E&ENews)
Texas fired off another salvo in a struggle with Washington over environmental regulation Tuesday, filing a suit in federal court to prevent regulation of greenhouse gases.
Gov. Rick Perry and Attorney General Greg Abbott are trying to get the federal Environmental Protection Agency to back away from a finding last year that greenhouse gases are a
threat to public health. The finding sets the stage for regulation of the gases, which scientists have linked to global warming. (Austin-American Statesman)
Another defender of limited government (and sound science) has petitioned U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reopen the regulatory process that led to EPA’s
controversial endangerment finding, arguing that new information casts doubt on the scientific
integrity of the determination. The Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF), a Sacramento, Calif.-based
group that defends individuals against large, intrusive government, filed an administrative petition
with EPA last week that challenges the agency’s finding on procedural grounds. The petition to
the EPA is available at PLF’s web site.
According to the filing, EPA must reopen the proceedings surrounding its determination that greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare, in light of recent
controversy over e-mails released from prominent climate scientists whose work formed the very foundation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)’s 4th
assessment on climate change (2007). The filing also demands that EPA’s Scientific Advisory Board evaluate whether the finding itself should be reconsidered. The IPCC reports
were preeminent among the data used to underpin EPA’s endangerment finding. (MasterResource)
Virginia joined a growing list of opponents to the Environmental Protection Agency's plan to regulate greenhouse gases.
Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II petitioned a federal court Tuesday to reconsider EPA's decision that greenhouse gases, which are linked to global warming, are a public
health threat. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Texas filed similar suits.
Cuccinelli will argue, among other things, that EPA failed to consider how regulations will affect the state's economy, particularly in the coal-mining towns of southwest
Virginia, spokesman Daniel Dodds said.
"We're asking them to reconvene because it did not take in to account the economic impacts," he said. (Daily Press)
The American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) has filed a legal challenge to a recent decision by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that will result in
greenhouse gas emissions being regulated under the Clean Air Act.
Washington-based AISI claims the analysis by EPA and its method for reaching the findings were "fundamentally inadequate" and believes the move will hinder the
abilities of North American steelmakers to compete globally. (AISI)
Did John Houghton promote disaster for environmental policy? The web's informal coalition of researchers and archivers says: "Yes":
“If we want a good environmental policy in the future we’ll have to have a disaster. It's like safety on public transport. The only way humans will act is if
there's been an accident.” Sir John Houghton, ‘Me and My God’, ‘The Sunday Telegraph’, September 10, 1995.
(Slightly cleaned up image here if you have trouble reading the above)
On Sunday last, Sir John Houghton, former Chief Executive of the Met Office, founder of the Hadley Centre, and former Co-Chair of the IPCC had a somewhat intemperate ‘Letter
to the Editor’ published in The Observer, which went as follows:
“Dr Benny Peiser, director of the the Global Warming Policy Foundation, writing about my work as the chair of the first IPCC Scientific Assessment , quotes me as saying:
‘Unless we announce disasters no one will listen,’ thereby attributing to me and the IPCC an attitude of hype and exaggeration. That quote from me is without foundation. I
have never said it or written it ...
... This quote is doing damage not only to me as a responsible scientist but also to the IPCC which in its main conclusions has always worked to avoid exaggeration. I demand
from Dr Peiser an apology that he failed to check his sources and a public retraction of the use he made of the fabricated quotation.”
Oh dear! Oh dear! To adapt slightly Queen Gertrude speaking in Hamlet, Act III, Scene 2: “The Gentleman doth protest too much, methinks”.
Read more at Emeritus Professor Philip Stott's The Clamour of the Timeshere.
The scientist at the centre of the storm over mistakes by the UN's climate change panel has broken his silence on the affair to defend his report as "robust and
rigorous".
Martin Parry, a climate expert at the Grantham Institute and Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College, London, said he was "perplexed" at the way the media
has focused on what he called minor points. (David Adam, The Guardian)
This weather station in Shenzhen used to be rural 30+ years ago, it also used to be a couple of kilometers away from this location.
Central to the Russell investigation is the issue of whether he or his CRU colleagues ever published data that they knew were potentially flawed, in order to bolster the
evidence for man-made global warming. The claim specifically relates to one of Jones’s research papers1 on whether the urban heat island effect
— in which cities tend to be warmer than the surrounding countryside — could be responsible for the apparent rise in temperature readings from thermometers in the late
twentieth century. Jones’s study concluded that this local effect was negligible, and that the dominant effect was global climate change.
In the paper, the authors used data from weather stations around the world; those in China “were selected on the basis of station history: we chose those with few, if any,
changes in instrumentation, location or observation times”, they wrote. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
Olive Heffernan traveled to the University of East Anglia in Norwich to meet with Phil Jones, the climatologist at the centre of the hacked email controversy. From Climate
Feedback part of Guardian Environment Network
Well, I am asking myself, what about all these co-authors, presumably some of them worked on the data too, otherwise why would they be co-authors ? Is their data too, “..not
well enough organised..” ? They are all from big instos – did none of them park a copy on their HDD ?
Or is co-authoring on this scale just an exercise in influence peddling and mutual career building – facilitating a network of supportive mates to ease the way in the peer
review process. I am curious to see if anybody else has thought about this. (Warwick Hughes)
The average voter has had enough: no more being force-fed scenarios defying that rare commodity called common sense.
February 16, 2010
- by Ian Plimer
The people are speaking. We are seeing a defiance of bureaucrats, officials, government propaganda, and funded climate catastrophe researchers. A scary scientific paradigm of
human-induced climate change is collapsing because the cake has been over iced. The average voter has had enough of being talked down to by arrogant scientists with vested
interests who present scenarios that defy that rare commodity called common sense.
It was only a short time ago that climate rationalists were told they were factually wrong, that their skepticism was evil, their views were akin to Holocaust denial, and that
they should be tried for crimes against humanity. However, Climategate emails show that the coterie of two dozen leading climate comrades shared this skepticism in private —
yet denounced skeptics in public. Various cap-and-trade systems have been shown to be an extra tax, which may end up being distributed by the sticky fingers of the UN. (PJM)
CHURCHVILLE, VA—The UN’s climate change panel is reeling from a series of scandals about unsupported claims in its 2007 report.
India has documented that the Intergovernmental Panel’s claim of Himalayan glaciers disappearing by 2035 was mere speculation—and has now been proven false.
The 2007 IPCC report claimed global warming could cut rain fed African food yields in half by 2020. New lead author Chris Field says this is highly unlikely, and he can
find nothing in the report’s supporting chapters to document it.
The Dutch are complaining that the IPCC said half of its land area lies below sea level, when the figure is actually 20 percent.
All this criticism is valid and long overdue. But the biggest scandal in the IPCC’s closet remains its 1995 claim to finding a “discernible human influence” on the
earth’s changing climate. Lead author Ben Santer of the Lawrence Livermore government laboratory inserted those words—after the IPCC’s consulting scientists had signed
off on a draft that specifically said no such “human fingerprint” had been found!
Santer deliberately reversed the meaning of the whole IPCC 1995 report—and the trajectory of every IPCC document since. He claimed the rewrite was justified by two of his own
studies. However, Santer’s papers “cherry-picked” the earth’s temperature record from 1963–1987, ignoring the earlier and later temperatures that didn’t confirm the
Greenhouse theory! Thus the IPCC’s whole claim of a “discernible human influence” remains without scientific support to this day.
What will we learn next about the IPCC and its frolicking alarmists? Expect proof that the land-based thermometer records have been deliberately sabotaged to lower the
temperature readings of yesteryear and raise recent thermometer readings—to make global warming seem scarier.
The most obvious case of this record manipulation to date is in New Zealand, where the “official” graph shows the country’s temperatures rose 0.92 degrees C through the
20th century. However, NIWA’s own raw data showed no 20th-century temperature uptrend in any of its stations. Is it an accident that most of the world’s raw climate
historical data has disappeared?
Veteran meteorologist Joe D’Aleo appeared on John Coleman’s TV special at KUSI-TV on January 14, charging that U.S. official temperatures have been rigged by quietly
dropping “cold” weather stations: those at high altitude, high latitude, or in rural areas.
Clear back in 1992, James Goodridge, then California State Climatologist, published a peer-reviewed paper that sorted the state’s weather trends by county population. The
urban counties had a strong upward trend of plus 3.14 degrees F per century. Rural stations showed no upward trend at all.
Looking back, an “official” global warming of 0.6 degrees since 1900 may not seem all that dramatic. Especially after a dozen years of non-warming. But think how hard it
would have been for the global warming alarmists to panic the people if they’d admitted the rural areas hadn’t warmed at all! That “global warming” was mostly cities
ratcheting up their own heat!
The supposedly dedicated “climate researchers” have nearly cost the world trillions of dollars in higher energy costs, agonies of wintertime suffering for the elderly
“energy poor,” and needless deaths for lack of air conditioning in the summers. They and the Green campaigners came awfully close to destroying human society as most of us
have known it. (CGFI)
Several errors have been recently uncovered in the 4th Assessment Report (AR4) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). These include problems with Himalayan
glaciers, African agriculture, Amazon rainforests, Dutch geography, and attribution of damages from extreme weather events. More seem to turn up daily. Most of these errors
stem from the IPCC’s reliance on non-peer reviewed sources.
The defenders of the IPCC have contended that most of these errors are minor in significance and are confined to the Working Group II Report (the one on impacts, adaptation and
vulnerability) of the IPCC which was put together by representatives from various regional interests and that there was not as much hard science available to call upon as there
was in the Working Group I report (“The Physical Science Basis”). The IPCC defenders argue that there have been no (or practically no) problems identified in the Working
Group I (WGI) report on the science.
Todd Stern, US special envoy for climate change seen here in 2009, on Tuesday accused vested interests of exploiting recent scientific scandals, saying there was an
overwhelming case for the world to take action. (AFP) | Briefing by the Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd
Stern (State)
Well we're certainly trying to bring them to people's attention Todd, have been for 14 years in fact. And yes, there is an overwhelming case for the world
to take action against carbon scammers and misanthropists trying to use gorebull warbling as a weapon against humanity.
The IPCC and scientific community urgently need to focus on rebuilding trust and could learn a few tactics from Barack Obama
There's an incredibly powerful movement opposed to action on climate change. Without doubt it had more influence on the outcome of the climate negotiations in Copenhagen than
many of the world's countries combined. (Joss Garman, The Guardian)
Wow! get a load of this:
The name of this world-changing movement? It's the Tea Party movement, coupled with its sophisticated echo chamber of right-wing shock jocks, culture-war
keyboard commandos, and allies at Fox News, all pushing the scepticism line on climate change.
To be honest I found the image of parties coupled with jocks in chambers faintly disturbing -- and that was before the introduction of commandos and
allies in a culture war...
Hasn't actually occurred to these clots yet that their favorite apocalypse exists only in fevered imaginations, has it? Much less that skepticism is the natural state of
scientists. Silly game, innit guv'na?
The scientific fraud started with the money and the (leftist) politics, and that's where the investigation needs to go now.
February 16, 2010
- by Charlie Martin
The Climategate files have led to a reexamination of the science behind climate change, and the arguments of the so-called climate skeptics have been vindicated. It’s time
for them to take a deserved victory lap.
But skeptics can’t afford to get cocky.
Elsewhere in Pajamas Media, there are a number of reactions to the bombshell interview with Dr. Phil Jones, director of the Climate Research Unit of the University of East
Anglia and one of the first people to feel the consequences of Climategate. Those other PJM articles cover, in much greater detail than I will, the implications of the
interview in which Jones begins to come clean about the machinations of the climate clique. Clarity regarding the science is important, but it’s not the science that has made
“climate change” what it is today. To understand that, we need to look at what has really driven the issue into prominence.
To understand that — as always — we must ask: Who benefits, and how? (PJM)
The Bangladeshi government objects to grant money being channelled through the World Bank, which it says will attach unfavourable "strings and conditions" ( David
Adam and John Vidal, The Guardian)
Ex-weatherman Anthony Watts says many US weather stations produce unreliable data because they are located next to artificial heat – but a scientific analysis suggests
that, if anything, such stations underestimate warming ( James Randerson, The Guardian)
Newsmax
seems to be one of the few news outlets that publicises the latest attitude survey on "climate change".
In what is almost a perfect mirror image of April 2008, the poll currently finds that 35 percent of US voters now believe global warming is caused primarily by human activity
while 47 percent think long-term planetary trends are mostly to blame, down three points from the previous survey in January. Eight percent say there is some other reason, and
10 percent aren't sure.
In April 2008, 47 percent blamed human activity and only 34 percent named long term planetary trends. Despite billions of dollars and countless hours of effort by the warmists,
that is all they can achieve.
Meanwhile, it looks as if the greenies have
sussed me. But don't you love the first comment: "Tim, outstanding sleuthing!" Er... like they've at last been reading EU Referendum and put two and two together.
Outstanding!
That's the weakness with these idiots. They tend to read – and believe – their own propaganda. They rarely pop over the fence to see what the opposition is doing. Me, I
read their crap all the time – military history helps. During the '40-41 desert campaign, Montgomery had a picture of Rommel on the wall of his personal caravan. "Know
thine enemy" – one of the primary rules of war.
And now, creeping round the back, we get a US majority ditching their garbage. It's like stealing candy from a baby – they didn't even see it coming. But the politicians are
going to be a tough nut to crack – but then, so was Rommel. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
January 2009 – After snowstorms in British Columbia, a statement by Andrew Weaver, “climate-modelling
expert at the University of Victoria and a lead author with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change“
for decades, climate scientists have consistently said that with climate change, many parts of the world should expect an increase in overall precipitation. “So
the fact that we’re getting snowfall records is entirely consistent with what we’ve been saying,” he said.
this type of purely coincidental extremely warm weather is completely consistent with the predictions of climate science. Indeed climate science says we are
likely to see far, far worse, far, far more often
23.
Eva – February 12th, 2010 – 4:25 pm In 1899, Washington DC had 54 inches of snow. We are told that was because there was less CO2 and it was cold. In 2010, Washington DC had 55 inches of snow. We are told
that is due to global warming.
Why does the global warming community expect the rest of the world to be as neurotic and confused as they are?
A growing number of Americans are beginning to think that global warming alarmism is little more than some sort of hippie plot to drag us back to the Stone Age. Or, failing
that, at least drag us back to the Hippie Age. And what with the abject failure of the international community to reach any kind of binding agreement at the recent Copenhagen
climate conference, and the growing unlikelihood that the U.S. Senate will pass any bill to combat that chimerical foe Anthropogenic Global Warming, coupled with the
scandal-a-minute collapse of any scientific “consensus” that we’re even changing the climate after all, the alarmists are now looking at a bleak future of their grand
scheme devolving into nothing more than a passing fad along the lines of Hula Hoops or the Macarena. (PJM)
Everyone knows you can’t make a direct connection between carbon emissions and this January in Vancouver which is so damn warm it crushed the record set so long ago
that toddlers can’t even remember it. It’s just a coincidence that we are now in the warmest winter globally in the satellite record.
It’s just like that chain-smoking guy who got lung cancer. The fact that he smoked two packs a day is a coincidence. You can’t prove it — so keep smoking,
already. Sure the statistics show the warming footprint — Record high temperatures far outpace record lows across U.S. — but individual events are just coincidence. I’m
telling you.
In the case of smoking and lung cancer, every single point of the checklist is fulfilled. In the case of carbon emissions and global warming:
Point 1 is still ill-defined – notably, the fork between maximum and minimum expected warming has not decreased between the IPCC TAR and AR4. That’s a far, far cry
from a RR of 23…
Point 2 is still ill-defined – we are given very generic statements “it’s going to get warmer”, “it will likely be a warm winter”, “the likelihood of
heavier snowstorms and rainfalls will increase”, almost value-free if there’s no number attached to them
No need to talk about points 3 and 4. If there’s no well-defined data to work on, everything else is a moot point. All in all, it is sad to see just how misinformed
somebody like Romm can be, when one is unwilling to find the time to understand the topic at hand. Hasn’t he got anybody helping investigating his own arguments??? (Maurizio
Morabito, OmniClimate)
We cannot accept a 'climate apartheid', where the rich can buy their way out of the problem (John Sauven, The Guardian)
First John, you need a real problem. Anyway, shouldn't you be getting with the watermelon program? This whole "buying of indulgences" thing has
been pushed by anti-capitalists for the express purpose of wealth transfer (allegedly on equality and social justice grounds). Singing out of the wrong songbook, aren't you?
Here’s why it’s possible that doubling CO2 won’t make much difference.
The carbon that’s already up in the atmosphere absorbs most of the light it can. CO2 only “soaks up” its favorite wavelengths of light, and it’s close to saturation
point. It manages to grab a bit more light from wavelengths that are close to its favorite bands, but it can’t do much more, because there are not many left-over photons at
the right wavelengths.
The natural greenhouse effect is real, and it does keep us warm, but it’s already reached its peak performance.
This graph shows the additional warming effect of each extra 20ppm of atmospheric CO2. More
» (Jo Nova)
The title of the piece somewhat gives the game away, as it declares: "Get ready for even foggier summers". The opening lines of the text tell us that the Bay Area
just had its foggiest May in 50 years. "And thanks to global warming, it's about to get even foggier."
This makes an interesting counterpoint to the article in The
Daily Telegraph today, proclaiming: "Fog over San Francisco thins by a third due to climate change".
The lead author of the 2009 study is Robert Bornstein, a meteorology professor at San Jose State University who points out that "global warming is warming the interior
part of California, but it leads to a reverse reaction of more fog along the coast."
We are told that study would appear in the journal Climate, which may be this one
here, headed: "Observed 1970-2005 cooling of summer daytime temperatures in coastal California."
Bornstein and team argue that as global warming heats up the Central Valley gets, the greater the temperature and pressure gradients between the inland and coast would be
greater - therefore forming more fog.
To demonstrate the thesis, they broke the Bay Area down into smaller regions and looked at daily temperatures for the last half century, focusing on the rapid post-1970 warming
period. They found that, although temperatures were trending upward as a whole, they were asymmetric - the hills and inland areas were warming, while low-elevation coastal
areas were actually cooling.
This was by no means the only time Bornstein ventured into print, his views being aired in the Ventura
County Reporter in October 2008. In November 2007 in the Napa
Valley Register, another scientist, Jeffrey P. Schaffer, seemed to support him, predicting that summers in the Bay Area would become cooler, windier and foggier. "And
this has already happened," he observed.
However, there is no shortage of conflicting material, this undated paper (circa
1997?) finding a fog decrease in four West Coast locations. On the other hand, this comprehensive
review (107 pages) points to considerable variation in fog levels over time, with periods when fog levels were considerably lower than at others.
Ironically – at least, according to the Los Angeles Times, fog is
a major nuisance to San Francisco Airport, where Dr Johnstone did his measurements. The two main runways are only 750 feet apart, so they cannot be used simultaneously when it
is foggy. If Johnstone's observations about fog were correct, the tree-huggers' loss would be aviation's gain. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
Declining fog cover on California's coast could leave the state's famous redwoods high and dry, a new study says.
Among the tallest and longest-lived trees on Earth, redwoods depend on summertime's moisture-rich fog to replenish their water reserves.
But climate change may be reducing this crucial fog cover. Though still poorly understood, climate change may be contributing to a decline in a high-pressure climatic system
that usually "pinches itself" against the coast, creating fog, said study co-author James Johnstone, an environmental scientist at the University of California,
Berkeley.
Last summer the San Francisco Chronicle carried a story about research on fog and
climate with a different conclusion:
The Bay Area just had its foggiest May in 50 years. And thanks to global warming, it's about to get even foggier.
That's the conclusion of several state researchers, whose soon-to-be-published study predicts that even with average temperatures on the rise, the mercury won't be soaring
everywhere.
"There'll be winners and losers," says Robert Bornstein, a meteorology professor at San Jose State University. "Global warming is warming the interior part
of California, but it leads to a reverse reaction of more fog along the coast."
The study, which will appear in the journal Climate, is the latest to argue that colder summers are indeed in store for parts of the Bay Area.
More fog is consistent with predictions of climate change. Less fog is consistent with predictions of climate change. I wonder if the same amount of fog is also
"consistent with" such predictions? I bet so. (Roger Pielke Jr)
Denominational confusion? Church leaders
call for 'technology fast' - Church leaders are urging people to give up iPods rather than chocolate this Lent as part of a 'technology fast' to save the planet as well as
our souls.
Senior bishops are calling for a cut in personal carbon use for each of the 40 days of Lent. Their list of ways to achieve this includes eating less meat, flushing the
toilet less often and cutting vegetables thinner so they cook faster.
But one of their tougher challenges is to give up technology such as television, mobiles and iPods for one day. The "Carbon Fast", organised every year by development
agency Tearfund, even suggests giving up technology for a day every month of the year and giving the money to charity. (TDT)
Christian? Pagan? Gaian? Do they not know to which faith they are adherent? For Christians to embrace carbon idolization and climate reverence reeks of
polydeism and a systemic crisis of faith.
Waters from warmer latitudes — or subtropical waters — are reaching Greenland's glaciers, driving melting and likely triggering an acceleration of ice loss, reports a
team of researchers led by Fiamma Straneo, a physical oceanographer from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI).
"This is the first time we’ve seen waters this warm in any of the fjords in Greenland," says Straneo. "The subtropical waters are flowing through the fjord
very quickly, so they can transport heat and drive melting at the end of the glacier."
Greenland's ice sheet, which is two-miles thick and covers an area about the size of Mexico, has lost mass at an accelerated rate over the last decade. The ice sheet's
contribution to sea level rise during that time frame doubled due to increased melting and, to a greater extent, the widespread acceleration of outlet glaciers around
Greenland.
While melting due to warming air temperatures is a known event, scientists are just beginning to learn more about the ocean's impact — in particular, the influence of
currents — on the ice sheet.
"Among the mechanisms that we suspected might be triggering this acceleration are recent changes in ocean circulation in the North Atlantic, which are delivering larger
amounts of subtropical waters to the high latitudes," says Straneo. But a lack of observations and measurements from Greenland's glaciers prior to the acceleration made it
difficult to confirm. (Press Release)
“Increasing the albedo of urban surfaces has received attention as a strategy to mitigate urban heat islands. Here, the effects of globally installing white roofs are
assessed using an urban canyon model coupled to a global climate model. Averaged over all urban areas, the annual mean heat island decreased by 33%. Urban daily maximum
temperature decreased by 0.6°C and daily minimum temperature by 0.3°C. Spatial variability in the heat island response is caused by changes in absorbed solar radiation and
specification of roof thermal admittance. At high latitudes in winter, the increase in roof albedo is less effective at reducing the heat island due to low incoming solar
radiation, the high albedo of snow intercepted by roofs, and an increase in space heating that compensates for reduced solar heating. Global space heating increased more than
air conditioning decreased, suggesting that end-use energy costs must be considered in evaluating the benefits of white roofs.”
This paper further provides a reason that the claim in the papers
that there is no appreciable difference in long term trends between urban and rural sites, is incorrect.
As a necessary condition for this to be true, the landscape of the rural and urban sites must be unchanging over time. This is clearly not true for most urban
areas as their population, streets, and building have changed over time (e.g see and
see). The new Oleson et al paper illustrates (in this case with white roofs) how sensitive the urban area
near-surface temperatures are to changes in the microclimate of cities. (Climate Science)
From CO2 Science Volume 13 Number 7: 17 February 2010
Editorial: A Tempering of Thought on CO2-Induced Ocean Acidification: As ever more research is
conducted, early climate-alarmist claims of an impending "calcification crisis" throughout the world's oceans are being significantly revised.
Medieval
Warm Period Record of the Week:
Was there a Medieval Warm Period? YES, according to data published by 805
individual scientists from 478 separate research institutions in 43
different countries ... and counting! This issue's Medieval Warm Period Record of the Week comes from Terra
Nova Bay, Victoria Land, Antarctica. To access the entire Medieval Warm Period Project's database, click here.
Subject Index Summary: Long-Term Studies (Woody Plants - Pine Trees: Scots): What do they reveal about the potential future
effects of what the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has recently labeled -- or should we say libeled -- "a dangerous air pollutant," namely, carbon
dioxide?
Plant Growth Data:
This week we add new results of plant growth responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment obtained from experiments described in the peer-reviewed scientific
literature for: Cotton (Yoon et al., 2009), Freshwater
Benthic Algae (Hargrave et al., 2009), Scallion (Levine and Pare, 2009), and Soybean
(Kanemoto et al., 2009).
14 February 2010—Penn State researchers and their international collaborators have discovered a diversity of corals harboring unusual species of symbiotic algae in the
warm waters of the Andaman Sea in the northeastern Indian Ocean. "The existence of so many novel coral symbioses thriving in a place that is too warm for most corals gives
us hope that coral reefs and the ecosystems they support may persist — at least in some places — in the face of global warming," said the team's leader, Penn State
Assistant Professor of Biology Todd LaJeunesse. According to LaJeunesse, the comprehensiveness of the team's survey, which also included analysis of the corals and symbiotic
algae living in the cooler western Indian Ocean and Great Barrier Reef area of Australia, is unparalleled by any other study. The team's findings will be published during the
week ending 20 February 2010 in an early online issue of the Journal of Biogeography. (Penn State)
At no point has there been any serious danger to corals posed by gorebull warbling. Nor do we have any expectation of "unnatural warming".
Researchers plan to expand the Fox Permafrost Tunnel during the next few years, drilling or blasting a new shaft 450 feet into a frozen hillside to parallel the existing
tunnel.
“We want to begin digging (a new) permafrost tunnel next winter,” said Matthew Sturm of the U. S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory on Fort Wainwright.
He and others envision a new “Alaska Permafrost Research Center” that will better serve scientists and non-scientists.
With start-up federal funding of $500,000 this year, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will carve out a new tunnel as well as build labs, offices, and a learning center. Other
improvements include a walkway on top of the frozen bluff where scientists can do permafrost experiments from the forest and tundra above the tunnel, and side rooms within the
new tunnel for permafrost-warming experiments. The improvements would replace infrastructure at the tunnel that has endured for four decades. (Alaska Science Forum)
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. is planning a field exercise this year to test a hydraulically powered clamp designed to stop oil squirting out of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline
through a bullet hole.
The drill is part of a series of oil spill response exercises the Anchorage-based operator of the 800-mile line aims to conduct this year and in 2011.
The bullet-hole exercise is planned for Milepost 438 of the pipeline at the Chatanika River, say documents Alyeska recently filed with the Alaska Department of Environmental
Conservation.
A test piece of 48-inch mainline pipe will be placed at the scene and pressurized with water to simulate a high-pressure oil spray through a bullet hole, an exercise
description says. Equipment including Alyeska’s HC 320 hydraulic clamp will be dispatched from the company’s Fairbanks Response Base.
A simulated 60-barrel release is expected over the course of the planned 12-hour exercise, and Alyeska and regulators will time and evaluate all the activities, the exercise
description says. (Wesley Loy, GoO)
A new study shows that our reluctance to develop domestic energy will cost the beleaguered U.S. economy trillions in opportunity costs, reduce our gross domestic product and
increase our trade deficit.
From trying to stimulate jobs in nonexistent ZIP codes at great expense to worshiping the false gods of climate change, our biggest deficit these days may be in the area of
common sense. A new study shows that many of our wounds are self-inflicted as we forgo the wealth and jobs to be found in our waters and under our feet.
The study by Science Applications International Corp. at the request of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, the Gas Technology Institute and others
shows the U.S. economy will suffer $2.3 trillion in lost opportunity costs over the next two decades, monies that would go a long way to reining in runaway deficits and
creating economic growth.
Critics will say this is another self-serving study paid for by oil industry groups, but unlike the climate change fantasies concocted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change and Britain's Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, the study's data can survive fact-checking and the conclusions are rooted in reality. (IBD)
With wind, solar and geothermal receiving much of the government handouts when it comes to energy production, biomass is back in the game after the Senate Finance Committee
unveiled its tax extender plan, which includes a $100 million in production tax credits for biomass energy as part of a larger tax extender package. Politico reports,
As drafted, Section 503 breathed new life into an unusual production tax credit, first awarded to the industry in 2004 as part of a one-time, five-year deal benefiting
nearly 80 biomass electric-generating plants, most of which were up and running well before the tax break was enacted. The House balked at renewing this bargain in December,
saying production tax credits are to spur new production, not to subsidize old. But Finance subtly changes the old wording from five years to six, thereby adding 12 months to
a tax break that is typically worth about $1.75 million annually for a qualified 20-megawatt plant.”
Environmental activists are attacking a $60 billion deal that will keep Chinese power stations supplied with Australian coal for at least the next two decades.
Under the agreement announced last week, the Australian coal and iron ore mining company Resourcehouse will build a new mining complex to give China Power International
Development 30 million tonnes of coal annually for the next two decades. Resourcehouse Chairman Clive Palmer called it the "biggest-ever export contract" for
Australia, which is the world's leading exporter of coal.
But in supplying China, the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, green groups are accusing Australia of ignoring the role it plays in maintaining dirty energy economies
around the world. (ClimateWire)
For those who may have missed the reference, here's a flashback to February '05:
WHEN 35 Greenpeace protesters stormed the International Petroleum Exchange (IPE) yesterday they had planned the operation in great detail.
What they were not prepared for was the post-prandial aggression of oil traders who kicked and punched them back on to the pavement.
“We bit off more than we could chew. They were just Cockney barrow boy spivs. Total thugs,” one protester said, rubbing his bruised skull. “I’ve never seen anyone
less amenable to listening to our point of view.”
Another said: “I took on a Texan Swat team at Esso last year and they were angels compared with this lot.” Behind him, on the balcony of the pub opposite the IPE, a
bleary-eyed trader, pint in hand, yelled: “Sod off, Swampy.” (The Times, February 17, 2005)
Gorebull warbling is not just the crisis that never was, it's the crisis that never could be. Coal is one of the finest and most abundant sources of
energy on the globe. One which should be used to the fullest extent to benefit humanity, especially as its use comes with the happy if accidental side effect of
feeding the biosphere. The fools attempting to use any excuse to hinder human wellbeing are not "environmentalists" but misanthropists wishing to simultaneously
limit photosynthesis and life on Earth. Get lost, tree haters! You are no value to society or the planet.
British Airways and the US bioenergy company Solena are to establish Europe's first green jet fuel plant in the East End of London.
When it is up and running in 2014, the factory will turn 500,000 tonnes of landfill waste – including household and industrial rubbish – into 16 million gallons of
carbon-neutral aviation fuel every year.
It will produce enough fuel to power all of BA's flights from nearby City Airport twice over. And with 95 per cent fewer emissions than traditional kerosene, the plan will be
equivalent to taking 48,000 cars off the roads. (The Independent)
WASHINGTON — President Obama told an enthusiastic audience of union officials on Tuesday that the Energy Department had approved a loan guarantee intended to underwrite
construction of two nuclear reactors in Georgia, with taxpayers picking up much of the financial risk.
If the project goes forward, it would be the first nuclear reactor built in the United States since the 1970s. (NYT)
Norway plans to build the world's most powerful wind turbine, hoping the new technology will increase the profitability of costly offshore wind farms, partners behind the
project said Friday.
With a rotor diametre of 145 metres (475 feet), the 10-megawatt protype will be roughly three times more powerful than ordinary wind turbines currently in place, Enova, a
public agency owned by Norway's petroleum and oil industry ministry, said.
The world's largest wind turbine, 162.5 metres (533 feet) tall, will be built by Norwegian company Sway with the objective of developing a technology that will result in higher
energy generation for offshore wind power.
It will first be tested on land in Oeygarden, southwestern Norway, for two years. (The Independent)
A video from a David Horowitz retreat several months back
has already cost one person a job. The video shows Patrick Caddell, former pollster to Jimmy Carter, lament that
“the whole idea of the environmental movement isn’t to clean up the environment” but rather to “basically deconstruct capitalism. They are against
capitalism.” A little later Caddell continues, “I happen to believe this country needs a good dose of what it believes in: real democracy and real free enterprise.”
While embarrassing to those on the left who promote the sort of policies Caddell refers to, the remark comes as no surprise to The Heritage Foundation—our extensive
research on the subject has long demonstrated that succumbing to the environmental lobby has often come attheexpense of
jobs and free trade. (The Foundry)
Tetrachloroethylene is a volatile, chlorinated organic hydrocarbon that is widely used as a solvent in the dry-cleaning and textile-processing industries and as an agent for
degreasing metal parts. It is an environmental contaminant that has been detected in the air, groundwater, surface waters, and soil. In June 2008, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency released its draft Toxicological Review of Tetrachloroethylene (Perchloroethylene) (CAS No. 127-18-4) in Support of Summary Information on the Integrated Risk
Information System (IRIS). The draft IRIS assessment provides quantitative estimates of cancer and noncancer effects of exposure to tetrachloreothylene, which will be used to
establish airquality and water-quality standards to protect public health and to set cleanup standards for hazardous waste sites.
At the request of EPA, the National Research Council conducted an independent scientific review of the draft IRIS assessment of tetrachloroethylene from toxicologic,
epidemiologic, and human clinical perspectives. The resulting book evaluates the adequacy of the EPA assessment, the data and methods used for deriving the noncancer values for
inhalation and oral exposures and the oral and inhalation cancer unit risks posed by tetrachloroethylene; evaluates whether the key studies underlying the draft IRIS assessment
are of requisite quality, reliability, and relevance to support the derivation of the reference values and cancer risks; evaluates whether the uncertainties in EPA's risk
assessment were adequately described and, where possible, quantified; and identifies research that could reduce the uncertainty in the current understanding of human health
effects associated with tetrachloroethylene exposure. (NAP)
Feb. 16 -- The rate of childhood obesity and chronic health problems doubled in the U.S. from 1988 to 2006 with fewer cases toward the end of the study consistent with a
recent leveling off, researchers found.
Children ages 8 to 14 showed an obesity rate of 15.8 percent at the end of 2006, compared with 8.3 percent in a similar period that ended in 1994, according to a study
published online today in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The overall rate of chronic childhood health conditions including obesity, asthma and behavioral or
learning problems increased to 26.6 percent from 12.8 percent during the same years. (Bloomberg)
WASHINGTON — Chronic conditions including asthma, obesity and behavior disorders have become more common among US children in recent years, with environmental changes and
more diagnoses partly to blame, a study published Tuesday shows.
Researchers led by Jeanne Van Cleave, a doctor at Massachusetts General Hospital for Children in Boston, looked at the prevalence of conditions that lasted a year or longer in
three groups of children, starting with a first cohort of more than 2,000 kids in 1988.
That group was tracked for six years, after which a second group was studied between 1994-2000 and finally a third group from 2000- 2006. (AFP)
We all wish former President Bill Clinton a quick recovery from the medical procedure in which two stents were inserted in a single artery. That, following his 2004
quadruple bypass, when four arteries were 90 percent clogged.
We're told that gone are Clinton's presidential days, when his dietary indulgences included regular binges on Big Macs. But it seems that Washington is still in the business of
supersizing government regulations and union power over what kids eat in our public schools.
On the one hand, I want genuinely to commend first lady Michelle Obama for her passion to launch her campaign against childhood obesity, "Let's Move." In particular,
I like the part that seeks to "mobilize public and private sector resources ... to help kids be more active, eat better, and get healthy."
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution
My concern, however, is that the first lady's nutritional quests, like Washington's health care crusade, ultimately will lead to more big-government and union-based solutions,
as well as enact more faulty legislation like the 1966 Child Nutrition Act, which the Obama administration is seeking to update, or "overhaul." (Of course, update and
overhaul in government translates into upgrade and expand; you can bet your last tax dollar on it.) (Chuck Norris, Townhall)
My 2004 Cato Policy Analysis, “Understanding Privacy — and the Real Threats to It,” talks
about how government programs intended to do good have unintended privacy costs. “The helping hand of government routinely strips away privacy before it goes to work,” I
wrote.
There could be no better illustration of that than the recent CNN report on
government collection and warehousing of American babies’ DNA. “Scientists have said the collection of DNA samples is a ‘gold mine’ for doing research,” notes a
sidebar to the story.
I have no doubt that it is—and that government-mandated harvesting of this highly valuable personal data from children is an unjust enrichment of the beneficiaries. (Cato
@ liberty)
A Review of Vegetated Buffer Efficacy - Scientists analyze the literature to
establish relationships between pollutant removal efficacy and key buffer design features.
MADISON, WI, February 15, 2010 -- Agricultural nonpoint source pollution has been listed as one of the leading sources of pollution in rivers and water bodies throughout the
world. Environmental regulators and scientists are making concerted efforts to reduce these pollutions using mitigation tools called best management practices (BMPs). As
promising and effective BMPs, vegetated buffers are gradually gaining in popularity. However, lack of quantification on their mitigation efficacies limits their implementation
in agricultural fields to reduce nonpoint source pollutions. (Press Release)
The bad weather has delayed spring by up to four weeks but when it finally does arrive it will be a stunner, gardeners said yesterday.
Temperatures have been so low for so long that plants that usually start flowering in spring are holding back to avoid being damaged by the Arctic conditions.
But the number of botanical no-shows is stacking up and when spring does arrive, gardeners expect a riot of colour in their borders.
A survey by National Trust gardeners and volunteers has shown that flowering dates have been set back by up to a month, bucking a trend for the earlier flowering seen in recent
years. (The Independent)
When Spring is "early" that's gorebull warbling but when it's "late" it's just "bad weather".
Researchers from the University of Barcelona (UB) have, for the first time, analysed all the articles published in the La Vanguardia newspaper between 1982 and 2007 linked
to natural hazards, climate change and sustainable development. Over 25 years the press devoted more headlines to forest fires and droughts, even though floods are much more
frequent and cause more damage.
"If the press focus more on forest fires and droughts, then people also become more aware of these events, to such an extent that they are deemed a more significant hazard
in the area and more frequent occurrences than they really are", Carme Llasat, main author of the article and researcher at the Department of Astronomy and Meteorology at
the UB, explains to SINC. "On the positive side, the substantial press coverage has brought about a change of attitudes in favour of saving water", explains the
expert. (FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology)
A campaign to save the eel, the continent's most threatened common freshwater fish, may be breaking down because French fishermen are exporting too many baby eels to China,
British conservationists fear.
France holds up to 90 per cent of Europe's eels, and French supplies are crucial for restocking rivers and lakes in other countries from which they are rapidly disappearing.
But in the current fishing season, which runs for another two months, French fishermen plan to export a massive 14.5 tonnes of baby eels – elvers or "glass eels"
– to China, where they can fetch the remarkable price of €800 per kilo. And in doing so, they may not be able to meet the restocking commitments which they have entered
into under an EU rescue plan for the species. (The Independent)
A £13 million UK-funded research programme has been launched to tackle damaging animal diseases such as foot-and-mouth and goat plague in developing countries. (TDT)
WASHINGTON — With much of his legislative agenda stalled in Congress, President Obama and his team are preparing an array of actions using his executive power to advance
energy, environmental, fiscal and other domestic policy priorities.
Mr. Obama has not given up hope of progress on Capitol Hill, aides said, and has scheduled a session with Republican leaders on health care later this month. But in the
aftermath of a special election in Massachusetts that cost Democrats unilateral control of the Senate, the White House is getting ready to act on its own in the face of
partisan gridlock heading into the midterm campaign.
“We are reviewing a list of presidential executive orders and directives to get the job done across a front of issues,” said Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff.
Any president has vast authority to influence policy even without legislation, through executive orders, agency rule-making and administrative fiat. And Mr. Obama’s success
this week in pressuring the Senate to confirm 27 nominations by threatening to use his recess appointment power demonstrated that executive authority can also be leveraged to
force action by Congress.
Mr. Obama has already decided to create a bipartisan budget commission under his own authority after Congress refused to do so. His administration has signaled that it plans to
use its discretion to soften enforcement of the ban on openly gay men and lesbians serving in the military, even as Congress considers repealing the law. And the Environmental
Protection Agency is moving forward with possible regulations on heat-trapping gases blamed for climate change, while a bill to cap such emissions languishes in the Senate.
(NYT)
WASHINGTON - The Chamber of Commerce is mounting a legal challenge to the Obama administration's bid to regulate greenhouse gas emissions through the Clean Air Act.
"The U.S. Chamber strongly supports efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere, but we believe there's a right way and a wrong way to achieve that
goal," said Steven Law, a legal official for the business lobby group, in a statement on the chamber's website. (Reuters)
The correct challenge is to prevent attempts to limit atmospheric carbon dioxide at all.
Now that Climategate ringleader Phil Jones has admitted that there has
been no global warming (man-made or otherwise) since at least 1995, and that the world was warmer in medieval times than now, I only have one question. Where do the so-called
global warming skeptics go to get their reputations back?
As head of the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia — their data underpins most of the claims of man-made global warming — Jones’ admission should be
the final nail in the coffin of the anti-carbon dioxide crusade of Al Gore, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), most green activist groups, industry
lobbying groups like the U.S. Climate Action Partnership (USCAP), and President Obama.
Concepts and policies like cap and trade, carbon taxes, carbon footprints, and carbon offsets all should shortly be relegated to the same ash heap of history as eugenics,
communism, Enron, and Bernie Madoff.
Secondary school students subjected to hysterical global warming propaganda — like Al Gore’s An
Inconvenient Truth — should recover quickly, if they were even paying attention in the first place. Since global warming alarmism for America’s universities was all
about the federal grant money to start with, they should have no problems switching gears as long as the money keeps flowing.
Goldman Sachs probably won’t get to profiteer from trading carbon credits. But not to worry — there’s always some new sort of financial fraud for modern Wall Streeters to
engage in just around the corner. General Electric will be forced to return to Thomas Edison-like innovation rather than lobbying for revenues and profits, but that should be
no problem after shareholders get rid of global-warming-loving CEO Jeff Immelt.
Yes, the world will inexorably move on from global warming to new crises, both real and imaginary. But before it does, the world should give credit where credit is due: to the
global warming skeptics. (PJM)
Two remarkable documents were published on the BBC website on Friday night. One is a long interview with Phil Jones conducted by Roger Harrabin. This does not seem to have
been the usual head to head affair, but written answers to written questions over a period of several days, some of them provided by sceptics. Therefore there is no scope for
Jones to claim that he was panicked into hasty responses or that he has been misquoted: (Harmless Sky)
The "mean daily temperature" CRU used is a statistically nonsensical calculation.
February 15, 2010
- by Vincent Gray
There are now admissions from Phil Jones, director of the Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia, that his “data” may be lost.
But what did this “data” actually consist of, anyway?
The only temperature measurements made at weather stations — until recently when some became “automatic” — were taken only once a day. Usually all the stations measure
are the maximum and the minimum temperatures.
But the time of day that this is done is not standardized. And the maximum usually refers to a different calendar day from the minimum.
These two figures are then averaged and called the “mean daily temperature.”
It is this quantity that gets subjected to further multiple averaging to arrive at monthly and annual figures. Eventually a “global” chart is produced, purporting to show
temperature “trends.”
So all of this is built on a foundation of sand.
If you would like to measure the average height of a group of schoolchildren, it is not much use measuring only the tallest and the shortest. Quite obviously, you will not get
a fair average from these two measurements.
Weather forecasters all know that the maximum/minimum average is inaccurate and they avoid using it, preferring to mention the separate figures. They also know that decimals of
a degree are meaningless.
Yet we have been persuaded to change our lives, the entire developed world, because a system built on such a dubious foundation shows a “warming” estimated only in decimals
of a degree over an entire century.
An amount you would never notice if such a change happened in one moment, never mind one hundred years.
Dr. Vincent Gray, founder of the New Zealand Climate Science Coalition, is an expert reviewer for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (PJM)
Jones conceded a little, but he remains unwilling to take a more objective view of climate science.
February 15, 2010
- by Alan Carlin
Phil Jones’ responses to the BBC were notable for the fact that the BBC actually asked some probing questions.
Also, Jones actually answered them.
But of more significance was that, although Jones was willing to admit some of the obvious problems with the warmist position (such as whether the 1975-98 warming is
unprecedented, and whether the Medieval Warm Period was warmer), Jones remains unwilling to take a broader and more objective view of climate science despite having had ample
time to contemplate all that has transpired.
In this, his views may be representative of many of the committed warmists central to the preparation of the IPCC reports. But this certainly is not the objective viewpoint
that the EPA — and others — should insist on in making multi-trillion dollar regulatory decisions. (PJM)
It has been a bad—make that dreadful—few weeks for what used to be called the "settled science" of global warming, and especially for the U.N.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that is supposed to be its gold standard.
First it turns out that the Himalayan glaciers are not going to melt anytime soon, notwithstanding dire U.N. predictions. Next came news that an IPCC claim that global warming
could destroy 40% of the Amazon was based on a report by an environmental pressure group. Other IPCC sources of scholarly note have included a mountaineering magazine and a
student paper.
Since the climategate email story broke in November, the standard defense is that while the scandal may have revealed some all-too-human behavior by a handful of leading
climatologists, it made no difference to the underlying science. We think the science is still disputable. But there's no doubt that climategate has spurred at least some
reporters to scrutinize the IPCC's headline-grabbing claims in a way they had rarely done previously. (WSJ)
Phil Jones, disgraced and dismissed Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), granted BBC reporter Roger Harrabin an interview. Why Harrabin? His reporting has shown
bias on all the IPCC and CRU activities. Leaked emails showed the CRU gang used friends in the BBC and that apparently continues. Prevarication, evasion, half-truths continue
in Phil Jones’ answers. Despite this there are stunning admissions from Jones. “There is a tendency in the IPCC reports to leave out inconvenient findings, especially in
the part(s) most likely to be read by policy makers.” (Tim Ball, CFP)
UNIVERSITY PARK, CENTRE COUNTY - The ongoing questioning of Climategate and Dr. Michael Mann is still heating up. Supporters of Mann think the questions have already been
answered when PSU exonerated Mann on three of the four allegations they felt had been made against the Earth Sciences Professor.
Protestors of that decision held a rally at Penn State’s HUB-Robeson Center Friday to object to what they believe is a forgery of climate research by Penn State professor Dr.
Michael Mann. The rally, which included critics of Penn State as well as Mann, was met with a counter rally by supporters of the embattled professor. (WeAreCentralPA.com)
Atop a milk crate, Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) member Samuel Settle called on Penn State to protect its reputation by conducting an outside review of meteorology
professor Michael Mann.
Armed with signs and handouts, members from at least six organizations gathered Friday to express opposing views of the climate change debate that has taken root at Penn State.
Climate change critics bundled up to brace the cold and listen to speakers, holding posters with slogans like "Mann-made Climate Change."
Since the university decided to look into Mann's research through an internal investigation, multiple groups have accused Penn State of "whitewashing" the issue by
reviewing its own professor. Calling for an outside investigation, the Penn State Young Americans for Freedom and the 9-12 Project of Central Pennsylvania used Friday's
demonstration in front of the HUB-Robeson Center as an opportunity to express their disapproval.
Settle said the inquiry -- the results of which were published in a 10-page document earlier this month -- is not what he expects from a major research university. (Daily
Collegian)
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Nearly 100 students, local leaders and residents gathered for a rally surrounding the "Climategate Controversy" on Penn State’s University
Park Campus Friday.
Two different groups rallied outside the Hetzel Union Building at noon; one group calling for an external investigation into Dr. Michael Mann’s leaked emails, the other
supporting the professor.
The rally came on the heels of released results from an internal peer investigation earlier this week.
The committee decided that there is no substantial information to pursue an investigation into three of the four misconduct allegations against Dr. Mann.
Leading the local Young Americans for Freedom group requesting an external investigation, Samuel Settle told WJAC-TV Friday that he doubts the committee of peers could be
unbiased.
“For the sake of the university, for the sake of his reputation, for the sake of our reputations as students and community members, we need to come out and make it clear to
the university that this is not what we consider acceptable,” said Settle. “We ask; we demand an external investigation of this."
Bette Jackson believes that an independent probe into academic misconduct allegations is necessary.
"I know if I were Dr. Mann, I would want impartial people to take a thorough look at my career and make sure that there were no blemishes on it," said Jackson. (WJAC
TV)
Only hours after protestors voiced their opinions on "Climategate" outside the HUB-Robeson Center, Penn State meteorology professor Michael Mann presented a
lecture on climate change to a packed auditorium in the Walker Building.
"I imagine the standing room crowd was due in part to all of the publicity, but I don't mind," Mann said. "I love talking about science to anyone who will
listen."
Penn State is currently conducting an investigation on Mann's research ethics after hundreds of illegally obtained e-mails were leaked last November from a private server in
the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia in England. Critics say these e-mails suggest Mann and his colleagues may have misrepresented climate change
evidence.
A two-month-long initial inquiry cleared Mann of three of four charges of research misconduct, but a panel of three Penn State employees decided Jan. 29 that further
investigation into whether Mann undermined "public trust in science" is necessary.
While this investigation proceeds, Mann continues his duties as a professor, saying he trusts the university to continue with the investigation responsibly. (Daily Collegian)
Weather stations which produced data pointing towards man-made global warming may have been compromised by local conditions, a new report suggests. (TDT)
DHAKA - Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Monday urged donors countries to come up quickly with promised funds to help her country limit the effects of climate
change.
World leaders pledged an initial $10 billion fund at the December climate summit in Copenhagen to help least developed countries (LDCs) most vulnerable to climate change,
particularly low-lying costal states like Bangladesh.
"Bangladesh needs quick disbursement of the fund promised in Copenhagen ... as we have already started mitigation programs," she told a donors' conference. (Reuters)
Unfortunately gorebull warbling is collapsing as more people realize it to be a blatant fraud and developed countries are simply not going to pay guilt
money for having developed. [Actually the Prime Minister is correct trying the strategy of demanding early disbursement before the scam collapses but it is unlikely to
succeed]
Back in early December, Roger L. Simon and Lionel Chetwynd called on the Motion Picture Academy to rescind their Oscar to Al Gore’s movie, which is more and more looking
like it was produced by Industrial PowerPoint and Magical Thinking: (Ed Driscoll, PJM)
Donald Trump is not a big believer in global warming. "With the coldest winter ever recorded, with snow setting record levels up and down the coast, the Nobel committee
should take the Nobel Prize back from Al Gore," the tycoon told members of his Trump National Golf Club in Westchester in a recent speech. "Gore wants us to clean up
our factories and plants in order to protect us from global warming, when China and other countries couldn't care less. It would make us totally noncompetitive in the
manufacturing world, and China, Japan and India are laughing at America's stupidity." The crowd of 500 stood up and cheered. (New York Post)
Please Sign Petition to Strip Al Gore and The UN IPCC of Their Nobel Prize and Award It Instead to The Much
More Deserving Irena Sendler
Al Gore and The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) shared a Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. Since receiving the award, a UK court has ruled that
An Inconvenient Truth, the work for which Al Gore received his half of the prize, contained nine factual errors.
Recently, it was discovered that the UN IPCC 2007 Report, the work for which the IPCC received its half of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, contained false information regarding the
risk of glacier melt, species extinction, sea-level rise and natural disaster in an effort to frighten the public and goad politicians into taking action. By signing this
petition, you are sending a clear message that you wish for Al Gore and the UN IPCC to be stripped of their 2007 award.
In signing, you are also asking that the 2007 prize to Irena Sendler who risked her life daily during WWII to ultimately rescue more than 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis.
Irena Sendler was among those up for the Prize in 2007 that the much less deserving Gore and IPCC won for political reasons.
Sir Muir Russell and his team have rejected the concerns of those of those sceptics who have questioned his suitability as a
panel member.
Sir Muir Russell said:
"This Review must determine if there is evidence of poor scientific practice, as well as investigate allegations around the manipulation and suppression of data.
"As others have pointed out, it would be impossible to find somebody with the qualifications and experience we need who has not formed an opinion on climate change.
"I am completely confident that each member of the Review team has the integrity, the expertise, and the experience to complete our work impartially."
Unfortunately it is not Sir Muir who needs to be confident of the integrity of the review team, it is the public who will be the consumers of his findings. Sir Muir said at
the start of his review that he considered it important to carry the confidence of sceptics. It seems clear now that this is not an issue that is occupying his mind any longer.
(Bishop Hill)
Well, well, well. You really can't pull the wool over Steve McIntyre's eyes can you? It turns out that the issues paper for the CRU emails review was written, not
by Sir Muir Russell, but by Professor Geoffrey Boulton, the secretary of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh, the body that is supplying the secretariat to the review, the man who works along the hall from Hockey Team staffers, the man who promotes global warming, the man
who stands in breach of the panel's own rules but refuses to stand down.
No wonder he's staying put - he's running the show.
In the comments to the CA piece, Mr Pete notes that the PDF was generated from a
Word file and that the Word file's author was Boulton too. (Bishop Hill)
Yet again, we have a situation where the data doesn’t match the full-gloss coloured graphs produced by the PR agency for global warming called the IPCC.
Frank Lansner and Nicolai Skjoldby have started a new blog Hide
The Decline,and posted that Scandinavian data shows clearly that temperatures got markedly cooler from 1950-1970, before they began rising again, and
even after the warming, they only appear to be back where they were. But, all the IPCC graphs minimize the cooling. It would be reasonable to conclude from the data that
the temperature today in Scandinavia is roughly similar to that of the 1930’s. But, you’d never know this from looking at the IPCC graphs.
Scandinavian Temperatures: 25 data series combined from The Nordklim database (left), compared to the IPCC's temperature graph for the area.
The IPCC needs to come forward and explain why its graphs are so different.
There is no “hockey stick warming” here. There is no unprecedented heat, and there is no good correlation with the rise of carbon dioxide either. Sure, this is just one
region, not the globe, but this is yet another example of how the IPCC has not presented an honest assessment of the information. More
» (Jo Nova)
More trouble looms for the IPCC. The body may need to revise statements made in its Fourth Assessment Report on hurricanes and global warming. A statistical analysis of the
raw data shows that the claims that global hurricane activity has increased cannot be supported.
Les Hatton once fixed weather models at the Met Office. Having studied Maths at Cambridge, he completed his PhD as metereologist: his PhD was the study of tornadoes and
waterspouts. He's a fellow of the Royal Meterological Society, currently teaches at the University of Kingston, and is well known in the software engineering community - his
studies include critical systems analysis.
Hatton has released what he describes as an 'A-level' statistical analysis, which tests six IPCC statements against raw data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric (NOAA)
Administration. He's published all the raw data and invites criticism, but warns he is neither "a warmist nor a denialist", but a scientist. (Andrew Orlowski, The
Register)
Climate variability affects many segments of this growing economic sector [Tourism]. For example, wildfires in Colorado (2002) and British Columbia (2003) caused tens
of millions of dollars in tourism losses by reducing visitation and destroying infrastructure (Associated Press, 2002; Butler, 2002; BC Stats, 2003).
The Air Vent:
That’s two newspaper articles and one tourism statistics newsletter. I can’t find the first two articles, one is an old AP story and the other was in a newspaper
that folded last year.
That doesn’t sound very scientific. And, in fact, the one source able to be checked - and the only one dealing with the impact of fires in British Columbia - shows no
evidence for the IPCC claim. Here is the relevant passage from
BC Stats, 2003: Tourism Sector Monitor – November 2003, British Columbia Ministry of Management Services, Victoria, 11 pp. [Accessed 09.02.07: :]http://www.bcstats.gov.bc.ca/pubs/tour/tsm0311.pdf]:
Tourism is a seasonal phenomenon. The wildfires unfortunately burned mostly during July, August and September, the three months of the year when most room revenues are
typically generated. More precisely, establishments generated 38% of their annual room revenues in these three months between 1995 and 2001. Moreover, the forest fires were
at their peak in August, also
the peak month for tourism. Despite this bad timing, the peak of the 2003 season does not appear to be lower than the peak of previous years.
The Air Vent rightly concludes:
Once again, I am not saying that their claim is wrong. I am only underlining that their sources don’t match their claims. This shows that the IPCC already had a
point of view, and they simply wanted a source to back up their claims. They found this BC Stats, probably didn’t read it because they figured it must show that fires
reduce tourism, and cited it as the source of their claim. The IPCC makes a conclusion, then looks for evidence that supports their claims, and cite it. Sometimes they even
cite evidence that doesn’t support their claims. Since no one read it for 2 years, they almost got away with it. This isn’t how a reputable scientific organization works.
Read the whole post at the first link. (Andrew Bolt)
In our previous post, we argued that ‘Without WGII and WGIII, there is no grounds for alarm’. Our point being that WGII and WGIII take certain premises for granted in
order to be able to talk about the inevitability of Nth-order effects of climate change, especially the human cost. The nature of these presuppositions is the subject of Ben’s
recent article on Spiked-Online. Briefly, confusion exists between the ideas of climate’s sensitivity to CO2 on the one hand, and society’s sensitivity to climate on
the other. (Climate Resistance)
In the video to the right, BBC’s Andrew Neil grills Chief Scientist at the Department for the Environment, Professor Robert Watson on the many many mistakes in the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change’s 2007 report.
If you want to understand why so many people have lost trust in the climate science community, due to the acts of a few, just take a look at what Real Climate has done to
spin the disaster issue regarding the IPCC. They write in a post that (emphasis
added):
WG2 did include a debatable graph provided by Robert Muir-Wood (although not in the
main report but only as Supplementary Material). It cited a paper by Muir-Wood as its source although that paper doesn’t include the graph, only
the analysis that it is based on.
As readers here well know, the analysis of the Muir-Wood mystery graph does not appear in the cited source (or any other). Real Climate's claim is easily shown to be wrong.
Perhaps they made an honest mistake. I pointed this
fact out to them and asked that they correct the error:
This statement in your post is in error:
“It cited a paper by Muir-Wood as its source although that paper doesn’t include the graph, only the analysis that it is based on.”
Real Climate has decided to leave the error uncorrected. When does an honest error become something different?
Instead of just correcting the factual record Real Climate responds to my request with the
following:
You've been working hard to scandalize your personal quibbles with IPCC here - how consistent is this with your self-proclaimed role as "honest broker"?
Lies on top of lies. Not good. If they want to understand why their community has lost so much credibility, they need only look to their own actions. (Roger Pielke Jr)
A new round of pro-global warming papers have begun to appear as the vested interests of the climate change community attempt to resuscitate their failed theory. Having been
exposed as a theory full of holes, based on uncertain, perhaps even corrupt, data and overly dependent on computer modeling for “proof,” the supporters of catastrophic
climate change are trying to rally. Amid mounting attacks on the IPCC, a small number of its leaders are trying to explain themselves to colleagues, the press and the people of
the world. Now that their highhanded, tolerate-no-dissent approach has failed, it seems some IPCC scientists are open to compromise. (The Resilient Earth)
The rate at which the oceans are becoming more acidic is greater today than at any time in tens of millions of years, according to a new study. (The Independent)
What's wrong with this scenario? Fog
over San Francisco thins by a third due to climate change - The sight of Golden Gate Bridge towering above the fog will become increasing rare as climate change warms San
Francisco bay, scientists have found.
The sight of Golden Gate Bridge towering above the fog will become increasing rare as climate change warms San Francisco bay Photo: ALAMY
The coastal fog along the Californian coast has declined by a third over the past 100 years – the equivalent of three hours cover a day, new research shows.
And it is not just bad for scenery, the reduction in the cooling effect of the fog could damage the health of the huge Redwood Forests nearby.
"Since 1901, the average number of hours of fog along the coast in summer has dropped from 56 per cent to 42 per cent, which is a loss of about three hours per day,"
said the study leader Dr James Johnstone at the University of California.
He said that it was unclear whether this is part of a natural cycle of the result of human activity, but the fog is receding because of a reduction in the difference between
the temperature of the sea and the land.
"A cool coast and warm interior is one of the defining characteristics of California's coastal climate, but the temperature difference between the coast and interior has
declined substantially in the last century, in step with the decline in summer fog," he added. (TDT)
So, the interior has warmed substantially less than the coast, contrary to every measure and hypothesis on warming because that is the only way you can get
a reduced temperature differential -- by warming the sea relative to the land and land heats far more rapidly than water. What about San Francisco's UHIE? Has that so
diminished the city is cooling relative to the seawater in the bay? The stated simplistic temperature relation would appear highly unlikely. Perhaps they should look at the
reduction in smoke particulates providing droplet nuclei over the 20th Century? Since 1901 most people have moved away from wood stove cooking and wood/coal fire
heating -- maybe clear air provides fewer fog hours?
Is the land really cooling relative to the sea over summer? The claim looks dubious on its face.
During the first two weeks of January, a record cold wave invaded Florida. It was the longest and coldest penetration of Arctic air into Florida since 1940. For the first
two weeks of 2010, West Palm Beach had an average low temperature of 39 degrees.
This month, Washington DC, Baltimore, and Philadelphia were buried under record amounts of snow. Meanwhile, another storm dropped snow on the Deep South closing schools and
highways. Dallas reported getting a foot of the white stuff, breaking that city’s 24-hour record for snowfall.
The winter of 2009-10 is rewriting the record books for cold and snow. Gee, I thought we were going to see the end of winter due to global warming -- at least that’s what
Al Gore told us. And yet, to the amazement and amusement of many we are being told that this winter’s record cold and record snowfall is due to global warming. Huh? Record
cold and record snow is because it’s getting warmer?
Here is the political spin on all this cold and snow: To defend the climate Armageddon predictions, the global warming enthusiasts have declared that warmer temperatures
introduce more moisture into the air and therefore create more snowfall. The global warming faithful say these weather extremes are a sure sign that global warming is here and
we had better change our ways because global warming is even worse than we thought! (Art Horn, Energy Tribune)
The AGU Fall meeting has a session entitled “Aspects and consequences of an unusually deep and long solar minimum”. Two hours of video of this session can be
accessed: http://eventcg.com/clients/agu/fm09/U34A.html
Two of the papers presented had interesting observations with implications for climate. First of all Solanki came to the conclusion that the Sun is leaving its fifty
to sixty year long grand maximum of the second half of the 20th century. He had said previously that the Sun was more active in the second half of the 20th
century than in the previous 8,000 years. This is his last slide:
McCracken gave a paper with its title as per this slide:
While he states that it is his opinion alone and not necessarily held by his co-authors, he comes to the conclusion that a repeat of the Dalton Minimum is most likely:
Solar Cycle 24 is now just over a year old and the next event on the solar calendar is the year of maximum, which the green corona brightness tells us will be in 2015.
As you can see in the Rutgers University maps below for mid-February, the excess snow cover is necessarily found at lower latitudes. Snow cover radiates out
from the pole, so the only place where snow extent can increase is towards the south.
The implication of the observed trend towards increasing snow extent is that
the Northern Hemisphere autumn/winter snow line is moving southwards over the last ten to twenty years.
Susan Solomon, Karen Rosenlof, Robert Portmann, John Daniel, Sean Davis, Todd Sanford, Gian-Kasper Plattner, 2010: Contributions of Stratospheric Water Vapor to Decadal
Changes in the Rate of
Global Warming. www.sciencexpress.org / 28 January 2010 / Page 1 / 10.1126/science.1182488 ( see also)
has already received considerable attention on blogs (e.g. see). [thanks to
Marcel Crok for first alerting me to the paper].
The abstract of this paper reads
“Stratospheric water vapor concentrations decreased by about 10% after the year 2000. Here we show that this acted to slow the rate of increase in global surface
temperature over 2000-2009 by about 25% compared to that which would have occurred due only to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. More limited data suggest that
stratospheric water vapor probably increased between 1980 and 2000, which would have enhanced the decadal rate of surface warming during the 1990s by about 30% compared to
estimates neglecting this change. These findings show that stratospheric water vapor represents an important driver of decadal global surface climate change.”
I have two comments on the implications of this paper:
1. This study reinforces that climate variability and change is more complex than just a response to added CO2 and a
few other human greenhouse gases. This conclusion has been emphasized in a variety of publications; e.g.
Pielke Sr., R., K. Beven, G. Brasseur, J. Calvert, M. Chahine, R. Dickerson, D. Entekhabi, E. Foufoula-Georgiou, H. Gupta, V. Gupta, W. Krajewski, E.
Philip Krider, W. K.M. Lau, J. McDonnell, W. Rossow, J. Schaake, J. Smith, S. Sorooshian, and E. Wood, 2009: Climate
change: The need to consider human forcings besides greenhouse gases. Eos, Vol. 90, No. 45, 10 November 2009, 413
and
2. The evidence that the stratospheric temperatures have not been behaving as the IPCC models have predicted (i.e. with a
more-or-less monotonic cooling in the absence of major volcanic eruptions of ash into the stratosphere) has been clear to anyone who has looked at the data.
I discussed this lack of cooling in my post
Is there Continued Stratosphere Cooling? [from March
13, 2006]. The most recent lower stratospheric data can be seen in the figure below from RSS MSU data (see
Figure 7 where since about 1995 the trend has been about flat).
The reason for the lack of a multi-year trend in the lower stratosphere since 1995 has not received the attention it
needs. Indeed, since the IPCC multi-decadal global climate models have not predicted this behavior, this is yet another reason to question the skill of their forecasts of
climate for the coming decades. (Climate Science)
The drive to cut Britain's carbon-dioxide emissions has been hit by companies' reluctance to obey new rules to reveal how much heat and light their buildings waste.
Nearly three-quarters of firms are flouting legislation requiring them to disclose energy performance details for the properties they sell or rent out, The Independent has
learnt.
The refusal to comply with the law raises fresh doubts over this country's ability to meet a European Union target of reducing emissions by at least 20 per cent by 2020. Nearly
one-fifth of UK emissions come from business and industry. (The Independent)
The boycott is down to one. A day after environmental activist group ForestEthics bragged that two major U.S. retailers - Whole Foods Market and Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. -
had agreed to spurn fuel made from oil sands bitumen, Bed Bath & Beyond is distancing itself from an effort some had described as "greenwashing." "Bed Bath
& Beyond has not 'rejected' or otherwise 'banned' our third-party transportation providers from using fuels from Canadian tar sands," the company said in a release
yesterday. "In our communication with our providers, we incorrectly communicated a desire to limit or avoid fuels from Canadian tar sands." The company has come under
fire in Alberta, where businesses and angry consumers have taken to talk radio stations and local newspaper pages to pledge their own boycott of Bed Bath & Beyond. ( Globe
and Mail)
LONDON — Touted by its supporters as the best and cheapest way to fight global warming, carbon trading is losing momentum amid the uncertainty created by the failure of
the Copenhagen summit meeting and President Barack Obama’s political troubles in the United States. (NYT)
State oil giant Saudi Aramco plans to inject carbon dioxide into the world's biggest oilfield by 2012, a year ahead of previous plans, a government official said on Monday.
The giant field Ghawar pumped 5 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2008, more than half of top oil exporter Saudi Arabia's output. The kingdom announced plans last year for a
pilot project to pump the climate-warming gas into the field to both improve production and reduce emissions. (Calgary Herald)
Well, the improving production part we are happy about...
Anadarko Petroleum Corp’s reinvigoration of Wyoming’s huge but aging Salt Creek oil field has become something of a poster child for what can be done to reduce the
environmental impact of oil production, Craig Walters, Anadarko’s general manager for Rockies enhanced oil recovery, told Greening of Oil Feb. 9. The company has been pumping
carbon dioxide into the field reservoir, using a technique known as carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery, or EOR, to increase oil production.
EOR is a win for the environment because it reduces the oil field’s surface footprint and keeps the CO2 underground, out of the atmosphere. And because it squeezes more oil
out of the ground, extending the life of the Salt Creek field, it is a win for Anadarko and the local and U.S. economy. (Alan Bailey, GoO)
EOR is definitely a major plus but the storage part of CCS, not so much. Fortunately only a relatively small proportion of the CO2 injected
during EOR is actually lost to the biosphere because you actually get about 85% of it back with the increased oil flow :)
Since you get a lot more carbon out in the oil than you lose during EOR everybody including the biosphere wins. Good on Anadarko, we say.
Brazilian government managed energy giant Petrobras announced this week that it has found oil at a well located in shallow waters of the Campos Basin. The find was made in
waters just 200 meters deep and is near massive deposits in deeper areas of Campos, which is located off the coast of Rio de Janeiro state and is the basin where 80% of
Brazil’s oil is extracted. (Merco Press)
Chevron and Repsol YPF SA will lead development of two 15 billion US dollars projects to pump and refine Venezuelan crude after winning the country’s first oil auction
since President Hugo Chavez took office 11 years ago.
Chevron, Mitsubishi Corp., Inpex Corp. and Suelopetrol CA will take a combined 40% stake in the Orinoco tar sands Carabobo 3 area, Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said in Caracas.
State-run Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA, will hold 60%. Output is scheduled to start in 2013 and rise to 400,000 barrels a day in 2016, Ramirez said.
The Carabobo projects, along with similar ventures with Eni SpA, PetroVietnam and a group of Russian companies in the neighboring Junin field, are central to Venezuelan plans
to boost oil output. The foreign companies get the opportunity to stake a claim to one of the world’s biggest oil deposits.
“Foreign oil investment is absolutely necessary to develop our reserves,” Chavez told company executives in a ceremony at the presidential palace. “We can’t do it
alone.” He said the US Geologic Survey found the Orinoco Belt has more than 500 billion barrels of recoverable crude. (Merco Press)
LONDON—The U.K. government on Monday gave tentative approval for the construction of a £600 million ($942 million) natural-gas storage facility aimed at correcting years
of government and market failure to build enough back-up capacity to keep pace with demand and to fill unexpected supply disruptions.
The planned underground facility would be the biggest built in many years in the U.K. It is expected to boost the nation's total gas storage capacity by 30% by 2014, when it is
slated to start operation, the Department of Energy and Climate Change said. (WSJ)
Wind farms are dying in the United States as the taxpayer handouts dry out:
Some say that Ka Le is haunted—and it is. But it’s haunted not by Hawaii’s legendary night marchers. The mysterious sounds are “Na leo o Kamaoa"-- the
disembodied voices of 37 skeletal wind turbines abandoned to rust on the hundred-acre site of the former Kamaoa Wind Farm…
The ghosts of Kamaoa are not alone in warning us. Five other abandoned wind sites dot the Hawaiian Isles—but it is in California where the impact of past mandates and
subsidies is felt most strongly. Thousands of abandoned wind turbines littered the landscape of wind energy’s California “big three” locations—Altamont Pass,
Tehachapin (above), and San Gorgonio—considered among the world’s best wind sites…
California’s wind farms—then comprising about 80% of the world’s wind generation capacity—ceased to generate much more quickly than Kamaoa. In the best wind
spots on earth, over 14,000 turbines were
simply abandoned. Spinning, post-industrial junk which generates nothing but bird kills...
WASHINGTON - Senate leaders have dropped from a jobs creation bill a U.S. tax credit for biodiesel, creating uncertainty for biodiesel makers, who say they need the
incentive to keep running.
A $1-a-gallon tax credit, which expired at the end of 2009, was in the first draft of the bill. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid pared back the bill on Thursday, dropping
the biodiesel tax credit, among other tax measures.
A spokeswoman said Sen Charles Grassley, the No 1 Republican on the Finance Committee, will press for action on the biodiesel credit and other so-called tax extenders. They
will be put into a Republican jobs bill or a list of amendments submitted for inclusion in Reid's bill, she said.
Reid presented a different plan of action on Thursday. He said his pared down bill would be the first of several job-creation bills, so provisions stripped from the Reid bill
would be considered later.
Senators are not expected to vote on the stripped-down bill before the week of February 22.
The U.S. Agriculture Department projects 11 percent of U.S. soybean oil will be turned into biodiesel this marketing year. (Reuters)
A "miracle" plant, once thought to be as the answer to producing renewable biofuels on a vast scale, is driving thousands of farmers in the developing world into
food poverty, a damning report concludes today.
Five years ago jatropha was hailed by investors and scientists as a breakthrough in the battle to find a biofuel alternative to fossil fuels that would not further impoverish
developing countries by diverting resources away from food production.
Jatropha was said to be resistant to drought and pests and able could grow on land that was unsuitable for food production. But researchers have found that it has increased
poverty in countries including India and Tanzania. (The Independent)
Each year, American farmers and turf managers apply some 34 million kilograms of atrazine to quash broad-leaved and grassy weeds. Most treatments go to protect corn,
sorghum, sugarcane and cotton, though golf courses sometimes tap the weed killer to maintain immaculate fairways and putting greens.
In recent years, however, questions have surfaced about atrazine’s safety, especially after monitoring programs picked up the chemical in drinking water and lab studies
demonstrated the pollutant’s ability to emasculate — if not deform — amphibians and fish. Last fall, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced it was reopening
what industry had hoped was a closed chapter on allegations in the United States of atrazine’s risks.
In a surprising turnabout, the EPA instructed its Scientific Advisory Panel on pesticides, a group of outside experts, to reevaluate the weed killer’s safety through three
meetings this year, the first of which took place earlier this month. The panel will review human data and any studies, including animal or test-tube assays, that might suggest
risks to people.
EPA admits this new review was prompted by a flurry of recent news stories and critical reports by advocacy groups, which continue to show that large numbers of people are
being exposed to atrazine through drinking water and which offer new data suggesting health concerns.
Overall, researchers concede that no smoking guns exist regarding atrazine risks. Data are suggestive, based on high-dose rodent tests, real-world wildlife exposures and
epidemiological surveys of people exposed to a mix of pollutants.
Although there have been charges that Syngenta has hidden troubling data from regulators and the public, Pastoor counters that the company’s research “is publicly
available,” and that “EPA has all of our raw data” for every study. Indeed, he says, “When we submit a study, it undergoes the kind of scrutiny that would rival an
Internal Revenue Service review.”
So regardless of the concerns that have been circulating in news accounts and reports by public interest groups, Pastoor says he’s confident that as long EPA bases its new
safety assessment on science, “any further opening up of atrazine’s scientific history is welcome.” (Science News)
Why do we keep dancing to the same old misanthropic tune of the chemical wackos? Human lifespans keep increasing and these twits keep claiming we're
poisoned, poisoned they say, by every useful compound known to man. If nothing else they are certainly tedious little blighters because they reopen the same absurd claims
every few years, regardless of the complete absence of any supporting data.
With the recent publication of Lyndall Gordon’s fascinating new biography [right] of America’s greatest, and my own favourite,
poet, Lives Like Loaded Guns: Emily Dickinson and her Family’s Feuds [Virago, London, and Penguin, New York: sample reviews here
and here],
I thought that this could be a suitable moment to reprise an ‘Essay’ I wrote some time...
“The quality of [truth-seeking] depends on a willingness to respectfully engage in open, honest, and objective debate, to challenge … our own beliefs…. As the
philosopher, economist, and Anglican bishop Richard Whately observed: ‘It is one thing to wish to have truth on our side, and another thing to wish sincerely to be on the
side of truth’.”
- Charles Koch, The Science of Success (John Wiley & Sons, 2007), p. 115. [Book review here]
A week ago I posted a tribute to Julian Simon (1932–1998) on the anniversary of his
death. The post was picked up elsewhere in the blogosphere, and I received a number of emails from academics who remarked about how much they appreciated Simon’s personal
kindness and scholarly qualities. Steve Horwitz wrote at Coordination
Problem:
[Simon] was a model of what a scholar can and should be: well-read, totally on top of the relevant data, fearless about taking on sacred cows, unafraid to be in your
face but always with a smile on his face. Plus, his boundless optimism for humanity’s future makes for a wonderful contrast to not just the doom-and-gloom of the
environmentalists, but even the doom-and-gloom of some libertarians, for whom disaster (though political not environmental) lurks just around the corner.
Plus, Simon’s bet with Ehrlich is the best example of challenging “cheap talk” ever.
Above all of that, he was a charming man who even had time for three over-eager assistant professors on a boat ride in the middle of the Mediterranean in the fall of 1994.
I know that Pete, Dave, and I would all tell you that the 45 minutes we spent chatting with Julian at the rear of that boat on a gorgeous sunny day was one of the fonder
memories we have of time spent with Big Thinkers. He was funny, charming, and gracious. And he is missed.
Yes, Simon was a true scholar who worked in a ‘challenge culture’ inside his mind. I remember how at his Houston Forum talk, “More People, Greater Wealth,
Expanded Resources, Cleaner Environment,” he was asked perhaps the hardest question of all: what do you think is the major weakness of your view. (What would your answer
be to this question?) I remember the pained expression on Simon’s face as he grabbled with that question. I just knew how hard he was trying…. (MasterResource)
How could respectable scientists armed with the same data on electromagnetic fields end up on opposite sides of the spectrum? The studies themselves are largely to blame.
The results are often ambiguous and hard to interpret. Some suggest a link between EMF and health problems, and some don't.
David Carpenter, a professor of environmental health sciences and biomedical sciences at the University at Albany, State University of New York, says he has more faith
in the studies that suggest a danger. "A positive study [that shows a link] is more believable than a negative one." (Luis Sinco, Los Angeles Times) [Em
added]
Carpenter believes and therefore that which confirms his wrong conclusions must be right... How did this fool get his parchment?
We addressed The Lancet's idiotic embrace of Andrew Wakefield in an earlier
posting. A recent HND piece examines other
lapses in editorial judgment by this once august publication.
Of special interest is their ludicrous inflation of the number of deaths in the Iraq war, an act of pure hysteria and junk science that earned them condemnation from both
doves and hawks.
It's well past time to fire the editor-in-chief Richard Horton, only don't hold your breath. The Brits have a long and sordid tradition of keeping bad people in key
positions. Does the name Kim Philby ring a bell? How about the knighted Anthony Blunt?
Young children who are regularly looked after by their grandparents have an increased risk of being overweight, an extensive British study has suggested.
Analysis of 12,000 three-year olds suggested the risk was 34% higher if grandparents cared for them full time.
Why are these kids being so-often cared for by grandparents? Is there perhaps a socioeconomic factor at work here? Kids being sent to nursery or having
employed childminders suggest the possibility of higher net household income, which in itself is associated with reduced risk of obesity.
NEW YORK - Exercise during pregnancy, while healthy for both mother and baby, has only a minor impact on an infant's birth weight, suggest findings from a large study from
Norway.
On the other hand, the findings confirm a strong association between being heavy prior to becoming pregnant and having a heavier baby, Caroline Fleten of the Norwegian
Institute of Public Health in Oslo, and colleagues report. (Reuters Health)
Most of you are familiar with the concept of good bacteria and probiotics. You probably also know what can happen to your digestive system if you are on a course of
broad-spectrum antibiotics, and forget to eat your yogurt.
Now, new research suggests that good bacteria function in priming the immune system. Since secondary infections—that is, infections that take place DURING a course of
antibiotics—are a big problem in hospitals, the hope is that this work will lead to better outcomes for immunocompromised patients.
We've mentioned the CareBot™ from Gecko Systemsbefore,
but it's just such a great idea that it deserves more coverage.
When reporters write about robotics, they often refer to industry as a prime example of successfully integrating this technology. After all, robots play a central role in
the manufacture of automobiles and other machinery so the example is an easy one—but an incomplete one.
The real revolution in robotics is in home health care. Some great apps are:
Monitoring patients
Dispensing medication
Communicating with doctors
Relaying important medical information
Gecko's CareBot™ is a home health care robot that promises to transform how we assist our loved ones. Reliable, durable and technologically advanced—the CareBot™
adapts to new surroundings and gives the peace of mind patients deserve.
Welcome to the new world of robotics! (Shaw's Eco-Logic)
At a conference on parenting at the British Library in London tomorrow, Professor Frank Furedi will outline how the politicisation of parenting is damaging family relations
and the education system. Here, we publish a preview of his comments, and his five-point programme for rescuing education from today’s meddling policymakers. (Frank Furedi,
spiked)
Phil Jones, the professor behind the "Climategate" affair, has admitted some of his decades-old weather data was not well enough organised.
He said this contributed to his refusal to share raw data with critics - a decision he says he regretted.
But Professor Jones said he had not cheated over the data, or unfairly influenced the scientific process.
He said he stood by the view that recent climate warming was most likely predominantly man-made.
But he agreed that two periods in recent times had experienced similar warming. And he agreed that the debate had not been settled over whether the Medieval Warm Period was
warmer than the current period.
These statements are likely to be welcomed by people sceptical of man-made climate change who have felt insulted to be labelled by government ministers as flat-earthers and
deniers. (Roger Harrabin, BBC News)
Translates to: "I didn't want people to know I'd made a career out of junk numbers", which is probably understandable but certainly not
forgivable. This crap is going to cost us big for years to come and the harm done to the citizens of least developed and developing nations incalculable.
I have no doubt perpetrators of this fraud should be tried for genocide and associated crimes against humanity. Even if they are simply dupes of the misanthropic watermelon
brigade that is no defense, although they should probably receive leniency in return for their testimony leading to conviction of the Greens for, what's the correct term...
anthropicide? Humanicide, perhaps? "Homicide" seems so hopelessly inadequate for a group with such self-hatred they wish to expunge humanity from the world.
Per a Phil Jones interview with the BBC, confirmation that the temperature record of the CRU is little better than a fabrication.
by Christopher Monckton
For several months, the “Monthly CO2 Reports,” compiled by me at www.scienceandpublicpolicy.org, have been pointing out
that there has been no statistically significant “global warming” for 15 years. Regular attacks on my calculations and graphs have appeared on blogs by the usual suspects
— Gavin Schmidt of NASA being, as usual, the most venomously ad hominem and the least scientifically plausible.
Then came Climategate. Kevin Trenberth, one of the many scientists whose activities I had been following with suspicion for some years, had privately been saying to his
colleagues that there had been “no global warming for a decade” and that it was “a travesty” that they could not explain why. Publicly, of course, the Climategate
conspirators had been saying that the last ten years were the warmest decade on the instrumental record — true, but not surprising given that there has been 300 years of
global warming.
Now, Professor Phil Jones of the University of East Anglia has admitted publicly, and — as far as I know — for the first time, that there has been no statistically
significant “global warming” for 15 years. He has also admitted that his Climatic Research Unit has lost much of the data behind the “hockey-stick” graph, via which
Michael Mann and other Climategate conspirators had falsely attempted to demonstrate that the Medieval Warm Period was not warmer than the present. (PJM)
Climategate U-turn as scientist at centre of row admits: There has been no global warming since 1995
Which, by the sounds of it, was the last time Jones cleaned his office:
The academic at the centre of the ‘Climategate’ affair, whose raw data is crucial to the theory of climate change, has admitted that he has trouble ‘keeping
track’ of the information.
Colleagues say that the reason Professor Phil Jones has refused Freedom of Information requests is that he may have actually lost the relevant papers.
Professor Jones told the BBC yesterday there was truth in the observations of colleagues that he lacked organisational skills, that his office was swamped with piles of
paper and that his record keeping is ‘not as good as it should be’.
The data is crucial to the famous ‘hockey stick graph’ used by climate change advocates to support the theory.
It’ll be in there somewhere, underneath lunch wrappers from 2003 and some old lottery tickets. This is interesting:
Professor Jones also conceded the possibility that the world was warmer in medieval times than now – suggesting global warming may not be a man-made phenomenon …
He said that the debate over whether the world could have been even warmer than now during the medieval period, when there is evidence of high temperatures in northern
countries, was far from settled.
Sceptics said this was the first time a senior scientist working with the IPCC had admitted to the possibility that the Medieval Warming Period could have been global,
and therefore the world could have been hotter then than now.
In the light of the ‘Climategate’ revelations, it is time for governments, academics and their media cheerleaders to be more modest in their claims and to treat
sceptics with far more courtesy.
I’ll settle for money.
UPDATE III. Mark Steyn: “Say it loud, he’s unsettled and proud.
Hide-the-decliner Phil Jones is embracing his inner decline.”
UPDATE IV. Marc Sheppard: “The statements Jones made regarding relatively recent
temperature trends … truly boggle the mind.”
UPDATE V. Good point from Ann Althouse: “Why would it just be skeptics who
would be interested in evidence of serious flaws in the science?”
UPDATE VI. Don Surber: “The whole interview — and it is done by e-mail — is very defensive and
insightful. [Jones] believes what he believes. He just can’t prove it.”
UPDATE VII. MIT’s Richard Lindzen (a sceptic) was saying almost exactly the same thing in 2008
as warmy Jones is saying now: “There has been no warming since 1997 and no statistically significant warming since 1995. Why bother with the arguments about an El Nino
anomaly in 1998?” (Tim Blair)
The United Nations is moving forward in implementing the Copenhagen Accord, setting up a high-level advisory panel Friday to mobilize climate funding for developing nations.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced today that British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Ethiopian PM Meles Zenawi will lead the panel. The group will include heads of state
and government, top officials from ministries and central banks as well as experts on public finance, development and related issues. (Clean Skies News)
If
you happen to be wandering down High Holborn in London, you will hardly notice New Penderel House but, if you did, you might catch sight of a nameplate, one of many, just
inside the lobby, announcing the London headquarters of New Energy Finance Ltd.
Apart from the name, there would no other clues as to the nature of the company, still less that it is one of the new breed of parasites living off the hype over "climate
change". Part of the Bloomberg empire, with offices in New York,
Washington and throughout the world, including Peking and Delhi, it was set up to exploit the burgeoning and totally artificial carbon market, grabbing money indiscriminately
from wherever the trail led.
And in November
2008, one of those trails led to Brussels, where the EU Commission's Directorate-General Environment kindly awarded it a €196,625 contract – excluding VAT - to analyse
the carbon market.
This is but one example of the torrent of money – provided by increasingly unwilling taxpayers – which is pouring out of Brussels, filling the coffers of disparate
commercial companies, research institutes, academia and even public relation companies, all under the generic heading of "climate change" and closely related matters.
As with the UK government though, the spending is so fragmented and dispersed in the budgets of different spending departments (or Directorate-Generals – DGs – as they are
called in Brussels) that it is virtually impossible to get a clear idea of quite how much money is being spent. But, by following the trail of contracts awarded by the
Commission for work related to climate change, it is clear that hundreds of millions, running into billions of euros, is pouring out of the system. (Richard North, EU
Referendum)
2-12-10 Sen. James Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, spoke from the Senate floor asking Rajendra Pachauri to respond directly to the Senate on reports his organization, the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, published reports on climate change with errors. Inhofe calls it a "crisis of confidence" in the IPCC. Pachauri has denied
the claims. (Clean Skies)
Remember when the far-green fringe went bat-stuff crazy over a simple call by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce for a review of evidence used to allow the Environmental
Protection Agency to regulate carbon dioxide? You would have thought someone was going after a sacred cow … which, of course, is how quasi-religious zealots reacted when the
cow was their beloved global warming.
Now that there’s been a torrent of utterly humiliating (and alternately amusing) stories of green groups cooking the books, the public conversation has more or less left
the Chamber behind (which, we’re sure, is not a bad thing for them).
The wrong way is through the EPA’s endangerment finding, which triggers Clean Air Act regulation. Because of the huge potential impact on jobs and local economies, this
is an issue that requires careful analysis of all available data and options. Unfortunately, the agency failed to do that and instead overreached. The result is a flawed
administrative finding that will lead to other poorly conceived regulations further downstream.
AN EMINENT Scottish scientist is facing calls to resign from the "climategate" inquiry, amid concerns over his impartiality
Only 24 hours after another panel member quit, questions emerged over Professor Geoffrey Boulton because of his previous views that climate change is caused by human activity.
The investigation was set up to look into whether scientists at the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) covered up flawed data.
But some have cast doubt on whether the inquiry results can be trusted if Prof Boulton, general secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, remains on the panel.
The leading geologist was one of five people chosen by former University of Glasgow principal Sir Muir Russell to carry out the high-profile investigation. A statement released
at the launch of the inquiry on Thursday said none of the panel members had a "predetermined view on climate change and climate science".
It added: "They were selected on the basis they have no prejudicial interest in climate science."
However, The Scotsman can reveal that only a few months ago, Prof Boulton, from the University of Edinburgh, was among a number of scientists who, in the wake of the
climategate scandal, signed a petition to show their confidence that global warming was caused by humans. And for at least five years, he has made clear his strong views on
global warming. He has given interviews and written articles – including in The Scotsman – that have spelled out his firmly held beliefs.
In one article for Edinburgh University, he wrote: "The argument regarding climate change is over." And for 18 years, he worked at the University of East Anglia (UEA)
– the establishment at the centre of the scandal. (The Scotsman)
The back-to-back snowstorms in the capital were an inconvenient meteorological phenomenon for Al Gore.
"It's going to keep snowing in D.C. until Al Gore cries 'uncle'," Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) exulted on Twitter.
Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) posted photos on Facebook of "Al Gore's New Home" -- a six-foot igloo the Inhofe family built on Capitol Hill.
"Where is Al Gore?" taunted Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.).
"He has not been seen since the snow and the arctic blast have pummeled the Eastern Seaboard in America, turning it into a frozen tundra," reported Fox News's Glenn
Beck, who also tastefully suggested hari-kari for climate scientists.
As a scientific proposition, claiming that heavy snow in the mid-Atlantic debunks global warming theory is about as valid as claiming that the existence of John Edwards debunks
the theory of evolution. In fact, warming theory suggests that you'd see trends toward heavier snows, because warmer air carries more moisture. This latest snowfall, though, is
more likely the result of a strong El Niño cycle that has parked the jet stream right over the mid-Atlantic states.
Still, there's some rough justice in the conservatives' cheap shots. In Washington's blizzards, the greens were hoisted by their own petard. (Dana Milbank, Washington Post)
So, absurd weather claims, inter alia, were fine while watermelons were winning but now some facts are escaping and the weather doesn't suit the narrative
it's time for a change in tactic?
Did AGW zealots claim gorebull warbling would reduce or even eliminate winter snow? Of course they did:
Britain's winter ends tomorrow with further indications of a striking environmental change: snow is starting to disappear from our lives.
Sledges, snowmen, snowballs and the excitement of waking to find that the stuff has settled outside are all a rapidly diminishing part of Britain's culture, as warmer winters
- which scientists are attributing to global climate change - produce not only fewer white Christmases, but fewer white Januaries and Februaries.
The first two months of 2000 were virtually free of significant snowfall in much of lowland Britain, and December brought only moderate snowfall in the South-east. It is the
continuation of a trend that has been increasingly visible in the past 15 years: in the south of England, for instance, from 1970 to 1995 snow and sleet fell for an average
of 3.7 days, while from 1988 to 1995 the average was 0.7 days. London's last substantial snowfall was in February 1991. (Charles Onians, The Independent, March 20, 2000)
Not even 30 inches of snow falling on Washington has discredited claims of "global warming," the belief that human activity is appreciably warming our planet. Of
course, a single snowstorm does not disprove global warming. Weather is not the same as climate. But even after a decade of unexpectedly cool temperatures, global-warming
alarmists still show no skepticism. Skepticism is a core value of science.
In "1984," George Orwell wrote about Big Brother (government) being so powerful that it can persuade people to believe things contrary to their senses. It even can
convince them that two plus two is not equal to four.
Eventually the truth will out. When global warming finally is recognized as the world's greatest political hoax, those discredited will not be the perpetrators.
The perpetrators are politicians and traditional media. After the credibility bubble bursts, the same politicians and media will continue to influence what the public is told.
They will effectively claim that they never misled anyone. The fall guy will be science.
Lost in the confusion will be the distinction between science and the scientific community.
The scientific community has largely abandoned science. It has degenerated into little more than just another lobbying group seeking advancement for its members. (Leonard
Evans, Washington Times)
You can't even find your car on the street, the kids have been out of school for days, and "blizzard conditions" is now standard weatherman talk in the
D.C.-Baltimore region. So if global warming is happening, why in the world are we literally buried in snow?
It's a good question, and thankfully, the answer is pretty straightforward. In fact, the growing pattern of extreme snowfall in our region has the fingerprints of climate
change all over it -- even as temperatures steadily rise across America and the world. ( Mike Tidwell, Baltimore Sun)
Just one teency gaping flaw in the above assertion: only the very low altitude atmosphere shows any moistening while anywhere above about 2500 feet
(i.e., much of the continental land masses), has shown a drying trend.
We've laid out the atmospheric moisture time series for you here. Check it out or simply cut to the chase with
our summary:
So, what do these time series tell us?
To begin with, what atmospheric moistening is believed to have occurred is at altitudes basically well below the surface altitudes of the major ice shields, Greenland and the
East & West Antarctic and much of Earth's land surfaces.
Secondly, the atmospheric region of most interest from a weather/climate perspective appears to be on a drying trend, contrary to that expected under the enhanced greenhouse
hypothesis.
Simply eyeballing the time series suggests the 1977 Pacific phase shift is a much better fit with changes in trends than is the steady increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Bottom line is that the regions climate models are programmed to expect atmospheric moistening are not actually doing so, making either the models or the atmosphere wrong.
None of the above time series leads to a plausible conclusion that we should anticipate any increase in weather activity.
Global-warming skeptics were hit with numerous setbacks over the past few years - from a major 2007 U.N. report that seemingly confirmed the warming crisis, to Al Gore's
popularization of this gloomy message through his book and Oscar-winning documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth."
And let's not forget the shifting political winds that elected a greener Congress and brought in an administration that made climate change a priority.
But now those skeptics are facing a new challenge: overconfidence.
That's because everything of late has been breaking their way.
OK, overconfidence may be an exaggeration, but the wheels are really coming off the global-warming cart. (Ben Lieberman, Washington Times)
Photo adapted from Ron Neibrugge’s beautifully crisp original at Wild Nature Images
This is it: The dam wall is breached.
There are defining moments in any era, and we are right now in the midst of the Great Collapse.
Open Magazine's
"Hottest Hoax in the World"
Cover Issue
Jan 30, 2010: the hottest hoax
The weekend before last, a magazine cover called it Fraud. This could have been New Scientist, Scientific American, Discover, or any of the
other popular science magazines, but it wasn’t. They were all scooped by an Indian publication, Open
Magazine, that had only been running for a year.
The climate change fraud that is now unraveling is unprecedented in its deceit, unmatched in scope—and for the liberal elite, akin to 9 on the
Richter scale. Never have so few fooled so many for so long, ever.
The entire world was being asked to change the way it lives on the basis of pure hyperbole. Propriety, probity and transparency were routinely
sacrificed.
Feb 2, 2010: the Australian abandons the IPCC and the ETS
Wednesday afternoon, the sky over New York City was a falling sheet of white. Temperatures had dropped sharply and the blizzard was underway. But nowhere in the city was the
blizzard more pronounced than in Central Park, which had been designed in the 19th century to create a miniature forest in the heart of one of the biggest cities in the world.
The trees were layered with coats of snow and visibility had vanished into a cloud of whiteness. And walking along a path in the Ramble, I heard a woman lecturing her children
on the dangers of what else, but Global Warming.
There is a kind of madness to walking through a blizzard, while wearing a thick coat and picking the moment to discuss Global Warming. A theory according to which we should be
sliding toward the tropics, awash in fleeing polar bears and Florida style temperatures, instead of frantically shoveling our driveways. Such an attitude has very little to do
with science, and a great deal to do with faith. Because while the scientist sees what is and evaluates it based on the available evidence, the believer has faith in what he
cannot see. And to see Global Warming while walking through a blizzard, is itself an act of faith. (Daniel Greenfield, RSN)
The Western Climate Initiative’s cap and trade market may soon need to be renamed The Canada Climate Initiative.
Until this week, the Western Climate Initiative boasted seven U.S. states and four Canadian provinces who were working toward the launch of a regional cap and trade system
on Jan 1, 2012. On Thursday, Arizona formally announced it was backing out of cap and trade. As the state with the fastest rate of emission growth -- 61% between 1990 and
2007 – many feared a body blow to Arizona’s economy if it tried to meet the initiative’s carbon reduction goals.
The following morning neighbouring Utah indicated it might follow suit. By a 6 to 2 vote, its House Committee on Public Utilities and Technology passed a nonbinding
resolution to urge Governor Gary Herbert to pull out of the Western Climate Initiative. Earlier in the week, the full Utah House voted resoundingly – 56 to 17 – to curb any
carbon-curbing attempts by the federal government’s Environmental Protection Agency. Specifically, the resolution “urges the United States Environmental Protection Agency
to halt its carbon dioxide reduction policies and programs and with its ‘Endangerment Finding’ and related regulations until a full and independent investigation of the
climate data conspiracy and global warming science can be substantiated.”
To date, only four of the 11 jurisdictions have adopted legislation that would allow them to participate in the cap-trade-market: California, British Columbia, Ontario and
Quebec, with Manitoba appearing close to joining.
Oregon, Washington, Montana and New Mexico have not yet adopted cap-and-trade legislation and now California, which is tottering toward bankruptcy, has become iffy: A voter
initiative in California, if it passes in November, would halt the cap-and-trade program until unemployment falls to 5.5%.
The upshot? By the end of the year, the only jurisdictions left in the Western Climate Initiative’s cap and trade program could be the Canadian provinces (Financial Post)
The United Nations climate panel faces a new challenge with scientists casting doubt on its claim that global temperatures are rising inexorably because of human pollution.
In its last assessment the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the evidence that the world was warming was “unequivocal”.
It warned that greenhouse gases had already heated the world by 0.7C and that there could be 5C-6C more warming by 2100, with devastating impacts on humanity and wildlife.
However, new research, including work by British scientists, is casting doubt on such claims. Some even suggest the world may not be warming much at all.
“The temperature records cannot be relied on as indicators of global change,” said John Christy, professor of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville, a former lead author on the IPCC.
The doubts of Christy and a number of other researchers focus on the thousands of weather stations around the world, which have been used to collect temperature data over the
past 150 years.
These stations, they believe, have been seriously compromised by factors such as urbanisation, changes in land use and, in many cases, being moved from site to site.
Christy has published research papers looking at these effects in three different regions: east Africa, and the American states of California and Alabama.
“The story is the same for each one,” he said. “The popular data sets show a lot of warming but the apparent temperature rise was actually caused by local factors
affecting the weather stations, such as land development.” (Jonathan Leake, Sunday Times)
Ever more question marks have been raised in recent weeks over the reputations of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and of its chairman, Dr Rajendra
Pachauri. But the latest example to emerge is arguably the most bizarre and scandalous of all. It centres on a very specific scare story which was included in the IPCC's 2007
report, although it was completely at odds with the scientific evidence – including that produced by the British expert in charge of the relevant section of the report. Even
more tellingly, however, this particular claim has repeatedly been championed by Dr Pachauri himself.
Only last week Dr Pachauri was specifically denying that the appearance of this claim in two IPCC reports, including one of which he was the editor, was an error. Yet it has
now come to light that the IPCC, ignoring the evidence of its own experts, deliberately published the claim for propaganda purposes. (TDT)
OSLO - The U.N. panel of climate experts overstated how much of the Netherlands is below sea level, according to a preliminary report on Saturday, admitting yet another flaw
after a row last month over Himalayan glacier melt. (Reuters)
“I don't believe the vast majority of climate scientists think this. This is not my view. There is still much that needs to be undertaken to reduce uncertainties, not just
for the future, but for the instrumental (and especially the palaeoclimatic) past as well.” [Professor Phil Jones (pictured right) answering questions put to him by the
BBC’s Roger Harrabin (left) in a key interview, in this...
there have been natural periods of warming and cooling
MWP could have been warmer than the present
data supporting the hockey stick don't exist, at least not now.
Roger Harrabin wrote his interview with Phil Jones as questions and answers and Jones
basically confirms every single statement that the informed skeptics have been making for years. (The Reference Frame)
Currently
standing at 476, the comments on the Mail
on Sunday piece on Phil Jones must be close to a record.
With the commentary from Anthony Watts
on the original interview, with Roger Harrabin, there can be no doubt that something remarkable has just happened.
Add to that Jonathan Leake's piece in The Sunday Times, headed
"World may not be warming, say scientists", then mix in with the article in The
Daily Mail today – which refers to the Leake piece – and the indications are that we are close to, if not at, a tipping point.
Factor in the The Daily Express lead story and the front page (pictured) and the piece in
The Times, where Bob Watson argues that the IPCC must
nvestigate an apparent bias in its report that resulted in several exaggerations of the impact of global warming. Then look at the crumbling edifice of the Muir inquiry into
the CRU, under further attack from Steve McIntyre. It is evident that the temples of
the global warming creed are tottering.
And, while this sustained attack on WGI data goes on, Booker ploughs
his solitary furrow, sustaining the attack on WGII and its co-chair Martin Parry. However, an unrepentant Parry comes out of hiding today in The
Guardian, clearly unaware of how much the tide has turned.
This signals that there is a long way to go before the institutional inertia supporting the global warming industry can be overturned, and the lack of political engagement by
the Conservatives is a major handicap. Until and unless this issue goes political, there is little to sustain it in the long run. Without that political traction, skeptics will
find it hard to keep up the momentum, feeding fresh stories to the media. The campaign could falter.
Thus, it is also essential that the two-front campaign is kept up. Rightly, the focus is on Jones at the moment, but the weak links of Pachauri and Parry must also be kept
under pressure. Not for nothing are they trying to hold the line as they seem to appreciate, perhaps more than some on our own side, where the danger lies.
In this, "Africagate" is a gaping hole in the IPCC – the chance to extract another, and possibly fatal – admission of error. WGI and Jones may be
"Normandy" but "Africagate" is the Eastern Front. And two fronts, not one, are needed to defeat this enemy. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
If there’s one thing that stinks even more than Climategate, it’s the attempts we’re seeing everywhere from the IPCC and Penn State University to the BBC to pretend
that nothing seriously bad has happened, that “the science” is still “settled”, and that it’s perfectly OK for the authorities go on throwing loads more of our money
at a problem that doesn’t exist.
The latest example of this noisome phenomenon is Sir Muir Russell’s official whitewash – sorry “independent inquiry” into the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) scandal.
(James Delingpole, TDT)
From the same Times article discussed in the last posting, a statement from Professor
Geoffrey Boulton on the furore over his combining a position on the CRU emails review and role as a global warming activist.
Sir Muir issued a statement last week claiming that the inquiry members, who are investigating leaked e-mails from the University of East Anglia, did not have a
“predetermined view on climate change and climate science”.
Professor Boulton told The Times: “I may be rapped over the knuckles by Sir Muir for saying this, but I think that statement needs to be clarified. I think the
committee needs someone like me who is close to the field of climate change and it would be quite amazing if that person didn’t have a view on one side or the other.”
This is quite extraordinary. How was it that the review went public with a statement that the panellists' views on climate change were not predetermined when one of the
panellists openly admits that his views are just that? Did Sir Muir check the views of the panellists before he published this statement on the official website? What did
Professor Boulton tell him then? For that matter, what did Philip Campbell say? We need answers to these questions because either Sir Muir has not checked to ensure that his
panellists are independent or someone has not been telling the truth.
The Russell review is rapidly turning into a farce. (Bishop Hill)
Please Sign Petition to Strip Al Gore and The UN IPCC of Their Nobel Prize and Award It Instead to The Much
More Deserving Irena Sendler
Al Gore and The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) shared a Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. Since receiving the award, a UK court has ruled that
An Inconvenient Truth, the work for which Al Gore received his half of the prize, contained nine factual errors.
Recently, it was discovered that the UN IPCC 2007 Report, the work for which the IPCC received its half of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, contained false information regarding the
risk of glacier melt, species extinction, sea-level rise and natural disaster in an effort to frighten the public and goad politicians into taking action. By signing this
petition, you are sending a clear message that you wish for Al Gore and the UN IPCC to be stripped of their 2007 award.
In signing, you are also asking that the 2007 prize to Irena Sendler who risked her life daily during WWII to ultimately rescue more than 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis.
Irena Sendler was among those up for the Prize in 2007 that the much less deserving Gore and IPCC won for political reasons.
British Council gets in on
the climate act - Why is the British Council spending taxpayers' money on the recruiting of 100,000 "international climate champions", asks Christopher Booker
Last December, our television screens were filled with scenes of young demonstrators from all over the world parading through the streets of Copenhagen to call for action to
halt global warming. Few people will have been aware, though, that they were being funded with the aid of millions of pounds from British taxpayers. What makes this even more
curious is that the money was provided by a body set up to promote British culture internationally.
Last Sunday, when I reported on some of the ways in which an array of British ministries have poured hundreds of millions of pounds into projects related to climate change, I
overlooked one branch of government which has been as active in the cause of saving the planet as any – the British Council, created more than 70 years ago to stage lectures
on Shakespeare and Jane Austen, and to spread the use of the English language.
In recent years, however, on the initiative of Lord Kinnock when he was its chairman, the British Council has been hijacked to promote the need for action on climate change. In
answer to a Freedom of Information request, we can now see some of the curious ways in which the British Council has been spending our money. (TDT)
Cash-strapped
Gordon Brown is buying £60,000,000-worth of "carbon credits" for Whitehall and other government offices in the UK, as well as British Nato bases in Europe.
While the rest of the country shivers in the cold, with householders wondering whether they can afford their mounting heating bills – inflated by hidden "carbon
taxes" to pay for the carbon emissions produced - bureaucrats in their centrally-heated government offices can keep producing "greenhouse gasses", their
emissions paid-for by British taxpayers.
The details, which were not announced publicly, emerged last week on the EU's
official website, announcing a contract to Barclays Capital PLC to buy the credits on behalf of the government's buying agency in Liverpool.
They will be bought under the UN's Kyoto protocol "clean development mechanism" (CDM) which allows from third world countries using carbon-reducing schemes such as
windfarms to sell "credits" for the carbon dioxide they save – worth approximately £12 a tonne. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
Critics of the science behind man-made global warming theories are playing "Russian roulette with the planet", the new head of the controversial unit at the centre
of the "climategate" storm has warned. (TDT)
[Illustrations, footnotes and references available in PDF version]
In August last year, the National Resources Defense Council released a film “documentary” claiming that CO2 is turning the oceans to acid: It was funded by the
Entertainment industry foundation1, and has the title, “Acid Test: The Global Challenge of Ocean Acidification”. This is SPPI’s second published analysis. (Science and
Public Policy)
Image: La Niña is characterized by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the central equatorial Pacific. The colder than normal water is depicted in this image in blue.
During a La Niña stronger than normal trade winds bring cold water up to the surface of the ocean. Credit: NASA
Perform a Google Scholar search for documents including “El Nino” in quotes and there will be more than 200,000 results. On the
other hand, “La Nina” will only raise 26,000+. Granted, the formal name of the coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon in the tropical Pacific is “El Nino-Southern
Oscillation”, but that in quotes only returns 28,000+ results. So it appears that El Nino events do get much more “press” from the scientific community than La Nina
events.
Figure 1 is a time-series graph of NINO3.4 SST anomalies from January 1979 to January 2010. El Nino events are a warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific so they
are displayed as a Positive SST anomaly, where La Nina events are a Negative. Visually, is the eye drawn to the upward spikes more than it is to the downward troughs? El Nino
events are viewed as being larger in magnitude than La Nina events. NINO3.4 SST anomalies peaked at approximately 2.8 deg C during the Super El Nino events of 1982/83 and
1997/98, while the La Nina events that followed them failed to reach -2 deg C. But the La Nina events of 1988/89 and 2007/08 were stronger than the El Nino events that preceded
them. (Refer to the note about base years at the end of this post.) Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Interior Department on Thursday issued the final terms for leasing almost 37 million acres in the central Gulf of Mexico to energy companies so they
can drill for oil and natural gas.
The area to be leased may hold up to 1.3 billion barrels of crude oil and 5.4 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to the department, which is also shortening the time that
companies would have to develop the tracts. (Reuters)
When it comes to energy issues, Thomas Friedman simply doesn’t care about the facts.
That reality was made apparent, once again, in Friedman’s column in the February 10 issue of the New
York Times. In an otherwise mostly sensible article, written from Yemen, where Friedman was talking about the need for proper educational opportunity in the Arabic and
Islamic worlds, Friedman concluded that the US will have to maintain a strong military presence in the region in order to counter al-Qaeda. But he continues, we also must
“help build schools and fund scholarships to America wherever we can. And please, please, let’s end our addiction to oil, which is what gives the Saudi religious ministry
and charities the money to spread anti-modernist thinking across this region.”
Friedman has been bashing the Saudis for so long, it’s hardly worth recounting the many instances where he does so. But the fact that Friedman once again trots out the
tired cliché of our “addiction to oil” and that he then immediately ties that issue to the Saudis shows that he simply doesn’t know what he’s talking about. Rather
than stick to the facts, he retreats to a mindless slogan that contributes nothing to the need for a broader discussion of energy policy and the reality of the global
marketplace. (Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune)
VLISSINGEN, Netherlands - The Dutch will not meet their renewable energy targets unless they speed up approval of wind farms, while nuclear energy has a key role to play in
energy supply, utility Delta said on Friday.
The Netherlands will miss its target of sourcing 20 percent of its energy from renewables by 2020 unless it cuts bureaucracy surrounding the licensing of wind parks, Peter
Boerma, the unlisted Dutch utility's chief executive, told Reuters.
"Permits are the biggest problem, bigger than any reduction in subsidies," Boerma said. "Of course we also need subsidies, in onshore and offshore wind. Offshore
wind technology is not yet fully established, this is my personal view."
Delta is also pressing on with plans for a second nuclear power station near its existing one at Borssele, despite a decommissioning trend in the Netherlands that has led to
the Dutch generating only 4 percent of their electricity from nuclear.
The Dutch government has said that no new plants would be built during its mandate, which runs until 2011. (Reuters)
The 1997 UN meetings in Japan about climate issues did more than give birth to the term “Kyoto Protocol” they also created the concept of “carbon capital.” And over
the past few years, no other country has capitalized on that concept more than China, which is collecting major subsidies from the international community for its energy
projects.
Here’s how it works: The amount of the carbon capital is determined by using a new alphabet soup of UN bureaucratese, specifically, the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
which issues Certified Emissions Reductions (CERs). The idea behind the CDM is fairly simple: industrialized countries who need to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions can
invest in projects that lower emissions in developing countries rather than cut emissions in their own. In theory, this allows overall global emissions to be reduced at a lower
cost.
The CDM is part of what some forecasters expect could be a booming international market in carbon trading and offsets. The World Bank has projected that the global carbon
trading market could be worth $150 billion by 2012.
Does the CDM process work? If it does, there’s no evidence of it from the numbers. (Xina Xie and Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune)
BRUSSELS - Fresh controversy is mounting within the European Union over biofuels and their unintended impact on tropical forests and wetlands, documents show.
One leaked document from the EU's executive, the European Commission, suggests biofuel from palm oil might get a boost from new environmental criteria under development.
But another contains a warning from a top official that taking full account of the carbon footprint of biofuels might "kill" an EU industry with annual revenues of
around $5 billion.
The European Union aims to get a tenth of its road fuels from renewable sources by the end of this decade, but has met with criticism that biofuels can force up food prices and
do more harm than good in the fight against climate change.
Most of the 10 percent goal will be met through biofuels, creating a market coveted by EU farming nations, which produce about 10 billion liters a year, as well as exporters
such as Brazil, Malaysia and Indonesia.
Environmentalists say biofuels made from grains and oilseeds are forcing farmers to expand agricultural land by hacking into rainforests and draining wetlands -- known as
"indirect land-use change" (ILUC). (Reuters)
A man asks for a plastic bag at the supermarket checkout. Next thing you know, his head's slammed against the counter, and he's being cuffed by the Green Police. "You
picked the wrong day to mess with the ecosystem, plastic boy," the enviro-cop sneers as the perp is led away. Cut to more Green Police going through your trash, until they
find - a battery! "Take the house!" the eco-commando orders. And we switch to a roadblock on a backed-up interstate, with the Green Police prowling the lines of
vehicles to check to see if they're in environmental compliance.
If you watched the Super Bowl, you most likely saw this commercial. As my comrade Jonah Goldberg noted, up until this point, you might have assumed it was a fun message from a
libertarian think tank warning of the barely veiled totalitarian tendencies of the eco-nanny-state. Anytime now, you figured, some splendidly contrarian type - perhaps Clint
Eastwood in his famous Gran Torino - would come roaring through, flipping the bird at the storm troopers and blowing out their tires for good measure. But instead, the
Greenstapo stumble across an Audi A3 TDI. "You're good to go," they tell the driver, and, with the approval of the state enforcers, he meekly pulls out of the stalled
traffic and moves off. Tagline: "Green has never felt so right."
So, the message from Audi isn't, "You are a free man. Don't bend to the statist bullies," but, "Resistance is futile. You might as well get with the
program."
Strange. Not so long ago, car ads prioritized liberty. Your vehicle opened up new horizons: Gitcha motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure.
To sell dull automobiles to people who lived in suburban cul-de-sacs, manufacturers showed them roaring around hairpin bends, forging deep into forests, splashing through
rivers, zooming across the desert plain, invariably coming to rest on the edge of a spectacular promontory on the roof of the world offering a dizzying view of half the planet.
Freedom!
But now Audi flogs its vehicles on the basis that it's the most convenient way to submit to arbitrary state authority. Forty years ago, when the company first began selling
over here, it's doubtful it would have considered this either a helpful image for a German car manufacturer or a viable pitch to the American male. (Mark Steyn, Washington
Times)
WASHINGTON - H1N1 swine flu has killed as many as 17,000 Americans, including 1,800 children, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday.
The swine flu pandemic put as many people into the hospital as during the normal influenza season - but most were younger adults and children instead of the elderly, and it was
during the months when usually very little or no flu is circulating, the CDC said.
"CDC estimates that between 41 million and 84 million cases of 2009 H1N1 occurred between April 2009 and January 16, 2010," the agency said in a statement. Usually
the CDC goes with a middle number, which is about 57 million people infected.
Between 8,330 and 17,160 people died during this time from H1N1, with a middle range of about 12,000, CDC said. But between 880 and 1,800 children died, up to 13,000 adults
under the age of 65 and only 1,000 to 2,000 elderly.
In a normal flu season, the CDC estimates that 36,000 Americans die of flu but 90 percent are over the age of 65. CDC estimates that 200,000 go into the hospital, again mostly
the elderly.
The swine flu pandemic has affected much younger people.
The CDC estimate shows that between 183,000 and 378,000 people were hospitalized with H1N1 swine flu from April to January. (Reuters)
LONDON - Expensive extra scans using MRI on breast cancer patients make no difference to the number of patients who have a repeat operation, scientists said on Friday,
raising questions about whether the scans are worth it.
A study of 1,623 women with breast cancer found that those who have a conventional triple assessment of their cancer are no more likely to be told they need a repeat operation
than those assessed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as well.
"Our results have important implications in routine clinical practice for the appropriate use of health-service resources and patient burden on health services," said
Lindsay Turnbull of Britain's Hull University and Hull Royal Infirmary, who led the study. "MRI is an expensive procedure."
Turnbull said that since the use of MRI scans in breast cancer patients is similar in many countries worldwide, her findings should be taken into account by all health
authorities.
"We believe that our findings are generalisable to all healthcare providers, and show that MRI might not be necessary in this population of patients in terms of reduction
of reoperation rates," she wrote in the Lancet medical journal. (Reuters)
NEW YORK - Exposure to certain types of pesticides could up the risk of thyroid disease in women, according to a new study of thousands of women married to licensed
pesticide applicators.
Problems with the thyroid gland are more common among women than men, Dr. Whitney S. Goldner of the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha and colleagues note in their
report. The thyroid is located at the base of the throat and plays an important role in regulating the body's energy use.
There is growing evidence for a link between exposure to pesticides and thyroid problems, the authors note. They studied more than 16,500 women living in Iowa and North
Carolina who were married to men seeking certification to use restricted pesticides in those states during the 1990s.
Overall, 12.5 percent of the women reported having thyroid disease; 7 percent had underactive thyroid glands (hypothyroidism) and 2 percent had overactive thyroids
(hyperthyroidism).
In the general population, Goldner and colleagues point out, the rate of diagnosed thyroid disease ranges from around 1 percent to 8 percent.
When they looked at 44 different pesticides, they found that women married to men who had ever used organochlorine insecticides -- such as aldrin, DDT, and lindane -- were 1.2
times as likely to have hypothyroidism. (Some of these pesticides are no longer used in the U.S. and elsewhere, although lindane is available in some states as a treatment for
head lice.) (Reuters Health)
BRUSSELS - You may need a sunbed to get that especially fine tan over this long winter, but the EU warned on Friday that some tanning beds and operators violate safety
regulations, putting users at risk of skin cancer.
The European Union's executive arm said on Friday that just over 14 percent of sunbeds violate radiation safety limits and that tanning salons often fail to warn clients of the
dangers of UV radiation while using the appliances.
"I am concerned that a high percentage of sunbeds and sunbed services were found not to respect safety rules," EU Consumer Affairs Commissioner John Dalli said in a
statement.
"This is an important health concern since the incidence of skin cancer is doubling every 15-20 years," he said.
Tanning beds have been ranked one of the greatest cancer threats to humans by an international research group.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified the ultra-violet-emitting beds in its highest cancer risk category, labelling them "carcinogenic to
humans". (Reuters Life!)
NEW YORK - A study in nearly 70,000 pregnant women has found no link between migraine drugs called triptans and the risk of birth defects.
However, the researchers did find a "slight increase" in the risk of excessive bleeding during labor, and the failure of the uterus to contract normally after
delivery, for women who used the drugs while pregnant.
Triptans are among the most powerful drugs used for migraine; others include aspirin, Excedrin, and ibuprofen.
While as many as three in 10 women may develop migraines during their childbearing years, women often shy away from using such drugs during pregnancy because of safety
concerns, according to study co-author Katerina Nezvalova-Henriksen of the University of Oslo in Norway and her colleagues.
However, the authors of the study in Headache note, untreated migraine may itself carry risks for mother and child; some studies have linked it to pre-eclampsia, a potentially
deadly pregnancy complication.
"While it is important to exert caution when using any medications during pregnancy, this study indicates" that pregnant women can either start or continue taking
triptans without "any major risk" of miscarriage, premature delivery, or other bad outcomes, the authors conclude. (Reuters Health)
Should there be restrictions on the amount of sodium in processed and restaurant foods? Many public health advocates think so. They argue that people consume excessive
amounts of sodium without even knowing it and mandatory restrictions would reduce the number of heart attacks, strokes, and even deaths that result from all that salty food.
But does the available research justify a population-wide restriction on sodium in food? Not quite, says Michael H. Alderman from the Department of Epidemiology and Population
Health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. (Scientific Blogging)
Low-carb beer has been branded an "insidious health risk" by a doctor who says it could encourage more drinking and, take note girls, it does little to prevent a
beer gut.
Diet conscious drinkers have flocked to beers like Foster's Pure Blonde and Bluetongue's Bondi Blonde which make much of their low-carbohydrate credentials, says addiction
expert Dr Peter Miller.
But such beers should not be seen as a "healthy alternative" to full strength beer, he said, and if your waistline was the concern then a switch to light beer would
be better.
"The recent rapid increase in popularity of low-carbohydrate beers in Australia ... may represent an insidious health risk," Dr Miller said.
"The message should be made explicit - low-carb beers are not a healthy choice."
The problem, Dr Miller said, was that while the beers had lower carbohydrate levels they delivered almost the same energy load to the body as full strength beer.
Low-carb beers contain around 1.5 grams of carbohydrate per 100ml - about half that found in full strength beer.
But when it comes to overall kilojoules of energy delivered to the body, low-carb is not far short of full strength beer.
Low-carb beers pack about 130 kilojoules of energy per 100ml while full strength beer can range from 150 - 170 kilojoules.
"There is little, if any, difference in either the amount of alcohol or the total energy content of traditional and low-carb beers," Dr Miller said.
Beers with a lower alcohol content, mid- or low-strength beers, deliver about 100 to 120 kilojoules in energy to the body - below the level of a low-carb beer.
Dr Miller said European authorities had recently moved to stop health-related claims from being used in the marketing of alcoholic drinks, and the Australian government should
do the same. (AAP)
Unfortunately not a joke, these bloody idiots are serious: The Robin Hood Tax
A tiny tax on bankers that would give billions to tackle poverty and climate change, here and abroad.
This tax on banks – not you or I - has the power to raise hundreds of billions every year. It could give a vital boost to the NHS, our schools, and the fight against child
poverty in the UK – as well as tackling poverty and climate change around the world.
Financial institutions pay taxes but don't pass on their costs? Who the heck do they think ends up paying the taxes? Just one more consumer tax for the
benefit of those poor starving carbon traders who aren't making enough taxing your every energy use but should get to tax your payments for it too...
LOS ANGELES - California has been deluged with rain and snow this winter, but its epic tug-of-war over water rages on, this time in the form of a plan by U.S. Senator Dianne
Feinstein to divert more water to the state's farmers.
Feinstein has infuriated environmental activists, fishing groups and even fellow California Democrats by drafting federal legislation that would ease Endangered Species Act
restrictions to allow more water to be pumped out of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta for growers in the state's Central Valley.
Drastic cutbacks in irrigation supplies this year alone from both state and federal water projects have idled about 23,000 farm workers and 300,000 acres of cropland, according
to University of California at Davis researchers.
"The unemployment rate is 40 percent in some valley towns and people are standing in bread lines," Feinstein said in a statement released through her office.
"I believe we need a fair compromise that will respect the Endangered Species Act while recognizing the fact that people in California's breadbasket face complete economic
ruin without help," she added. (Reuters)
This generation of pampered westerners is the first tribe in the history of the world that seems determined to destroy its ability to produce food.
The history of the human race has always been a battle for protein in the face of the continual challenge of natural climate change. Nothing has changed for this generation,
except the wildfire spread of a destructive new religion that requires the sacrifice of food producers on a global warming altar.
Food creation needs solar energy, land, carbon dioxide and water. All four food resources are under threat.
Eons ago, long before ancient humans discovered the magic warmth locked in coal, millions of woolly mammoths were snap frozen in the icy wastes of Siberia. They are still being
dug out of the ice today.
In the last few weeks, in a mild repeat of this past climate disaster, massive snowstorms have killed millions of domestic animals in Mongolia and China. The capacity to
produce and distribute food has been decimated across the top of the world from Northern Europe and Russia to North America. When orange groves in Florida are damaged and Texas
gets six snowstorms in a few weeks it is obvious that nature is damaging the world food supply.
Solar energy produces all of our food. Those who follow the sun are already recording a dramatic change in sunspots, which tend to reflect solar energy. This seems to indicate
that the current frigid conditions affecting the Northern Hemisphere may not be an isolated weather event but may be a harbinger of natural climate change.
Global warming has never been a problem for mankind. But global cooling is a killer.
Australia can feed itself and is a major food supplier to the world – beef, mutton, cereals, sugar, dairy products, pork, chicken, eggs, seafood, nuts, legumes, fruit,
vegetables, beer and wine.
However green extremists, supported by foolish politicians, are gnawing at the foundations of Australia’s food chain. And the biggest threat today is Climate Change Policies.
Land is an essential ingredient to most food production. All over Australia, uncontrolled regrowth of eucalypt scrub is silently reclaiming our vast grazing lands, the source
of the lowest cost beef and mutton in the world. Generations of graziers have created and maintain these grasslands against the ever present threat of capture by woody weeds.
Now their hands are tied and their land is being stolen by global warming politics. The suffocating scrub will soon pass the tipping point, beyond which grasslands are
destroyed and the land is no longer capable of food production.
Land sterilisation is also occurring via the stealth of Wild Rivers, World Heritage and other lock-away land policies.
Even more food producing land is lost by policies that subsidise people to grow carbon forests in the stupid belief that this will somehow improve the climate by removing
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Trees, grasses, sub-soil critters, grazing animals and carnivores are all part of the same carbon cycle. If one life form gets to monopolise
land and carbon resources, it is detrimental to other life.
Still more stupid are market destroying policies that use government mandates and subsidies to convert food producing land to growing ethanol for cars. This has already caused
massive dislocations to markets for corn, sugar, soybeans and palm oils. Forcing people to convert food into motor fuel is not a sensible policy and always adds to food
shortages.
Carbon dioxide is the breath of life for all food production. Imagine the stupidity of trying to capture this harmless will-o-the-wisp in order to bury it in carbon cemeteries.
Luckily for our food capacity, this suicidal policy of carbon capture and burial is unlikely to succeed.
Finally, let’s look at water, the life blood of all food production.
Australia probably has access to more water per head of population than most countries in the world, but decades of government mis-management have made us more vulnerable to
every drought. Many government policies have encouraged the waste of water resources.
There are huge unused water resources across the north from the Fitzroy River in the West to the Flinders River in Cape York. Most of this water is untapped and unused because
of government anti-development and land sterilisation policies.
In the south, other silly government policies have supplied water for “free” to the cities. Anything free is wasted. Because of urban demand, food producers are now being
denied water at any price, but there is no real price rationing in the cities. Government drought relief for farmers also rewards those who overstock.
When natural climate change in the Northern Hemisphere is combined with political climate change in our southern food baskets, the real crisis creeping up on the world is not
global warming caused by industry, but global famine caused by politicians.
As Genghis Khan said wisely “Only a foolish horse fights with his feed bag”.
There’s good news for those who like to watch paint dry and grass grow. Now you can log on to www.climate.gov and watch the climate change.
Under the pretext that “Americans are witnessing the impacts of climate change in their own backyards,” and that they “increasingly are asking the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for information about climate change in order to make the best choices for their families, communities and businesses,” this week the Obama
administration unveiled its National Climate Service (NCS).
Though we can’t rely on a weather forecast that extend more than a few days, the National Climate Service is going to help us plan for micro-changes in climate decades and
more into the future.
Climate.gov features a “climate dashboard” with constantly updated
graphs showing changes in global temperature, atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), incoming sunlight, sea level, and Arctic ice. How any of this information will help anyone make
any choice for any family, community, or business is not even suggested on the website. But rest assured, says NOAA:
People are searching for relevant and timely information about these changes to inform decisionmaking about virtually all aspects of their lives.
Climate.gov is more self-lampooning than informative. (Steve Milloy,
PJM)
Back in December, the EPA announced that it had determined that greenhouse gases released by human
activities “threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations.” This “Endangerment Finding” is the first step toward EPA’s issuing regulations
aimed at restricting GHG emissions in the U.S.
Unfortunately for the EPA, a major pillar of support of the Endangerment Finding—that “most” of the “observed warming” since the mid-20th century is from
greenhouse gas emissions from human activities—has been shown by recent scientific research in major peer-reviewed scientific journals to be largely in doubt.
Add this result to the list of problems that seems to grow longer with each passing day as more IPCC
gaffes are uncovered and Climategate emails are parsed. One has to wonder just how long it will be until the EPA is challenged to reconsider its Endangerment Finding.
The basis for the Endangerment Finding is contained in the EPA’s Technical Support
Document for Endangerment and Cause or Contribute Findings for Greenhouse Gases under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act (TSD). The TSD does not describe any new,
independent research carried out by the EPA (because they did not undertake any), but instead largely summarizes the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC).
One of the key statements (from page 2 of the Executive Summary of the EPA’s TSD) is this—a simple mimic the IPCC AR4 finding:
Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic GHG [greenhouse gas]
concentrations.
As I shall show, this statement is no longer tenable.
Background
First off, here is my take on what the EPA/IPCC is claiming.
For “most” I’ll assume “more than half.” For “observed increase in global temperature” I’ll assume the linear least-squares regression trend through the most
recent version of the global temperature dataset compiled jointly by the U.K.’s Hadley Center and Climate Research Unit (dataset HadCRUT3). [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Senate's stalled climate bill is getting a last big push from an unlikely ally -- a group of energy companies who say a carbon market will help them
get financing for the next generation of energy production.
But intensive lobbying by these climate bill proponents -- including heavyweights like Duke Energy, Shell Oil Co and General Electric Co -- may not be enough to counter
powerful opposition and get a bill passed before the U.S. mid-term elections in November. (Reuters)
Data show 2009 was a record year for lobbying on energy issues. 1747 clients (firms and groups) hired lobbyists to work in the area of energy
and nuclear power. This is a stunning 93 percent increase from 2006.
This increase may be stunning, but it isn’t surprising. With literally trillions of dollars put into play by various cap-and-trade bills over the last three years,
it would have been surprising if lobbying hadn’t grown by leaps and bounds.
Though initially offered as legislation to fight global-warming, the justifications for cap and trade followed the polls (from global warming to climate change to energy
security to economic stimulus to green jobs to who knows what’s next) and the bills’ provisions followed the money. Effectively a huge energy tax, early proposals
kept the trillions in new taxes for federal spending. In the end, the only bill to pass either house of Congress, the Waxman-Markey bill, gave virtually all of the
revenue away to a grab bag of special interests. Continue reading...
(The Foundry)
Climategate and United Nations' Controversies Eroding Political Support for Obama's Policy, says National Center for Public Policy Research
Washington, DC - Desperation and panic over the imminent failure of cap-and-trade legislation is driving a new White House lobbying push by special interest groups, according
to policy experts at the National Center for Public Research.
Corporate and environmental special interest groups are meeting with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Climate Change Czar Carol Browner this week, spurred by comments by
President Obama that the politically-unpopular cap-and-trade requirements might be split from the “green jobs” section of the cap-and-trade bill. Such a change would likely
doom the chances of a national law mandating reductions in carbon emissions.
President Obama made the remarks at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire last week. (National Center)
I’m writing this from Washington, D.C., looking out at cars buried in snowdrifts and hemmed in by snowbanks, along a snow-covered street — where the occasional
pedestrian toils past, like those lone stragglers in an apocalypse movie. I’ve lost track of whether Washington has already beat the record snowfall of 1898, or is just
edging up on it. But if carbon emissions will warm this scene, we’re ready to exhale and switch on all the lights.
In Washington, where local authorities can’t even keep the streets open, this is of course the week the White House picked to announce plans to set up a new “Climate
Service.” This will presumably be enlisted along with the United Nations, the Environmental Protection Agency and Ted Turner’s UN Foundation to tell us all
how to amend our lives to control the climate of the planet.
On the basis of what? Climate “science”? Thirty years ago, the budding climate-ocracy was sounding the klaxons over “global cooling.” Then it was “global
warming.” Now it’s “extreme weather.” Hmmm. Would that be “extreme” as in the record Washington snowfall of 1898? That was back in the low carbon-emissions era
when people were engaged in such useful projects as inventing better, cheaper incandescent lightbulbs, so everyone could enjoy well lit rooms – instead of
regulating these lightbulbs away because Al Gore and the United Nations said the earth had a fever. (Claudia Rosett, PJM)
Rich nations furthered their "conspiracy to divide the developing world" at December's UN climate summit in Copenhagen, while Canada "connived" and the
EU acted "to please the United States", according to an internal document from a Chinese government thinktank obtained by the Guardian.
The document, which was written in the immediate aftermath of Copenhagen but has only now come to light, provides the most candid insight yet into Chinese thinking on the
fraught summit.
"It was unprecedented for a conference negotiating process to be so complicated, for the arguments to be so intense, for the disputes to be so wide and for progress to be
so slow," notes the special report. "There was criticism and praise from all sides, but future negotiations will be more difficult." (The Guardian)
With any luck people will come to their senses and there will never be another "climate conference".
The resignation of Philip Campbell, editor-in-chief of Nature, from the Muir Russell/CRU inquiry – after he had been outed for offering favourable comments about
the researchers' actions – has elicited interesting comments from Channel
4 News:
The revelation, it says, is evidence of the well-organised and highly-motivated campaign by climate change sceptics that has already used the emails leaked from University of
East Anglia to make allegations about the validity of climate change science.
The report continues: "They have also been swift to attack errors in the influential United Nations intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC) report on the science
of climate change, published in 2007."
Now let's see. The IPCC report was published in 2007 ... and it is now 2010. That's "swift"? Actually, it is a measure of the remarkable hype that attended the launch
of AR4 and all the hullabaloo of the Nobel peace prize, that it took so long.
History will record, I suspect, that "Climategate" was the turning point, opening the flood gates and changing media sentiment to the extent that journalists were
prepared to listen to the "sceptic" arguments.
As a sign of the times, we
see this from Denise Robertson, columnist at the Western Mail, a provincial Welsh newspaper.
Under the heading "Climate shift on climate shift itself", she tells us that "for years we’ve been hectored by the climate-change 'experts'. I had an open mind
on the subject but now I feel myself moving into the sceptic camp."
My conversion, she says, "is a result of all the mistakes, untruths, exaggerations and suppression of data on the part of the warming lobby. If they’re so sure of their
case, I reason, why do they need to fiddle?"
Meanwhile, she adds, the government is pouring millions into mysterious "studies" like "Climate change impacts on Chinese agriculture" or how to help the
Indian insurance industry profit from carbon credits. That's your money and mine. (Shades of Booker
there?)
"We need an honest debate about this issue," Robertson concludes. And when you get that from a provincial paper, things are changing. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
... urge IPCC chief to step down. To Hartmut Grassl, any conflicts of interest, real or perceived, could still undermine the credibility of the panel. The former director of
the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg told Deutsche Welle that this
"mixing of duties makes [Pachauri] vulnerable."
The Discover
magazine writer Chris Mooney sees it as a guerrilla war.
... what I and many others failed to anticipate was that a kind of guerilla war on science–and especially climate science–would take its place, driven by blogs like
Climate Depot and Watts Up With That. This war springs from the same politics, but it is coming from those who are out in the wilderness, rather than running the government.
As a result, this war hits harder, and is much more personal—aimed at discrediting individual researchers, by sifting through their emails and accusing them of scandalous
wrongdoing. And it is draws its momentum from the vast numbers of online commenters who closely follow the climate "scandal" stories and then show up at this blog,
and other ones, to leave comments attacking scientists like Mann, and institutions like the IPCC.
After trying to ignore the issue, even Richard Black of the
BBC is wobbling. On the back of "Climategate", it's nearly two months since this started and it's showing no signs of abating. I think it's got to the stage where
only a blood sacrifice is going to resolve it. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
Educator-turned global warming alarmist claims older people struggle with manmade warming theory and cites IPCC Nobel Prize as proof of phenomenon. (Jeff Poor, Business
& Media Institute)
Laying aside for a moment the current discussions over the science of climate change, I have long been interested in what we may term the psychological profiling of ‘global
warming’*, that is the differences in...
Why has this review been announced? Well, the website says: "The University of East Anglia
announced the independent Review on 11 February to investigate key allegations arising from the series of hacked emails from the Climatic Research Unit in December 2009."
"The incident," it continues, "saw an anonymous hacker steal 160MB of data from the UEA server (including more than 1,000 emails and 3,000 other documents) and
leak it online."
So, even while a police inquiry continues, with every possibility that this was an inside job, we have a supposedly independent inquiry which makes assumptions which prejudice
the outcome of another inquiry – and shows its own bias into the bargain.
And we are supposed to believe this is going to come up with anything useful? It is tainted before it has even started. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
As the first person to call for an independent inquiry into 'climategate', I regret that what has been announced today is defective in a number of ways. The inquiry will
wholly lack transparency, with the hearings held in private, and no transcripts to be published.
The terms of reference, while better than nothing, are inadequate in a number of ways, not least the failure to include the question of the efforts made by CRU scientists to
prevent the publication of papers by dissenting scientists and others, contrary to the canons of scientific integrity. And the objectivity and independence of the inquiry is
seriously called into question by the composition of Sir Muir Russell's team, in particular the Editor in Chief of Nature, who has already published an editorial on the matter
strongly supportive of the CRU scientists and accusing their critics of being 'paranoid'.
We will, of course, suspend final judgment until see the report of the inquiry.
Nigel Lawson, Chairman of the Global Warming Policy Foundation
Within hours of the launch of an independent panel to investigate claims that climate scientists covered up flawed data on temperature rises, one member has been forced to
resign after sceptics questioned his impartiality.
// In an interview last year with Chinese State Radio, enquiry panel member Philip Campbell,
editor-in-chief of Nature said: “The scientists have not hidden the data. If you look at the emails there is one or two bits of language that are jargon used between
professionals that suggest something to outsiders that is wrong.”
He went on: “In fact the only problem there has been is on some official restrictions on their ability to disseminate data otherwise they have behaved as researchers
should.”
Dr Campbell, was invited to sit on the enquiry panel because of his expertise in the peer review process as editor of one of the world’s leading science journals. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
A fine piece of writing from Dipankar Gupta in yesterday's Indian Mail Today. It is on line here
or if you click the pic above, it is readable. Says Gupta:
On the other hand, to get an admission from Pachauri is like dragging a pet to the vet. When confronted with the errors, he shifted the blame to his researchers and to the
probability theory that with so many facts it's alright to go wrong on a couple.
and ...
What really matters is the emergence of Pachauri's law. It says "good science drives out bad science with the speed of melting ice cream".
Not sure about that last bit – it seems to contradict the headline, which is more to the point. But, overall, there are some delicious barbs, and some serious points, not
least that the paranoia over climate change is diverting attention from real pollution. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The credibility crisis facing the UN's climate panel over errors in its 2007 report has cast a shadow on IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri. Now, top researchers in Germany are
among those calling for his resignation. (Deutsche Welle)
Inside the Climate Bunker - How global-warming deniers
are running circles around the U.N.'s top climate body.
Three years ago, Rajendra K. Pachauri was accepting the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.N.'s climate science panel. Now
the IPCC head is under fire from critics for a catalogue of recent embarrassments: his initial kneejerk defense of the "Climategate" emails (Pachauri first questioned
the motives of those who had hacked into the University of East Anglia's email system, then said there was "virtually no possibility" that IPCC findings were
impacted), the fight he picked with the Indian environmental minister when the latter questioned certain data on glacier melt within India (Pachauri called the government
report's "voodoo science"), and the steamy soft-core novel, Return to Almora, he released last month (somewhere between memoir and fantasy, it features the sexual
exploits of a 60-something globetrotting climate expert, and has scandalized an Indian public not accustomed to its masturbating scenes and erotic explicitness).
Few stars have risen and fallen so quickly as Pachauri's, who has gone from being an international climate hero to subject of increasing ridicule at home and abroad. Pachauri,
an economist and former railroad engineer from a small town in the Himalayan foothills of north India, assumed his position at the helm of the IPCC in 2002. At the time, he had
the enthusiastic backing of the Bush administration, which had grown tired of fielding industry complaints about his predecessor Robert Watson and hoped (wrongly, it turned
out) that Pachauri would prove less vocal in his calls for carbon-reduction efforts. (Foreign Policy)
Seth trying to make the best of a really bad situation: Scientists Seek Better Way to Do
Climate Report - Scientists call for better way to do climate report; errors tarnish Nobel Prize-winning effort
The flaws — and the erosion they've caused in public confidence — have some scientists calling for drastic changes in how future United Nations climate reports are done.
A push for reform being published in Thursday's issue of a prestigious scientific journal comes on top of a growing clamor for the resignation of the chairman of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The work of the climate change panel, or IPCC, is often portrayed as one massive tome. But it really is four separate reports on different aspects of global warming, written
months apart by distinct groups of scientists. (Associated Press)
Poor old Boringtheme is trying to claim WG1 remains unsullied yet that is home of the patently absurd "hockey stick" graph and territory of the
climategate conspirators. Nice try though...
WASHINGTON — As millions of people along the East Coast hole up in their snowbound homes, the two sides in the climate-change debate are seizing on the mounting drifts to
bolster their arguments.
Skeptics of global warming are using the record-setting snows to mock those who warn of dangerous human-driven climate change — this looks more like global cooling, they
taunt.
Most climate scientists respond that the ferocious storms are consistent with forecasts that a heating planet will produce more frequent and more intense weather events.
But some independent climate experts say the blizzards in the Northeast no more prove that the planet is cooling than the lack of snow in Vancouver or the downpours in Southern
California prove that it is warming. (NYT)
Well, since warmies did claim snow would be a thing of the past, suggesting modern kids would never know sledding, etc., etc., why shouldn't skeptics rub
their noses in modern era record falls?
Will global warm-mongers admit that this winter's heavy snow in the East weakens their position? Of course not. They insist the record flurries are confirmation of their
bogus theory.
We've seen this before. In January 1996, when a nor'easter dumped 14 inches of snow in Hickory, N.C., and almost three feet in parts of Massachusetts, Jessica Mathews wrote in
her Washington Post column that "blizzards like this one are part of what the experts tell us to expect of a warming climate."
The New York Times ("Blame Global Warming for the Blizzard") and Newsweek ("Blizzards, Floods and Hurricanes: Blame Global Warming") offered the same
explanation.
The believers might be losing credibility, but they're consistent. In Thursday's New York Times, under the headline "Climate-Change Debate Is Heating Up in Deep
Freeze," Joseph Romm, identified as "a climate-change expert and former Energy Department official who writes about climate issues at the liberal Center for American
Progress," is allowed to resurrect the notion. (IBD)
What happens in the weather this week or next tells us absolutely nothing about the role of humans in influencing the climate system. It is unjustifiable to claim that a cold
snap or heavy snow disproves or even casts doubts predictions of long-term climate change. It is equally unjustifiable to say that a cold snap or heavy snow in any way offers
empirical support for predictions of long-term climate change. This goes for all weather events.
Further, it is professionally irresponsible for scientists to claim that some observed weather is "consistent with" long-term predictions of climate change. Any and
all weather fits this criteria. Similarly, any and all weather is also "consistent with" failing predictions of long-term climate change. The "consistent
with" canard is purposely misleading.
Knowledge of climate requires long-term records -- on the time scale of a decade and longer. Don't look to the weather to learn about climate, unless you have a long time to
watch. Using the weather to score cheap political points in the climate debate appears to be a tactical area of agreement among those who otherwise disagree about climate
change. (Roger Pielke Jr)
Weather is not evidence of climatic trend. Weather events tell us absolutely nothing about anthropogenic influence on the climate system but weather
actually is climate since climate is merely the sum of all weather events over a given period.
Dirt is endangered, Prius loving hippies can’t stop themselves and the IPCC needs a trainer to throw the towel in before their beating gets worse. (Daily Bayonet)
Andy Revkin has a very informative post and set of comments in his post of February 9 2010 titled “Does
an Old Climate Critique Still Hold up?”. My comment with respect to an input to his post by Gabriele Hegerl [one of the IPCC contributing lead authors] is reproduced
below.
This came in from Roger Pielke Sr. at the University of Colorado:
Hi Andy
It is clear, from the failed seasonal forecasts of the UK Met Office and others over the past few years, that there is less understanding of the climate system, even on
that time scale, than is concluded by Gabriele Hegerl and by the IPCC. If we cannot provide seasonal skillful forecasts most of the time, multi-decadal climate forecasts are
even more difficult as more climate feedbacks and forcings become important.
I can provide a few examples here to document that this lack of understanding is becoming better recognized:
1. From
Lavers, D., L. Luo, and E. F. Wood (2009), A multiple model assessment of seasonal climate forecast skill for applications, Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L23711,
doi:10.1029/2009GL041365. [see http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2010/02/08/a-paper-on-the-limits-of-seasonal-weather-prediction-and-relevance-to-longer-term-climate-predictions-by-lavers-et-al-2009/]
“Given the actual skill demonstrated by operational seasonal climate forecasting models, it appears that only through
significant model improvements can useful long-lead forecasts be provided that would be useful for decision makers – a quest that may prove to be elusive.”
2. From a presentation given by Greame Stephens at the August 2009 GEWEX meeting in Melbourne Australia titled “Earth observations and moist processes.” [see http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2009/10/09/major-issues-with-the-realism-of-the-ipcc-models-reported-by-graeme-stephens-of-colorado-state-university/]
“Observational inferences on indirect radiative forcing do not support the large values of forcings being applied in
models.”
“Models contain grave biases in low cloud radiative properties that bring into question the fidelity of feedbacks in
models.”
“While I believe the changes that are likely to occur are primarily driven by changes in the large scale atmospheric flows, we
have to conclude our models have little or no ability to make credible projections about the changing character of rain and cannot conclusively test this hypothesis.”
3. In
Koutsoyiannis, D., A. Efstratiadis, N. Mamassis, and A. Christofides, 2008: On the credibility of climate predictions, Hydrological Sciences Journal, 53 (4), 671-684.
[see http://pielkeclimatesci.wordpress.com/2008/07/31/on-the-credibility-of-climate-predictions-by-koutsoyiannis-et-al/]
“At the annual and the climatic (30-year) scales, GCM interpolated series are irrelevant to reality. GCMs do not reproduce
natural over-year fluctuations and, generally, underestimate the variance and the Hurst coefficient of the observed series. Even worse, when the GCM time series imply a Hurst
coefficient greater than 0.5, this results from a monotonic trend, whereas in historical data the high values of the Hurst coefficient are a result of large-scale over-year
fluctuations (i.e. successions of upward and downward “trends”. The huge negative values of coefficients of efficiency show that model predictions are much poorer than an
elementary prediction based on the time average. This makes future climate projections at the examined locations not credible. Whether or not this conclusion extends to other
locations requires expansion of the study, which we have planned. However, the poor GCM performance in all eight locations examined in this study allows little hope, if any. An
argument that the poor performance applies merely to the point basis of our comparison, whereas aggregation at large spatial scales would show that GCM outputs are credible, is
an unproved conjecture and, in our opinion, a false one.”
I can provide quite a few more examples as to studies which question the attribution conclusions summarized by Dr. Hegerl.
Roy [Spencer] can also provide results from his studies that illustrate a much larger natural variability in global average radiative forcing than concluded in the
IPCC report.
MOMBASA - Climate change has affected Kenyan coffee production through unpredictable rainfall patterns and excessive droughts, making crop management and disease control a
nightmare, a researcher said on Thursday.
Intermittent rainfall in the 2007/08 crop year, for example, caused a terrible bout of the Coffee Berry Disease that cut Kenyan output 23 percent to 42,000 metric tons as
farmers were caught out by rains and did not protect their crop in time.
"We have seen climate change in intermittent rainfall patterns, extended drought and very high temperatures," said Joseph Kimemia, director of research at Kenya's
Coffee Research Foundation (CRF). (Reuters)
But what caused the variation in local conditions? (Good thing ambient CO2 levels are up since they are quite protective of stressed plants)
Yields from some of the most important crops begin to decline sharply when average temperatures exceed about 30 degrees Celsius, or 86 Fahrenheit. Projections are that by
the end of this century much of the tropics and subtropics will regularly see growing season temperatures above that level, hotter than the hottest summers now on record.
An international panel of scientists writing in the Feb. 12 edition of the journal Science is urging world leaders to dramatically alter their notions about sustainable
agriculture to prevent a major starvation catastrophe by the end of this century among the more than 3 billion people who live relatively close to the equator.
Specifically they urge world leaders to "get beyond popular biases against the use of agricultural biotechnology," particularly crops genetically modified to produce
greater yields in harsher conditions, and to base the regulations of such crops on the best available science. (University of Washington)
We're all for ag biotech but gorebull warbling is not a valid reason to do anything.
Depicting a cause-and-effect scenario that spans thousands of miles, a scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and his collaborators discovered that
ocean waves originating along the Pacific coasts of North and South America impact Antarctic ice shelves and could play a role in their catastrophic collapse.
Peter Bromirski of Scripps Oceanography is the lead scientist in a new study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters that describes how storms over the North
Pacific Ocean may be transferring enough wave energy to destabilize Antarctic ice shelves. The California Department of Boating and Waterways and the National Science
Foundation supported the study.
According to Bromirski, storm-driven ocean swells travel across the Pacific Ocean and break along the coastlines of North and South America, where they are transformed into
very long-period ocean waves called "infragravity waves" that travel vast distances to Antarctica.
Bromirski, along with coauthors Olga Sergienko of Princeton University and Douglas MacAyeal of the University of Chicago, propose that the southbound travelling infragravity
waves "may be a key mechanical agent that contributes to the production and/or expansion of the pre-existing crevasse fields on ice shelves," and that the
infragravity waves also may provide the trigger necessary to initiate the collapse process. (Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego)
UCLA chemists report creating a synthetic "gene" that could capture heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions, which contribute to global warming, rising sea levels
and the increased acidity of oceans.
The research appears in the Feb. 12 issue of the journal Science.
"We created three-dimensional, synthetic DNA-like crystals," said UCLA chemistry and biochemistry professor Omar M. Yaghi, who is a member of the California
NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA and the UCLA–Department of Energy Institute of Genomics and Proteomics. "We have taken organic and inorganic units and combined them
into a synthetic crystal which codes information in a DNA-like manner. It is by no means as sophisticated as DNA, but it is certainly new in chemistry and materials
science."
The discovery could lead to cleaner energy, including technology that factories and cars can use to capture carbon dioxide before it reaches the atmosphere. (University of
California - Los Angeles)
Carbon dioxide is not an atmospheric pollutant, it is an essential trace gas, an environmental resource and an asset. Leave it alone!
A
surprising revelation from a new paper: industrial emission actually have a net cooling effect on Earth's climate. The paper that appears in the Proceeding of the National
Academy of Sciences early edition attempts to apportion blame for global warming among various economic sectors. Climate impacts of CO2,
tropospheric ozone, fine aerosols, aerosol-cloud interactions, methane, and long-lived greenhouse gases were all analyzed and the appropriate human activities cited. When the
dust settled, two sectors turned in large net negative (i.e. cooling) forcing values: biomass burning and industry. (Doug L. Hoffman, The Resilient Earth)
“During the last glacial period, the climate of the Northern Hemisphere was characterized by rapid, large-amplitude temperature fluctuations through cycles lasting a
few thousand years. These fluctuations are apparent in Greenland temperature reconstructions, and corresponding temperature and hydrological variations have been documented
throughout the Northern Hemisphere.”
“Many regions of the world experienced abrupt climate variability during the last glacial period (75–15 thousand years ago). These changes probably arose from
interactions between Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean, but the rapid and widespread propagation of these changes requires a
large-scale atmospheric response whose details remain unclear.”
John Fleck’s very informative news article reads
Thousands of years of drip, drip, drip from the ceiling of a southern New Mexico cave tells a story of a dry Southwest in the past when the world was warm, University of
New Mexico researchers have found. And that has implications for what might happen here the future, according to the scientist who did the work.
For 45,000 years, the drips built stalactites and stalagmites in Fort Stanton Cave. The minerals in the rocky deposits recorded traces of dry and wet spells above,
according to Yemane Asmerom, a professor in UNM’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences.
The scientists wrote last week in the journal Nature Geoscience that their finds suggest that a warming planet “could lead to increasingly arid conditions in
southwestern North America in the future.”
The new research takes advantage of the scientists’ ability to precisely date the layers in stalactites and stalagmites, the delicate formations that build up slowly
in caves, using equipment at UNM’s Radiogenic Isotope Laboratory.
With 15 miles of surveyed passages, Fort Stanton in southeast New Mexico is the third longest known cave in New Mexico, according to Victor Polyak, a UNM cave researcher
and collaborator on the climate study.
The work is the latest use of cave formations, a technique Asmerom and others have been developing in recent years, to reveal evidence of how Earth’s climate changed
in the past. The findings closely match a similar effort by a University of Arizona team that used formations in the Cave of the Bells in Arizona, said Julia Cole, one of the
leaders of the U of A team.
Scientists have long used tree rings to track wet and dry periods in the Southwest. The tree rings show the “medieval warm period,” from roughly 900 to 1300 A.D.,
was unusually dry across much of what is now the western United States. Some scientists have argued that suggests a linkage between globally warm conditions and drier weather
here. But the tree ring record is limited in how far back in time it goes.
The cave formations allowed Asmerom and his colleagues to look at what happened over much longer time periods, from 56,000 to 11,000 years ago.
Earth’s climate was very different then, but periods of known northern hemisphere cooling tended to have more winter precipitation in the Fort Stanton area, according to
Asmerom and his colleagues. When it was warmer, there was less winter precipitation.
Comparing the Fort Stanton records with other sites around the world, Asmerom, Polyak and Stephen Burns of the University of Massachusetts found evidence that the jet
stream — the river of high altitude air that guides the region’s winter storms — changed in response to global temperatures.
When temperatures warmed, they wrote, the jet stream shifted to the north, and the Fort Stanton area got less winter precipitation. Cole and her University of Arizona
colleagues found the same pattern at their site.
The findings also closely match research using sediments from ancient Lake Estancia in central New Mexico, according to Bruce Allen of the New Mexico Bureau of Geology.
“The jet stream and the storm track moves around as the northern hemisphere warms and cools,” Cole said in a telephone interview.
“It is really neat after watching this kind of research develop over the years to see how it is all meshing together,” said Allen, who has spent two decades using
the Lake Estancia sediments to track New Mexico’s prehistoric wet and dry periods.
Computer simulations of the effect of rising greenhouse gases on Earth’s climate suggest that, in a future warming world, the jet stream will shift to the north. In a
study published last year, Cristina Archer of California State University at Chico found evidence that the jet stream shifted northward over the last few decades, though it is
not clear whether the shift was human-caused or the result of natural variability.”
These two papers and John’s summary include these two important findings:
1. Long periods of drought can occur in the southwest United States even without the interference of humans in the climate
system. This means that society should take steps to reduce the risks we face from these long dry periods, irrespective of how humans are altering the climate. We
recommend this perspective in our recent EOS paper (see).
2. The conclusion that the jet stream moves north, in a warming world is an interesting hypothesis. There is
current evidence, however, that this is not necessarily true as we see in the current weather pattern where i) the global average lopwer tropopsheric temperature anomaly is
well above average (in fact it is at a record high for January for the period 1979 to the present – see)
, yet ii) the jet stream is well south of its average latitude and has been for much of the winter. Indeed, this more southerly track explains the above average
precipitation we have seen across the southern United States [e.g.see the insightful discussions by Joe Daleo on Icecap on Feb 5 2010 on this weather pattern].
Clearly, the explanation for the dry periods presented by Bruce Allen, Cristina Archer and the authors in the news article is incomplete, or even in error.
An example of this southerly displacement of the jet stream at the present is seen in
Roy Spencer has posted on the January 2010 UAH LT MSU data (see), and there is also a press release (see).
In the presentation from UAH, the analyses are not area weighted. This results in a visual overstatement of the contribution to the anomalies in the higher latitudes.
Tim Channon, however, has completed area averaged maps of this analyses which is reproduced below with his permission [he also has completed such presentations for
other temperature analyses which I will post on later].
I have presented both the standard UAH LT MSU presentation (non-area weighted) and Tim Channon’s area-weighted presentation below.
Theories about the rates of ice accumulation and melting during the Quaternary Period -- the time interval ranging from 2.6 million years ago to the present -- may need to
be revised, thanks to research findings published by a University of Iowa researcher and his colleagues in the Feb. 12 issue of the journal Science.
Jeffrey Dorale, assistant professor of geoscience in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, writes that global sea level and Earth's climate are closely linked. Data he
and colleagues collected on speleothem encrustations (see photo right), a type of mineral deposit, in coastal caves on the Mediterranean island of Mallorca indicate that sea
level was about one meter above present-day levels around 81,000 years ago. The finding challenges other data that indicate sea level was as low as 30 meters -- the ice
equivalent of four Greenland ice sheets -- below present-day levels.
He said the sea level high stand of 81,000 years ago was preceded by rapid ice melting, on the order of 20 meters of sea level change per thousand years and the sea level drop
following the high water mark, accompanied by ice formation, was equally rapid.
"Twenty meters per thousand years equates to one meter of sea level change in a 50-year period," Dorale said. "Today, over one-third of the world's population
lives within 60 miles of the coastline. Many of these areas are low-lying and would be significantly altered -- devastated -- by a meter of sea level rise. Our findings
demonstrate that changes of this magnitude can happen naturally on the timescale of a human lifetime. Sea level change is a very big deal." (University of Iowa)
LONDON - The world may lose its taste for oil long before oil itself runs out, if the trend in the West becomes global.
Demand for oil may well have peaked in the developed world, the International Energy Agency said on Thursday, postponing further any possible supply crunch. But emerging
nations still want more, the IEA said.
More efficient cars and the increasing use of electricity and gas instead of oil in areas outside transport, such as heating, have driven the move in the West.
Drivers need to start treating oil as a scarce commodity and switch to green transport to avoid shortages by 2020, according to the chief executive of Scottish &
Southern. (TDT)
So, all the more reason to bring unconventionals to market then. How's that coal to liquid thing coming along? (Carbon is not really in short supply, which
is why the misanthropy brigade run such desperate campaigns pretending its use to be hazardous rather than the benefit it truly is.)
WASHINGTON--U.S. environmental regulators must soon decide whether burning natural gas to generate power counts as a means of cutting greenhouse gases, a ruling that could
reshape the country's industrial operations and edge the U.S. away from coal.
If the EPA decides that companies must consider gas as a tool to limit emissions, power companies with coal-burning power plants in the works might have to go back to the
drawing board. Gas producers would find fresh demand for the abundant fuel. Gas releases about half the greenhouse-gas emissions of coal.
The Environmental Protection Agency is pursuing its own greenhouse-gas regulations because Congress has failed to act. The issue has been pending at the EPA since 2007, when
the Supreme Court ruled that greenhouse gases are pollutants and said that the EPA must determine whether to write regulations.
At issue is what counts as "best available control technology" to reduce emissions from power generation. Other methods under consideration are carbon capture and
sequestration, or CCS, whereby carbon dioxide emissions are piped into permanent underground storage, and energy efficiency measures. The EPA is working on that guidance as it
finalizes rules requiring power plants and other stationary emissions sources to hold permits to emit greenhouse gases. States would implement the rules and approve permits
that have the best available technology to control greenhouse-gas emissions. (Dow Jones)
Researchers at Queen's University suggest that policy makers examine greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions implications for energy infrastructure as fossil fuel sources must be
rapidly replaced by windmills, solar panels and other sources of renewable energy. (Queen's University)
Despite pressure from farm state politicians, the Environmental Protection Agency has taken an important step to ensure that biofuels help rather than hurt the environment.
Under new guidelines, biofuels produced at new facilities — including ethanol from corn, sugar, plants and other sources — must achieve at least a 20 percent reduction in
greenhouse gas emissions compared with conventional gasoline. (NYT)
GHGs are irrelevant and ethanol, while suited to sippin' liquors and beer, has no place in the fuel supply. Normally vehemently against big ag boondoggles The
Crone actively promotes this one. Why? We can't tell but we have a terrible suspicion it's because this particular boondoggle helps starve lots of those little brown
people, "breeding with the irresponsibility of codfish", as Vogt wrote in Road to Survival (1948). We have little doubt The Crone remains a
hotbed of population panic, despising the bulk of humanity.
MEXICO CITY/LA PAZ - Hopes of an electric car boom are spurring companies to seek new lithium sources, but new finds may be lower quality and costlier to develop than
established deposits able to meet demand for years to come.
Lithium is a key component in rechargeable batteries that power laptop computers, digital cameras and cell phones. Demand for the silver-white metal is expected to surge if
carmakers start producing electric or hybrid vehicles on a large scale.
Excitement is brewing about new projects in Bolivia -- which could hold the world's largest lithium bounty -- and in Mexico, where a small company says it has a site with up to
800,000 tonnes of the highly reactive and versatile metal.
But all lithium deposits are not created equal and experts say the new finds may be poor quality or expensive to extract. (Reuters)
GENEVA - The World Health Organisation will convene its emergency committee later this month to examine whether the H1N1 flu pandemic has peaked, its top influenza expert
said on Thursday.
"What we are hoping for is that the worst is behind us," Keiji Fukuda told a news conference.
Fukuda said the committee, which makes recommendations on the state of a pandemic to WHO Director-General Margaret Chan, would decide whether the H1N1 pandemic declared in June
had entered a post-peak or transition phase.
Designating a transition phase in this way -- indicating that the pandemic is continuing but the overall trend is back towards seasonal patterns of influenza -- would help
national health authorities look to the future, he said.
Even if the WHO decided the pandemic had peaked, the virus remained active, causing disease and death, and could continue to flare up in some regions, as it had done recently
in West Africa, Fukuda said. (Reuters)
NEW YORK - A new report on people sickened by a liquid dietary supplement illustrates the real -- if rare -- risks associated with using these products.
In 2008, users of "Total Body Formula" and "Total Body Mega Formula" started losing their hair and began suffering from fatigue, diarrhea, nausea and other
symptoms; some doubled their dose of the liquid supplement in response.
But the symptoms, first reported by patients of a Florida chiropractor who was selling the products in his office, were subsequently traced to a batch of the supplements
carrying up to 200 times the amount of selenium stated on the label. Further investigation found 201 people in ten states who had been sickened by the supplement. (Reuters
Health)
NEW YORK - Children born extremely preterm may face a much higher-than-average risk of developing autism later in childhood, a new study suggests.
Researchers found that of 219 children born before the 26th week of pregnancy, 8 percent met the criteria for an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) at age 11. That compared with
none of 153 classmates who were born full-term and included in a comparison group.
The ASD rate was far higher than that in the general population, which experts estimate to be somewhere between one and nine cases per 1,000 children, depending on how strictly
the disorders are defined.
ASD refers to a group of developmental disorders that hinder people's ability to communicate and build relationships. The conditions range from severe cases of
"classic" autism to Asperger's syndrome -- a disorder in which a person has normal intelligence and verbal skills, but difficulty socializing and understanding
subtler forms of communication, like body language and vocal tone.
Some past research has indicated that children born prematurely have a higher prevalence of ASDs, but the extent of the risk linked to extreme prematurity has not been clear.
(Reuters Health)
Artificially-enhanced chicken breasts, patented soya beans – a new film exposes the secrets of the modern food industry. Viewers will need a strong stomach, says Tim
Walker (The Independent)
Wonder why they don't do a compare and contrast with the food industry pre-refrigeration, modern cleaners and pesticides and all the sanitation and
inspections of the modern era? Do people really believe they were better off when the local butcher had neither refrigeration nor indoor plumbing and knew knowing of bacteria
or hygiene? Oh yeah, I'm sure our food industry has gone downhill over the last few hundred years...
Becoming a vegetarian can do more harm to the environment than continuing to eat red meat, according to a study of the impacts of meat substitutes such as tofu.
The findings undermine claims by vegetarians that giving up meat automatically results in lower emissions and that less land is needed to produce food.
The study by Cranfield University, commissioned by the environmental group WWF, found that many meat substitutes were produced from soy, chickpeas and lentils that were grown
overseas and imported into Britain.
It found that switching from beef and lamb reared in Britain to meat substitutes would result in more foreign land being cultivated and raise the risk of forests being
destroyed to create farmland. Meat substitutes also tended to be highly processed and involved energy-intensive production methods. (The Times)
Probably not the answer watermelons were looking for.
WASHINGTON - Most publicly traded companies that depend on water do not adequately disclose their financial risks to droughts and future regulations, even as water scarcity
problems mount, according to a report released on Thursday.
The report produced by Ceres, a coalition of investors and environmentalists and Swiss Bank UBS, ranked 100 of the biggest publicly traded companies on the quality, depth and
clarity of their water disclosure risks and opportunities.
"This report makes clear that companies are not providing investors with the kind of information they need to understand the risks and opportunities posed by water
scarcity," said Jack Ehnes, chief executive officer of the California State Teachers' Retirement System.
The group, known as CalSTRS, is a member of Ceres. (Reuters)
The conservation group has for years been playing fast and loose with the facts
THE revelation that a World Wildlife Fund report was the source of an insupportable claim that glaciers in the Himalayas were melting rapidly is embarrassing for the body.
The organisation has been silent about this. Little wonder.
Its integrity is important. It is the largest environmental body in the world and has royalty and the cream of society and business on its boards. Its worldwide arms are
estimated to turn over about $US400 million ($458m) annually, most from donations, but about 10 per cent is taxpayers' money.
WWF delivers some reputable and important conservation programs. It also an environmental activist. And in that capacity, it evidently has some problems with numbers. Let's
deal with that first.
Bjorn Lomborg, global environmental expert and statistician, reported this problem in his book The Skeptical Environmentalist more than a decade ago. He queried a media release
in 1997 by WWF UK that new research showed two thirds of the world's forests had been lost. The conventional number was 20 to 25 per cent. When Lomborg asked to see the
research report, he was told there was none.
That was not the only questionable number. This was the year environmental groups sensationalised Indonesian forest fires as part of a global campaign to pressure poor
countries to halt forestry. WWF president Claude Martin declared 1997 "the year the Earth burnt". He declared more forest was burnt in Indonesia that year than in
history. (Alan Oxley, The Australian)
Elisabeth Badinter, a leading French feminist, has warned the green movement is threatening decades of improvements in gender equality by forcing women to give up their jobs
and become earth mothers. (TDT)
Flying high over Venezuela's southeastern territories, a plane banks and fires into a mass of clouds.
Venezuela is not at war with the skies but with a severe drought that has caused an electricity crisis and forced the government to resort to unconventional methods to make it
rain.
The government began "bombing clouds," or cloud seeding, late last year after it emerged that the country was facing a dire water shortage.
Using technology borrowed from Cuba and Chile, the idea is to fire a mixture of silver iodide, dry ice and salt into vertically growing cumulonimbus clouds to encourage
raindrops to join together.
"Where we have sewn it has rained," said Jose Gregorio Sottolano, president of the National Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology. "What I can't tell you, and
it would be a lie, is how much water has fallen and if it has increased." (Reuters)
China has long struggled to feed one-fifth of the world's population on 7% of the world's arable land. Adding to the challenge are the side effects of rapid economic
development: air pollution, contaminated water, and encroaching urbanization, all of which threaten Chinese farmland. Now, a new study has tacked unnaturally acidic soil onto
the list, caused by excessive fertilizer use over the past 30 years.
Soil pH is critical to plant growth. Most crops thrive in soils that are neutral, with a pH value of 7, or slightly acidic. When soil's pH value creeps downward, it becomes
prone to diseases and pests that stunt plant growth. Heavily acidic conditions also prompt the leaching of toxic metals into nearby bodies of water. So when pH values plunge,
as they have in China, scientists start to worry. (ScienceNOW Daily News)
As burgeoning human populations place greater pressure on wild areas, a strategy is emerging for preserving threatened lands and wildlife. Known as ‘rewilding,’ it
involves expanding core wilderness areas, connecting them via corridors that allow humans and animals to co-exist, and protecting and reintroducing top predators. (Caroline
Fraser, e360)
Leaders from Baltic region countries pledged urgent action to generate the "miracle" needed to save one of the world's most polluted seas at a summit in Helsinki
Wednesday.
Over-fished, polluted by agricultural nutrient discharge and uncared for, the Baltic is so toxic Greenpeace says pregnant women should not eat its fish.
"We don't expect any miracles, but serious work by all of us which may make a miracle," said Finland's President Tarja Halonen, who co-hosted the summit with Finnish
Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen and the Baltic Sea Action Group (BSAG) foundation.
The summit brought together national leadership from 11 countries with a Baltic Sea coast or located in its vicinity - Russia, Sweden, Denmark, Finland Germany, Poland,
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus and Norway.
Increasing maritime traffic, over-fishing and eutrophication - the overconcentration of nutrients caused by sewage and agricultural run-off carrying fertilizers into the sea -
are key threats to be tackled. (The Independent)
The looming threats of global climate change and population growth call for sweeping changes in how the world produces its food and fiber, warns a group of prestigious
scientists, including an expert in plant genetics at the University of California, Davis.
The research team, led by Nina Federoff, science and technology adviser to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, suggests that there is a "critical need to get beyond
popular biases against the use of agricultural biotechnology," as well as explore the potential of aquaculture and maximize agricultural production in dry and saline
areas. Their recommendations will appear as a perspective piece titled "Radically Rethinking Agriculture for the 21st Century" in the Feb. 12 issue of the journal
Science. (University of California - Davis)
And our answer remains the same: we are all for ag biotech but hitching your wagon to a failing fraud like gorebull warbling is a really bad idea!
Record snowfall has buried Washington — and along with it, buried the chances of passing global warming legislation this year.
Cars are stranded in banks of snow along the streets of the federal capital, and in the corridors of Congress, climate legislation also has been put on ice.
Democratic senators say a bill that was once a top priority for the party and for President Barack Obama cannot be dug up again during 2010.
Voters are mostly concerned with jobs and the economy. Global warming is at the bottom of their list. And now, on top of that, the paralyzing snowfalls have made the prospect
of winning support for a climate bill this year even less likely. (The Hill)
The big danger, however, is EPA zealotry. Of course, there are moves to prevent this happening, which both need and deserve support:
U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) on Jan. 21 introduced a bipartisan disapproval resolution to stop the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions under the Clean Air Act.
Murkowski's resolution ─ co-sponsored by 35 Republicans and three Democrats ─ comes in the wake of the EPA's recent endangerment finding, which will result in regulations
that Murkowski says will endanger America's economy.
"As the EPA moves closer and closer to issuing these regulations, I continue to believe that this command-and-control approach is our worst option for reducing the
emissions blamed for climate change," Murkowski said.
Murkowski, the ranking Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and a strong proponent of moving the nation toward a cleaner energy future, said the
disapproval resolution is necessary to avoid the "economic train wreck" that would result from the EPA regulating GHGs under the Clean Air Act. (EP)
WASHINGTON - With congressional action on climate legislation in doubt, two House committee chairmen have filed a bill to block the government from regulating greenhouse
gases under its own power. (Reuters)
You need to help make this happen -- contact your Senators and Representatives.
Rest assured the enviros are responding to this challenge and remember that politicians respond to voter activity. Be polite, be brief and direct but above all, be active.
Politicians don't mind being reminded that voters don't vote for the loss of their jobs, their lifestyles or their hopes and aspirations for their children, it actually gives
them a defense against the looney campaigns run by misanthropists and Gaia cranks. And it does work! Here in Australia we dodged a bullet (just) because voters motivated
politicians to stand against energy rationing gorebull warming legislation. You can do this but you must make the effort and make contact rather than leaving it thinking
someone else will. Numbers count! (And so do politicians)
Air quality in the United States has improved dramatically over the past 40 years, yet MoveOn.Org wants you to believe that breathing the air is like being a pack-a-day
smoker.
MoveOn broadcasts this disinformation in TV ads bashing Senators Blanche Lincoln (D-AR), Ben Nelson (D-NB), and Mary Landrieu (D-LA). The ads show little leaguers, a mother and
her bottle-feeding infant, track athletes, and even a mother giving birth all smoking cigarettes. As these images flash by, the text of the ads says:
While Senator Landrieu [or Lincoln, or Nelson] works to roll back the Clean Air Act
Many Americans are already smoking the equivalent of a pack a day.
Just from breathing the air.
Senator Landrieu [or Lincoln, or Nelson], Americans need the Clean Air Act.
Leave it alone.
The MoveOn ad is a triple whopper, piling falsehood upon falsehood upon falsehood. No American smokes the equivalent of a pack a day just by breathing. The senators are not
working to “roll back” the Clean Air Act. The policy they support — one that MoveOn opposes — would not slow any federal or state efforts to clean the air. Let’s
examine each falsehood in turn. ( Marlo Lewis, PJM)
George Carlin once asked, “Is it really possible to have a civil war?” Readers of Joe Romm’s pronouncements on greenhouse gas legislation would answer in the
negative. Romm has always been a caustic critic of the “anti-science
disinformers” who do not toe the line on the alleged scientific consensus, but lately he has turned his fire on former allies who dare to question the legislative
developments in Washington.
An illustration of this internal squabbling is Romm’s recent
post on the “cap and dividend” proposal put forth by Senators Cantwell and Collins. Here’s Romm’s take (emphasis added):
Climate politics can be very strange indeed. Because cap-and-trade bills like Waxman-Markey are seen as having no chance of passing the Senate, some enviros
appear to be shifting their support to bills that are politically even less attractive and environmentally even less adequate.
The latest misguided missile is the Carbon Limits and Energy for America’s Renewal (CLEAR) Act put forward by Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Susan Collins (R-ME) — full
text and info here. Supporters call it “Cap-and-Dividend,” but right now I think the best term for it is, “Cap-and-Divide,” since it has no chance
whatsoever of becoming law but is serving to undercut the tripartisan effort by Graham,
Kerry, and Lieberman to develop a bill that might get 60 votes….
Cap-and-Divide…doesn’t even pass the environmental viability test, as the first-rate researchers at World Resources Institute have shown…. And while W-M is far
from perfect environmentally, as
I’ve said many times, it would enable a global deal. W-M’s biggest problem is that it can’t get 60 votes in the Senate or even close. But
“cap-and-divide” is certainly less politically viable than Waxman-Markey or Kerry-Boxer.
SALT LAKE CITY — With most Democrats voting no, the Utah House approved a resolution Tuesday that questions global warming while asking the federal government not to
proceed with "cap-and-trade" legislation or CO2 regulation.
Sponsor Rep. Kerry Gibson, R-Ogden, a dairy farmer, agreed to have his HJR12 amended to take out some inflammatory wording, like calling global warming and those who advocate
it guilty of "tricks," and a "conspiracy" and "flawed" research. (Deseret News)
... on the state of
the media. We started pumping stuff into the system in mid -December yet, even though
our stories have been replicated in whole or part, thousands of times, it really is quite remarkable how few journalists bring anything new to the table.
Most of the stuff seems to be recycled, very often poorly understood and most often incomplete and behind the curve – and very rarely acknowledging the source. And it came
full circle yesterday, with the New York Times finally
broaching a story about Pachauri and the IPCC, two months are we started the hare running.
To think that an NYT journalist once called blogs "derivative", claiming
that: "Without the New York Times (insert name of preferred British newspaper here), there is no blog community. They'd have nothing to blog about."
How the worm as turned. While the media is cutting and pasting press releases and agency
copy, increasingly blogs are making the news that matters. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
At least that's what The Time Magazine and their Bryan Walsh
think or at least pretend to think and tell us.
Cross-country ski used as a vehicle: that's why their ancestors were designed in the first place.
But does it? More precisely, are there any rational arguments justifying the unexpected conclusion (and preconception) of Walsh's article?
At the beginning, he tells us a lot about the conspiracies. The politicians are trying to hide the lethal threat of global warming by hiding the global warming as the cause of
the snowstorm in D.C., Walsh asserts.
Walsh also says it's unlikely for top-10 storms to take place by chance in Washington D.C. as well as Philadelphia (200 km away, it's almost like light years) or even Baltimore
(55 km away, that's near the Hubble scale) during the same winter. He's apparently completely unable to understand that these are just two parts of the same regional
atmospheric phenomenon so their probabilities are not independent at all.
He quotes some meteorologists who claim that the snowstorm was really big - well, there exists an obvious threat in doing science in the ancient way, i.e. without numbers (with
numbers replaced by emotional words). And we also hear some other old talking points: for example, the hurricanes are getting bigger, too.
But is there an argument why such a thing should be true? Well, there's no argument but there's surely something that the author considers to be an argument. In the middle of
the article, we read:
That's in part because of global warming — hotter air can hold more moisture, so when a storm gathers it can unleash massive amounts of snow. Colder air, by contrast, is
drier; if we were in a truly vicious cold snap, like the one that occurred over much of the East Coast during parts of January, we would be unlikely to see heavy snowfall.
Well, that's very entertaining. While it's true that hotter air can hold more moisture, the comment about "a truly vicious cold snap" negates the argument. It
disagrees with the weather records, too.
First, it negates the argument because it admits that a "truly vicious cold snap" existed even in 2010. Second, it tries to suggest that once upon a time, before the
global warming began, there was nothing else than a "vicious cold snap" in D.C. in January and February.
That's, of course, a complete nonsense. Look at the climate profile of the U.S. capital. The
average daily high in January is 42 °F (6 °C) and it is 47 °F (8 °C) in February. So it is surely not true that before the "catastrophic man-made global warming"
began, the city was permanently suffering a "truly vicious cold snap".
Exaggeration and alarmism have been a chronic weakness of environmentalism since it became an organized movement in the 1960s. Every ecological problem was instantly
transformed into a potential world-ending crisis, from the population bomb to the imminent resource depletion of the “limits to growth” fad of the 1970s to acid rain to
ozone depletion, always with an overlay of moral condemnation of anyone who dissented from environmental correctness. With global warming, the environmental movement thought it
had hit the jackpot — a crisis sufficiently long-range that it could not be falsified and broad enough to justify massive political controls on resource use at a global
level. Former Colorado senator Tim Wirth was unusually candid when he remarked in the early days of the climate campaign that “we’ve got to ride the global-warming issue.
Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing — in terms of economic policy and environmental policy.” (Not surprisingly, after Wirth left
the Senate and the Clinton administration he ended up at the United Nations.) (NRO)
LEADING scientists have stepped up calls for a major overhaul of the United Nation’s climate panel following a string of criticisms of its Nobel peace prize-winning
2007 report…
by 2035.
Many subsequent criticism have focused on the panel’s use of ‘’grey literature’’ - work that has not been peer reviewed by other scientists including student
thesis, reports by green groups and magazine articles - in parts of its 3000-page report.
Writing in respected journal Nature, contributing author Eduardo Zorita ... called for (the IPCC) to be made stronger and independent so that it drew only on established
peer-reviewed literature and highlighted gaps in the published science. Opposing views would be included.
Dr Zorita, from the GKSS Research Centre in Germany, said the IPCC’s use of government-nominated academic volunteers working under unmanageable deadlines had put it
‘’at the mercy of pressure
from advocates‘’.
The IPCC is no longer fit for purpose. . .
My suggestion for radical reform is to dissolve the IPCC after the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) in 2014. The work would be split into three types of assessment and
evaluation, each rather different to the three existing IPCC working groups.
Eduardo Zorita
An [International Climate Agency] could be built, for instance, on the IAEA template, encompassing many more countries than the IAEA but with a smaller staff. . .
As with finance, climate assessment is too important to be left in the hands of advocates.
Thomas Stocker
The IPCC has served as an honest broker in the past and will do so, hopefully, in the future.
Only with strict adherence to procedures and to scientific rigour at all stages will the IPCC continue to provide the best and most robust information that is needed so much.
Jeff Price
Increasing the number of lead authors would provide better balance and give more scientists the ability to participate in the process. . . The IPCC should also expand the
number of specialist task forces, task groups and hold more expert meetings to provide additional scientific review and oversight . . . the current period between assessments
is too long.
John Christy
The IPCC selects lead authors from the pool of those nominated by individual governments. Over time, many governments nominated only authors who were aligned with stated
policy.
I recommended last year that the next IPCC report invites published authors to write about the evidence for low climate sensitivity and other issues. The IPCC then would be a
true reflection of the heterogeneity of scientific views, an ‘honest broker’, rather than an echo chamber.
(Roger Pielke Jr.)
This all assumes the IPCC has a valid function, which it does not. Its entire remit is "dangerous human climatic interference", which is fatally
flawed to begin with. If you were really worried then you would investigate whether such interference could exist (implausible). Then, if that were ever established
you would investigate whether it does exist. Finally, in probably a thousand years or so, since it will take that long for us to understand the climate system, you pose the
question of whether it is really worth addressing or simply better to adapt as we have always done.
Almost daily, we learn about new problems with the formerly respected UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): In their 2001 report, they claimed that the 20th
century was "unusual" and blamed it on human-released greenhouse gases. Their infamous temperature graph shown there, shaped like a hockey stick, did away with the
well-established Medieval Warm Period (around 1000AD, when Vikings were able to settle in Southern Greenland and grow crops there) and the following Little Ice Age (around 1400
to 1800AD). Two Canadians exposed the bad data used by the IPCC and the statistical errors in their analysis. (S. Fred Singer, American Thinker)
Claudia Rosett is on the case, in Pajamasmedia, looking at the web of
conflicts of interest, and in particular at Achim Steiner, executive director of the UN Environment Program (UNEP), one of the sponsoring organisations for the IPCC.
Rosett, who cut her teeth on the UN's corrupt "oil for food" programme, is well-placed to observe the machinations of this organisation, building a picture which
demonstrates that the UN climate Mafia (of which Rajendra Pachauri is part) is as corrupt and self-serving as the rest of the UN institutions.
How anyone can take any UN body seriously is one of those mysteries in life which seem to defy explanation. How rotten and how corrupt do you have to be before people
start taking notice? (Richard North, EU Referendum)
which was sent as an attachment in an email to Phil Jones by Tom Peterson of NOAA. As you can imagine, Roger
Pielke Sr wasn’t too happy with the suggestion that he believes that ‘global warming is a hoax’. (Climate Resistance)
Jerry Ravetz, a giant among scholars in the history and philosophy of science and someone who I am happy to call a friend and
colleague, has written a thoughtful essay on the remarkable events that have unfolded in climate science of recent months. Here is an excerpt:
The total assurance of the mainstream scientists in their own correctness and in the intellectual and moral defects of their critics, is now in retrospect perceived as
arrogance. For their spokespersons to continue to make light of the damage to the scientific case, and to ignore the ethical dimension of Climategate, is to risk public
outrage at a perceived unreformed arrogance. If there is a continuing stream of ever more detailed revelations, originating in the blogosphere but now being brought to a
broader public, then the credibility of the established scientific authorities will continue to erode. Do we face the prospect of the IPCC reports being totally dismissed as
just more dodgy dossiers, and of hitherto trusted scientists being accused of negligence or worse? There will be those who with their own motives will be promoting such a
picture. How can it be refuted?
And what about the issue itself? Are we really experiencing Anthropogenic Carbon-based Global Warming? If the public loses faith in that claim, then the situation of
science in our society will be altered for the worse. There is very unlikely to be a crucial experience that either confirms or refutes the claim; the post-normal situation
is just too complex. The consensus is likely to depend on how much trust can still be put in science. The whole vast edifice of policy commitments for Carbon reduction, with
their many policy prescriptions and quite totalitarian moral exhortations, will be at risk of public rejection. What sort of chaos would then result? The consequences for
science in our civilisation would be extraordinary.
Rees and other LORDs fear public is losing
confidence in climate change science. It now looks as thought the consensus defence has emerged that a few errors and misjudgements by a minority of incompetents has put
the whole immaculate edifice of climate change evidence under threat from those evil sceptics.
They must be hoping that the inadequate establishment media just stick to those leaked e-mails and do not cotton on to the much more damaging annotations to software that
accompanied them, let alone the evidence that is arising all round the world of fraudulent adjustment of temperature data accompanied by “the dog ate my homework” excuses
for not releasing the source data.
The main thing to remember is this:
Such people do not hold their beliefs because of their positions: they hold their positions because of their beliefs. (Number Watch)
Sir John Houghton explains to Steve Connor how global warming sceptics have misrepresented his views (The Independent)
Is it purely apocryphal? I don't know but I do know Sir John is no better angel, here he is promoting IPCC TAR with the fraudulent hockey stick graph as
his chief prop:
BTW: does anyone know how Houghton came to use Kondratjew & Moskalenko and their estimate of 7.2 °C for pre-IR level of CO2-forced
climate warming? My Russian is not up to the task & we've never found any English reference other than Houghton's book 'The Global Climate', (1984) and those
citing it. Lindzen derives only half that sensitivity with the cited 40% cloud, making us very interested in the number's provenance.
Perhaps unknown to many people, the process is started and finished not by scientists but by political officials, who steer the way the information is presented in
so-called summary for policymakers [SPM] chapters.
Not so, agrees Anton Imeson, a former IPCC lead author from the Netherlands:
The IPCC should have never allowed itself to be branded as a scientific organisation. It provides a review of published scientific papers but none of this is much
controlled by independent scientists.
The evidence shows that the claim of “4000 scientific experts supported the IPCC’s claims” is dishonest in almost every word. There were not 4000 people, but
just under 2900; they were not all scientists; and it seems that they were not all experts. There is only evidence that about 60 people explicitly supported the claim,
although that might not mean much given the vested interests and lack of impartiality of many authors and reviewers.
While we are all familiar with the figures of al-Gore and James Hansen pushing "dangerous climate change", not all those behind the climate alarmism agenda are
household names.
One who most definitely should be is Professor Martin Parry, whom we featured in an
earlier piece. It is he that has been responsible for fashioning many of the "bullets" used by the higher-profile figures.
What has brought this man onto the radar is "Africagate", where the
accumulating evidence suggests that – as with "Glaciergate" - the alarmist claim that found its way into the IPCC AR4 cannot have been an accident.
Parry is, of course, the co-chair of Working Group II (WGII) which, in dealing with climate impacts, has been responsible for all the "gates" bar the original
"Climategate". As head of the all-powerful Technical Support Unit (TSU) as well, it is he more than anyone who had ultimate control over what went into the WGII
report, and how it finally appeared. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The December SPPI monthly report
came out on Jan 23. As usual, it contains graphs of the latest juiciest data: sea levels, ice, sunspots, cyclones, global temperature trends and the latest papers. Here’s a
few snippets that caught my eye.
Get ready for, 1.4 degrees (or more… or less).
Global Temperature Trends 1981-2009
Call me a cherry picker, but going by the full satellite data record we have and drawing a simplistic straight line, we are rocketing towards 1.4
degrees of warming by 2100, (but only if that trend of the last 30 years doesn’t change, which it is, every year). For those who are new to this, there are two
interpretations of the satellite data and this neatly combines both of them (UAH and RSS) and makes one wiggly line out of masses of data. Not surprisingly, the SPPI team
have chosen to ignore the surface record of airports and air-conditioners, “ground based thermometers”. More
» (Jo Nova)
A new University of California, Davis, study by a top ecological forecaster says it is harder than experts thought to predict when sudden shifts in Earth's natural systems
will occur -- a worrisome finding for scientists trying to identify the tipping points that could push climate change into an irreparable global disaster.
"Many scientists are looking for the warning signs that herald sudden changes in natural systems, in hopes of forestalling those changes, or improving our preparations for
them," said UC Davis theoretical ecologist Alan Hastings. "Our new study found, unfortunately, that regime shifts with potentially large consequences can happen
without warning — systems can ‘tip’ precipitously.
"This means that some effects of global climate change on ecosystems can be seen only once the effects are dramatic. By that point returning the system to a desirable
state will be difficult, if not impossible."
The current study focuses on models from ecology, but its findings may be applicable to other complex systems, especially ones involving human dynamics such as harvesting of
fish stocks or financial markets. (UC Davis)
Not more PlayStation® Climatology! Alternative futures of a warming world -
Potential human responses to climate change will be integrated into future models of global climate
RICHLAND, Wash. -- An international team of climate scientists will take a new approach to modeling the Earth's climate future, according to a paper in 11 February Nature.
The next set of models will include, for the first time, tightly linked analyses of greenhouse gas emissions, projections of the Earth's climate, impacts of climate change, and
human decision-making.
This approach will influence the next international scientific assessment undertaken by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It will provide the framework for
thousands of individual scientific studies on climate impacts and adaptation, climate modeling, and changes in the way societies generate and use energy. (DOE/Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory)
Couldn't you guys just go see Madame Zelda for a tarot reading or something? It'd be way cheaper and probably more accurate too.
“….it’s a mistake to use any one storm — or even a season’s worth of storms — to disprove climate change (or to prove it)…”
and
“Weather is what will happen next weekend; climate is what will happen over the next decades and centuries. And while our ability to predict the former has become
reasonably reliable, scientists are still a long way from being able to make accurate projections about the future of the global climate.”
However, the article contains misinformation. I briefly comment on two issues presented in the article.
1. It is written
“The 2009 U.S. Climate Impacts Report found that large-scale cold-weather storm systems have gradually tracked to the north in the U.S. over the past 50 years.”
The currentset of snowstorms in the Middle Atlantic states this winter actually have become intense further south than average. New
England is certainly accustomed to these nor’easters. In an earlier post (see
figure top), illustrates that the jet stream (as represented by the lower tropospheric temperature anomalies) was well south of its average position across the
northern hemisphere. It is the polar jet stream which is where winter storms develop and intensify.
2. It is written
“As global temperatures have risen, the winter ice cover over the Great Lakes has shrunk, which has led to even more moisture in the atmosphere and more snow in the
already hard-hit Great Lakes region, according to a 2003 study in the Journal of Climate.”
“After a decade of little ice cover, from 1997–1998 to 2007–2008, the Great Lakes experienced extensive ice cover during the 2008–2009 winter. The area
of Lake Superior covered by ice during the 2008–2009 winter reached 75,010 square kilometers on 2 March 2009, nearly twice the maximum average of nearly 40,000 square
kilometers. By this time, Lake Superior was nearly completely ice covered, as were Lake Huron, Lake Erie, and Lake St. Clair, a small basin between Huron and Erie (Figure 1a).
Even northern Lake Michigan experienced severe ice cover.”
These news articles would be more accurate (and effective) if the actual behavior of the climate system were presented. (Climate Science)
A new study finds that the effects of changing land surface are dominated by changes in the hydrological cycle (reduced latent heat flux) warming globally rather than
changes in radiative forcing at the surface due to albedo. The reduced latent heat flux led to a small but statistically significant warming in the global average. Larger
regional warmings were partially compensated for by regional cooling which varied by season. This warming due to hydrological response is directly opposite to the discussion
presented in the latest IPCC report which finds a small cooling due to the albedo changes resulting from land cover changes. In the land surface model inter-comparison study of
[Pitman, et al., 2009, LUCID] only half of the modeling experiments had decreased latent heat flux associated with deforestation, while the other half had increased
latent heat flux. To realistically simulate land surface forcing a model must be able to reproduce the surface forcing found in field and satellite studies. From the LUCID
experiments we can see that this is not the case for many of the current GCMs.
1 National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado
2 Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), and Dept. of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado,
Boulder, Colorado
The abstract reads
Recently, [Pitman, et al., 2009] found a wide range of bio-geophysical climate impacts from historical land cover change when modeled in a suite of current Global
Climate Models (GCMs). The bio-geophysical climate impacts of human land cover change however, have been investigated by a wide range of general circulation modeling, regional
climate modeling, and observational studies. In this regard the IPCC 4th assessment report specifies radiative cooling of -0.2 W/m2 as the dominant global impact of
human land cover change since 1750, but states this has a low to medium level of scientific understanding. To further contribute to the understanding of the possible climate
impacts of anthropogenic land cover change, we have performed a series of land cover change experiments with the Community Land Model (CLM) within the Community Climate System
Model (CCSM). To do this we have developed a new set of potential vegetation land surface parameters to represent land cover change in CLM. The new parameters are consistent
with the potential vegetation biome mapping of [Ramankutty and Foley, 1999], with the Plant Functional Types and plant phenology consistent with the current day MODIS land
surface parameters of [Lawrence and Chase, 2007]. We found that land cover change in CCSM resulted in widespread regional warming of the near surface atmosphere, but with
limited impact on near surface temperatures globally. The experiments also found changes in precipitation, with drier conditions regionally, but with limited impact on average
global precipitation. Analysis of the surface fluxes in the CCSM experiments found the current day warming was predominantly driven by changes in surface hydrology through
reduced evapo-transpiration and latent heat flux, with the radiative forcing playing a secondary role. We show these finding are supported by a wide range of observational
field studies, satellite studies, and regional and global climate modeling studies. (Climate Science)
LONDON - Buying activity in the voluntary carbon market has been quite slow recently as buyers favor very specific types of offset credits and it is difficult to source such
clean energy projects.
"The market hasn't changed much, it is quite quiet. Buyers prefer renewables but it is taking a long time to get something into the market," said David Pontis,
emissions broker at Tullett Prebon. (Reuters)
HELSINKI - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin insisted on the superiority of pipeline gas over alternative fuels Wednesday as Moscow prepares to start building its
biggest post-Soviet gas link to Europe.
"Fortunately or unfortunately, neither solar power nor firewood nor dried manure can replace hydrocarbons in the next 20-25 years," Putin told a joint news conference
with Finnish Prime Minister with Matti Vanhanen.
"As far as natural gas reaching Europe by pipelines is concerned, this gas will always be cheaper than liquefied gas," said Putin. (Reuters)
LONDON - Britain faces tough choices on the level of energy sector regulation needed in order to provide secure, affordable, and sustainable energy supplies in the future.
Energy regulator Ofgem called for radical energy sector reforms last week, presenting five policy packages of various levels of regulation, aimed at encouraging long-term
investments in energy security, such as gas storage, and renewable energy projects such as wind and back-up power plants. (Reuters)
In December, I wrote about the problems caused by the German wind turbines to the
electric grid in Germany and its neighbors, including the Czech Republic.
As Reuters and the
Czech media noticed today, the Czech grid is overloaded and the company in charge of it, ČEPS, is finalizing its plans to solve the situation.
ČEPS urges the electricity distribution companies to halt the connecting of the new solar and wind plants. At the end of 2009, they were giving 600 MW to the grid. However,
projects that would add a whopping extra 3,500 MW have already been approved! This is a genuine threat to the stability of the grid.
ČEPS has informed that if the rules won't be changed to avoid the danger raised by these ludicrously subsidized and hugely irregular sources of energy, it will have to start
to disconnect them. This could mean that the green investors could lose their money which would be great.
As we reported in today’s Morning Bell,
ABC News reports that despite massive amounts of stimulus funding being spent on wind farms—nearly $2 billion—the vast majority (80%) of it has been spent on overseas
companies. ABC contacted Russ Choma at the Investigative
Reporting Workshop who suggested that the project has resulted in nearly 6,000 jobs for overseas manufacturers and only a few hundred over here.
To add insult to injury, ABC’s Jonathan Karl reports that “a
recent report by American Wind Energy Association showed a drop in U.S. wind manufacturing jobs last year.” That’s right—even with a government-subsidized demand,
wind manufacturing decreased. Continue reading...
(The Foundry)
Some headlines are so telling, that you don’t really need to write the story to go with them. So I’ll keep this story short and focus primarily on the facts that were
revealed by the Earth Policy Institute last month. The think tank reports that in 2009, US ethanol distilleries consumed 107 million tons of grain. That amounts to more than
25% of total US grain production. That quantity of grain, says Earth Policy, “was enough to feed 330 million people for one year at average world consumption levels.” [Read
More] (Energy Tribune)
Brazil has plans to increase its production of biofuels over the next ten years. But, although Brazilian sugarcane is currently one of the best raw materials for producing
biofuels with low greenhouse-gas emissions, there are concerns that land-use changes caused by expanding biofuel plantations could mar this good performance.
With that in mind, a team from Germany and Kenya has projected land-use changes in Brazil to 2020. Its results indicate that the biofuel and cattle ranching sectors should work
together to ensure that the increased growth of biofuels does not lead to destruction of rainforest for rangelands. One way to achieve this could be by increasing livestock
density. (environmentalresearchweb)
Yeah, sure, we can all see enviros welcoming high-intensity farming in the Amazon Basin, right?
Far fewer children would get a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. “Binge eating disorder” and “hypersexuality” might become part of the everyday language. And the way
many mental disorders are diagnosed and treated would be sharply revised.
These are a few of the changes proposed on Tuesday by doctors charged with revising psychiatry’s encyclopedia of mental disorders, the guidebook that largely determines where
society draws the line between normal and not normal, between eccentricity and illness, between self-indulgence and self-destruction — and, by extension, when and how
patients should be treated.
The eagerly awaited revisions — to be published, if adopted, in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, due in 2013 — would be the
first in a decade. (NYT)
The federal Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that it would take steps to more stringently regulate three of the most potent forms of medical radiation, including
increasingly popular CT scans, some of which deliver the radiation equivalent of 400 chest X-rays.
With the announcement, the F.D.A. puts its regulatory muscle behind a growing movement to make life-saving medical radiation — both diagnostic and therapeutic — safer.
Last week, the leading radiation oncology association called for enhanced safety measures. And a Congressional committee was set to hear testimony Wednesday on the weak
oversight of medical radiation, but the hearing was canceled because of bad weather.
The F.D.A. has for weeks been investigating why more than 300 patients in four hospitals were overradiated by powerful CT scans used to detect strokes. The overdoses were first
discovered last year at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where patients received up to eight times as much radiation as intended.
The errors occurred over 18 months and were detected only after patients lost their hair. (NYT)
HUNDREDS of Chinese believe they have a mysterious new disease with HIV-like symptoms but doctors suggest it is just "HIV phobia" caused by guilt from having sex
with prostitutes.
In the past Chinese authorities have been accused of covering up epidemics such as the SARS virus and doctors are blaming a breakdown in trust between the medical profession
and patients for the growing HIV phobia. (NewsCore)
Number Watch is obliged to accept its destiny as the producer of great ideas that are taken up later by others around the world. Seven years after we
launched our miracle diet the same thing has turned up in Hong
Kong. (Number Watch)
First we were told - quite reasonably - that smoking was bad for us. It increases the risk of a variety of diseases, particularly lung cancer and respiratory illnesses, as
well as making heart disease and stroke more likely. No one who smokes regularly can be unaware that there is a fair chance that their habit will shorten their life, even if
the immediate prospect of a stimulating drag is more enticing than a few extra years of old age. We’ve all got to die of something, at some point; it’s up to us to make a
calculation about whether that nicotine hit is worth it.
More controversial was the suggestion that breathing other people’s smoke might be dangerous, too. Okay, it wouldn’t be a huge surprise if those nights of old spent steeped
in a nicotine-tinged fug in the Dog and Duck didn’t exactly do one’s lungs the world of good. The smell certainly lingered on your clothes. Even then, anyone who remembers
boozers in the past, or the top-deck of the bus on a winter’s evening, will know that the modern, well-ventilated, pre-smoking ban pub was a much less smoky environment. By
rather dubiously extrapolating from some small personal risks, based on smoking studies that probably bear little relevance to twenty-first century Western workplaces, official
estimates concluded that about 1,000 people per year die from ‘secondhand’ smoke in the UK. In July 2007, a ban on smoking in public places came into force in England. The
tobacco lovers were turfed out on to the street.
Yet even the junk science of secondhand smoke seems like the stuff of Nobel Prizes next to the new kid on the block: ‘third-hand smoke’. Now, claim researchers, you don’t
even need to breathe smoke in, you simply need to be in contact with smokers or touch surfaces that have been in contact with their smoke to be at risk. If the dodgy research
that produced the smoking ban was bullshit, the claims made for third-hand smoking are in a whole new category: ‘beyond bullshit’. (Rob Lyons, spiked)
Government is taking us a long way down the Road to Serfdom. That doesn't just mean that more of us must work for the government. It means that we are changing from
independent, self-responsible people into a submissive flock. The welfare state kills the creative spirit.
F.A. Hayek, an Austrian economist living in Britain, wrote "The Road to Serfdom" in 1944 as a warning that central economic planning would extinguish freedom. The
book was a hit. Reader's Digest produced a condensed version that sold 5 million copies.
Hayek meant that governments can't plan economies without planning people's lives. After all, an economy is just individuals engaging in exchanges. The scientific-sounding
language of President Obama's economic planning hides the fact that people must shelve their own plans in favor of government's single plan. (John Stossel, Townhall)
The Scientific American runs a story about a
ruling by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) that was released last week. The title is kind of incredible:
Denial of global warming threat to the American pika means no protection from U.S.
After
one year of research, the official U.S. body for biodiversity decided that
After review of all available scientific and commercial information, we find that listing the American
pika ... is not warranted at this time.
Well, most of the American pika actually belong to the "least concern" group,
whopping three categories below the "endangered" group, while only 8 out of 31 populations are "vulnerable", one step below "endangered".
The petition to classify these small (170 g) cousins of
the rabbit as an endangered species came from environmental advocacy groups. These green humans claimed that Pika dies when the temperature jumps to 25.5 degrees Celsius for a
few hours. (The only existing reference seems to be a statement by an ABC journalist.) FWS
found out that they can live at 40 degrees Celsius: there's just 14.5 degrees discrepancy between the two sources.
These little animals live in Oregon and Nevada. They may move by 3 kilometers to the North a year or 2 meters upslope a year (or some mixture of these two) if the slow changes
to the temperatures continue (regardless of the cause) and if these changes pose a problem for them. That is enough to counter the 0.013 °C of warming a year that we have seen
for 30 years.
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—A study by University of Michigan researchers offers new insight into what happens to mercury deposited onto Arctic snow from the atmosphere.
The work also provides a new approach to tracking mercury's movement through Arctic ecosystems.
Mercury is a naturally occurring element, but some 2000 tons of it enter the global environment each year from human-generated sources such as coal-burning power plants,
incinerators and chlorine-producing plants.
"When released into the atmosphere in its reduced form, mercury is not very reactive. It can float around in the atmosphere as a gas for a year or more, and it's not
really an environmental problem at the concentrations at which it occurs," said Joel Blum, the John D. MacArthur Professor of Geological Sciences. (UM)
Much environmental damage has been caused by the way we do business. Is there a way of changing our economic models from being part of the problem into part of the solution?
(Pavan Sukhdev, The Guardian)
Before we even start, what's wrong with shaping our world to suit ourselves? Never mind...
So, you want to "save" wild critters or some particular patch of unmodified dirt? Fine, to guarantee X's "protection" simply privatize and
commoditize it, then you have owners with an incentive to husband and protect X, don't you? Why is it the watermelons have such problems with that? Moreover, you don't
need to create some imaginary value since the market will soon find X's true value and it will be protected by its owners in accord with its worth.
"Despite improvements in the LCA, it has a methodological weakness, which is a lack of environmental impact categories to measure the effect of human activities such as
cultivation or grazing on the soil", Montserrat Núñez, lead author and a researcher at the Institute of Agro Food Research and Technology (IRTA), tells SINC. (FECYT -
Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology)
Given that 70% of the globe's surface is oceans there's a bit of a problem with the headline. Of the approximately 25% of the world not permanently covered
by water, ice and snow about two-fifths receives less than 10" annual rainfall and is thus classified as "desert" (although that doesn't prevent a great deal
of dry land farming, livestock grazing and other uses). Are they really distributing a release saying desert regions may become desert regions?
The drivers of tropical deforestation have shifted in the early 21st century to hinge on growth of cities and the globalized agricultural trade, a new large-scale study
concludes. The observations starkly reverse assumptions by some scientists that fast-growing urbanization and the efficiencies of global trade might eventually slow or reverse
tropical deforestation. The study, which covers most of the world’s tropical land area, appears in this week’s early edition of the journal Nature Geoscience.
Deforestation has been a rising concern in recent decades, especially with the recognition that it may exacerbate climate change. Studies in the late 20th century generally
matched it with growing rural populations, as new roads were built into forests and land was cleared for subsistence agriculture. Since then, rural dwellers have been flooding
into cities, seeking better living standards; 2009 was recorded as the first year in history when half of human lived in urban areas. Large industrial farms have, in turn,
taken over rural areas and expanded further into remaining forests, in order to supply both domestic urban populations and growing international agricultural markets, the study
suggests. (Earth Institute News)
Conservationists want to turn archipelago into a giant sea-life reserve. But what about the exiled population whose hopes of going home would be dashed forever?
A major conservation row is developing over proposals for Britain to establish the biggest and most unspoiled marine nature reserve in the world. The issue of the Chagos
Islands raises the increasingly difficult question of how to weigh up the protection of the best remaining parts of nature, in a rapidly degrading world, against the needs and
rights of people.
It concerns the Chagos Archipelago in the middle of the Indian Ocean, a group of isolated coral islands teeming with wildlife which is considered to be among the least polluted
marine locations on Earth. Its seawater is the cleanest ever tested; its coral reefs are completely unspoiled; its whole ecosystem, with its countless seabirds, turtles,
coconut-cracking crabs (the world's largest), dolphins, sharks and nearly 1,000 other species of fish, is pristine.
Officially British Indian Ocean Territory, the islands are the subject of an ambitious plan by conservationists – backed by the Foreign Secretary, David Miliband – to keep
them the way they are, by creating a marine protected area, where fishing and all other exploitation would be banned, of 210,000 square miles – more than twice the land
surface of Great Britain. In an age when the oceans and their biodiversity are being ever more despoiled, it would be a supreme example of marine conservation and one of the
wildlife wonders of the world – in effect, Britain's Great Barrier Reef, or Britain's Galapagos.
The plan excites many wildlife enthusiasts and has the formal support of several of Britain's major conservation bodies, from the Royal Botanic Gardens of Kew and the
Zoological Society of London to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. The backing of the Foreign Office and the Foreign Secretary is significant. A public consultation
on the plan ends on Friday.
But there is a notable omission from the plan. It takes no account of the wishes of the original inhabitants, the Chagossians – the 1,500 people living on the islands who,
between 1967 and 1973, were deported wholesale by Britain, so that the largest island, Diego Garcia, could be used by the US as an airbase for strategic nuclear bombers. (The
Independent)
“The increased use of renewable fuels will also impact emissions with some emissions such as hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides (NOx), acetaldehyde and ethanol expected to
increase and others such as carbon monoxide (CO) and benzene expected to decrease. However, the impacts of these emissions on criteria air pollutants are highly variable from
region to region. Overall the emission changes are projected to lead to increases in population-weighted annual average ambient PM [particulate matter] and ozone
concentrations, which in turn are anticipated to lead to up to 245 cases of adult premature mortality.”
Trading non-toxic CO2 for airborne particulate matter is not a good idea. (Global Warming Science)
The Obama Administration has been moving full-speed ahead on anticarbon regulation, never mind waiting for Congress to pass a bill. But now opposition is building among
senior Democrats, with two powerful committee Chairmen introducing a bill last week to bar the Environmental Protection Agency from declaring that carbon is a dangerous
pollutant.
EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is busy writing new rules that would let her drive a tax-and-regulation bulldozer through the U.S. economy under laws never meant to apply to
greenhouse gases. Ms. Jackson is expected to issue new anticarbon regulations for cars and trucks next month before moving on to power plants and other industries.
This is all too much for Missouri's Ike Skelton and Minnesota's Collin Peterson, the Chairmen of the House Armed Services and Agriculture Committees, respectively. Along with
Missouri Republican Jo Ann Emerson, they are pushing a two-page bill that would amend the Clean Air Act to restore Congress's original intent and strip CO2 and other greenhouse
gases from the statutory language.
This is bipartisanship we can believe in. Such legislation would vaporize the EPA's "endangerment finding" for carbon and thus require the Administration to use
democratic debate and persuasion if it really wants to reshape the energy markets and impose huge new costs on American consumers. What a thought.
"If Congress doesn't do something soon, the EPA is going to cram these regulations through all on their own," Mr. Peterson said. "I have no confidence that EPA
can regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act without severe harm to all taxpayers."
Added Mr. Skelton: "Simply put, we cannot tolerate turning over the regulation of greenhouse gas emissions to unelected bureaucrats at EPA. America's energy and
environmental policies should be set by Congress." Yes, they should be. (WSJ)
CLIMATE CHANGE legislation, according to conventional wisdom, is all but dead for the year. It fell victim to Senate gridlock, yawning gaps between lawmakers over how and
even whether to tackle the issue and President Obama's decision last year to place it third on his list of priorities, after the stimulus and health care. The president himself
seemed to admit at least temporary defeat last week; at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire, Mr. Obama cited speculations that the Senate might pass only a modest energy bill.
Such a bill inevitably would contain expensive subsidies and research programs, but it would not place a price on carbon. (Washington Post)
You have heard much talk about various schemes devised by members of Congress to ensure that the energy tax masquerading as a rationing scheme — the cap-and-trade wonder
that President Obama insists will cause your electricity prices to "necessarily skyrocket" and "bankrupt" key industries — won't cost you anything. And
yet it will still lead you to use far less energy, result in the invention of pixie dust, and otherwise do all those things that Europe's scheme failed to do.
From Europe today comes yet another admission that, unless the thing hurts — bad, it won't do anything emissions-wise (nor climate-wise, given that the overwhelming
majority of the world's nations say fuggedaboudit). (Chris Horner, NRO)
As I have mentioned several times, most of the revelations about the U.N. climate panel and its boss, Rajendra Pachauri, were first published in the British
newspapers, especially The Telegraph and The Times. A more limited coverage has been available to the readers and viewers of FoxNews.
But the gospel may finally be coming to the U.S. mainstream media, too. Elizabeth Rosenthal named her article
Although it includes some bizarre alarmist comments such as
"The general consensus among mainstream scientists is that the errors are in any case minor and do not undermine the report’s conclusions,"
it actually says enough true stuff about the GlacierGate and especially various conflicts of interest of the IPCC boss. I feel that they find it easier to sacrifice particular
individuals, such as Pachauri, than the core elements of the orthodoxy. That's an explanation why the financial interests are being given so much space while the discussion of
the errors and sub-par references in the 2007 report remains limited to the GlacierGate and is not too detailed, anyway.
Today the New York Times finally gets round to covering the scandals roiling the International Panel on Climate Change and its controversial head, high-flying
railroad engineer and soft-porn novelist Dr. Rajendra Pachauri. It's a front-page
story but incredibly dully written, as if its object is to depress interest in the subject. In its way, it's a textbook example of why the Times is doomed.
The first thing you notice is that the NYT is not investigating the scandals itself but merely commenting on stories reported by the Times of London and my
old colleagues at Britain's Telegraph. Jay Currie asks:
Perhaps the New York Times has become a blog.
Not quite. If so, they'd include links to the Brit originals. I will make just one observation, relating to the reporter's dogged attempts to exonerate Dr. Pachauri from
charges of conflict of interest. Elisabeth Rosenthal says it's all hunky-dory because the money the IPCC chair gets as a paid consultant to private companies goes to help poor
children in rural India or something. She adds:
Dr. Pachauri, 69, said the only work income he received was a salary from the Energy and Resources Institute: about $49,000, according to his 2009 Indian tax return, which
he provided to The New York Times. The return also lists $16,000 in other income, most of it interest on accounts in Indian banks.
But the most casual glance at Dr. Pachauri suggests that this is not a man with a $65,000 lifestyle. For example, within the space of a week he made two round-trips from New
York to Delhi, in each case staying a day and then flying back to the U.S. — the first time for a
cricket practice, the second for the actual match. First-class airfare for those two trips alone would be about a third of his pre-tax income.
So who paid for them? The U.N.? Or one of his consulting clients? Or more likely that institute of his for helping upcountry villagers? He was, after all, playing for his
Institute's amateur cricket team. So, when Deutsche Bank pay Dr. Pachauri's consulting fees to his Institute, are they in fact funding his remarkably lavish lifestyle?
Let's take another example: The launch festivities for his warmographic
novel (in which he demonstrates an obsession with bosomly swell on a par with noted
breast man Andrew Sullivan) were paid for by BP. Curious. Big Oil sponsoring Big Breasts
for Big Climate.
Dr. Pachauri is in the happy position of so many people one encounters in "public service" who rarely if ever have cause to write a personal check. But why is the New
York Times reporter assigned to this story so ill-informed that she doesn't even ask him about the cricket and the breast-book party and all the other stuff?
As I said, the Times coverage only makes sense if your object is to bore readers away. (Mark Steyn, NRO)
While perusing some of the review comments to the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report, I came across the contributions of Andrew
Lacis, a colleague of James Hansen's at GISS. Lacis's is not a name I've come across before but some of what he has to say about Chapter 9 of the IPCC's report is simply
breathtaking.
Chapter 9 is possibly the most important one in the whole IPCC report - it's the one where they decide that global warming is manmade. This is the one where the headlines
are made.
Remember, this guy is mainstream, not a sceptic, and you may need to remind yourself of that fact several times as you read through his comment
on the executive summary of the chapter:
There is no scientific merit to be found in the Executive Summary. The presentation sounds like something put together by Greenpeace activists and their legal department.
The points being made are made arbitrarily with legal sounding caveats without having established any foundation or basis in fact. The Executive Summary seems to be a
political statement that is only designed to annoy greenhouse skeptics. Wasn't the IPCC Assessment Report intended to be a scientific document that would merit solid backing
from the climate science community - instead of forcing many climate scientists into having to agree with greenhouse skeptic criticisms that this is indeed a report with a
clear and obvious political agenda. Attribution can not happen until understanding has been clearly demonstrated. Once the facts of climate change have been established and
understood, attribution will become self-evident to all. The Executive Summary as it stands is beyond redemption and should simply be deleted.
I'm speechless. The chapter authors, however weren't. This was their reply (all of it):
Rejected. [Executive Summary] summarizes Ch 9, which is based on the peer reviewed literature.
Simply astonishing. This is a consensus? (Bishop Hill)
Ben Santer had a change of heart about data transparency despite being hectored and abused by rabid climate sceptics ( Fred Pearce, The Guardian)
Climate Group Admits Mistakes - Some IPCC Officials Say the
U.N.-Sponsored Group Must Improve Procedures for Reviewing Reports
Some top officials of a Nobel Prize-winning climate-science organization are acknowledging the panel made some mistakes amid a string of recent revelations questioning the
accuracy of some of the information in its influential reports.
Officials of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations-sponsored network of scientists whose reports strongly influence global policy on greenhouse-gas
emissions, initially played down some of the allegations and criticized those who called them important. Increasingly, however, they are acknowledging the panel's mistakes and
saying it needs to tighten its procedures.
"This has not increased the credibility of the IPCC," said Ottmar Edenhofer, a German economist who is co-chairing one of the main sections of the IPCC's next big
climate-change report, due out in 2013 and 2014. "There is some room for improvement." (WSJ)
It being the 350th anniversary of the Royal Society, celebrations by the new Greenie proprietors are only natural. The
Telegraph has a page largely dominated by President Martin Rees with an article entitled The
unstoppable spirit of enquiry. Rees is a notorious serial scaremonger, through doom-laden books and articles. One wonders, however, whether many readers paused to consider
the import of one particular paragraph that occurs in the middle of this piece:
Traditional journals survive as guarantors of quality, but they are supplemented by a blogosphere of widely varying quality. The latter cries
out for an informal system of quality control, indicated by the approbation by discerning readers, by blogs or by commentaries.
There are those of us, who have long ago published in some of these traditional journals, who might question whether some of them still act as guarantors of quality. It is
the second sentence, however, that for all its vagueness and understatement carries an implied threat. Who are these discerning readers, blogs and commentators? While no one
can argue that most of what is on the internet is not irredeemable nonsense, it still has the overarching merit that it is uncensored. Readers are able to make their own
judgement. The implication of this statement is that there are those who are more qualified to decide what hoi polloi are allowed to read. So far the internet has been
free of the self-censorship observed by the establishment media, which has allowed ludicrous and costly theories to reign, and it is only recently that the establishment has
come to realise that upstarts out there are pointing out that the emperor has no clothes. The neo-Marxists who are the backbone of the new Greenie establishment would dearly
love to extend their censorship to the internet. Be warned! (Number Watch)
Despite failures at Copenhagen, the fraud of the IPCC and the farce of Climate-gate, the administration wants an agency to monitor climate change. Why must we fund one-stop
shopping for climate charlatans?
As the climate freezes, there's no freeze on federal employment that will grow even more with the establishment of a new agency, the Climate Service office. The new agency was
announced Monday by Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
This ministry of climate change propaganda will operate in tandem with NOAA's National Weather Service and National Ocean Service. "Whether we like it or not, climate
change represents a real threat," Lubchenco said at a press conference as snow measured in feet blanketed the Eastern seaboard. This new agency represents a threat to real
climate science.
Lubchenco also announced a NOAA climate portal on the Internet to collect climate data from NOAA and other sources. It will be "one-stop shopping into a world of climate
information."
That portal will be more like Alice's rabbit hole, leading to a world of disinformation where climate data will mean whatever Locke and Lubchenco want it to mean. (IBD)
Richard Somerville, Ph.D. is a distinguished professor emeritus and research professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. He has told San Diego "City Beat"
that KUSI promised to present his full statement on-air but didn’t. He was talking about my January 14th hour long program "Global Warming: The Other Side". KUSI
contacted Scripps seeking a response to the program for our 10 PM newscast that night. Scripps referred our Producer to Somerville. The Producer who had that assignment assures
me that no "promise" was made. But according to the nasty City Beat editorial that slam-bams the program, Somerville said the station didn't run his written statement
and included only a couple of “garbled” sentences from a lengthy interview during a 10 p.m. newscast. He called KUSI and me "unethical."
I object to his remarks to "City Beat" and take particular exception to being called unethical. (KUSI)
“The Obama administration announced plans yesterday to create a new National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate Service…..
Lubchenco [NOAA Administrator] said her agency already receives millions of requests each year for the type of information the proposed climate service would
provide, “and we fully expect requests for information to grow explosively.”
“There is no question about the critical need for this service,” she said. “Climate change is real. It’s happening now in our own backyards and around the globe,
and it’s beginning to touch nearly every aspect of our lives.”
The NOAA chief said climate change is already raising sea levels, lengthening growing seasons, prompting earlier spring snowmelts and shifts in river flows, causing
more intense drought and increasing the incidence of extreme weather….
NCDC head Thomas Karl will serve as the climate service’s transitional director. NOAA also plans to create new positions for six regional climate service directors.”
The statements by Jane Lubchenco and the appointment of Tom Karl as the transitional director, assures that policymakers will continue to receive an
inappropriately narrow view of our actual knowledge with respect to climate science. I have documented the biases of Tom Karl in a number of reports and weblog posts;
e.g. see
The NOAA Administrator, in making the appointment of Tom Karl, has apparently not learned that the climate science
community has a broader view of the issues and less confidence in the skill of the multi-decadal global and regional climate predictions than she does. By selecting
Tom Karl, she has assured that this narrow viewpoint will be perpetuated within the new National Climate Service. (Climate Science)
“Faced with the social need to tell the world what the science says, the IPCC was set up as a means of seeking consensus. My concern has always been that it
runs against the normal spirit of science.” [Quotes are italicized; emphasis added.]
He explains, “In science, people are supposed to rock the boat,” and ideas have to survive “ordeal by fire.” So thank you, Sir David, for endorsing skepticism
and the scientific method. In our world, that cannot be repeated often enough. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
Given the dogmatic fervor of global warming proponents, and their intolerance of skeptics who dare to question the latest commandment (see: cap-and-trade)
in the green scripture, it is perhaps no coincidence that the environmentalist movement sometimes seems to have more in common with theology than with science. If that is true,
then the logical word to describe those scientists who have challenged environmental hysteria and extremism is “heretics.” In a series of profiles, Front Page’s Rich
Trzupek will spotlight prominent scientists whose “heretical” research, publications, and opinions have helped add a much-needed dose of balance and fact to
environmental debates that for too long have been driven by fear mongering and alarmism. In a field that demands political conformity, they defiantly remain the heretics.
Previous profiles in the series include Steve Milloy, Dr.
Craig Idso, Dr. Roy Spencer, and Lord
Christopher Monckton. – The Editors (Rich Trzupek, FrontPage)
Some animals, it seems, are going on a diet, while others have expanding waistlines.
It's likely these are reactions to rapidly rising temperatures due to global climate change, speculates Prof. Yoram Yom-Tov of Tel Aviv University's Department of Zoology, who
has been measuring the evolving body sizes of birds and animals in areas where climate change is most extreme.
Changes are happening primarily in higher latitudes, where Prof. Yom-Tov has identified a pattern of birds getting smaller and mammals getting bigger, according to most of the
species he's examined. The change, he hypothesizes, is likely a strategy for survival. Prof. Yom-Tov, who has spent decades measuring and monitoring the body sizes of mammals
and small birds, says that these changes have been happening more rapidly.
His most recent paper on the topic, focused on the declining body sizes of arctic foxes in Iceland, appeared in Global Change Biology. (PhysOrg)
All along the Oregon coast over the last month, hundreds of brown pelicans have turned up dead, starving or begging for food.
As many as 1,000 of the gangly seabirds failed to make their annual fall migration to California, many instead winding up at Oregon's rehabilitation centers.
Those that did head south, leaving the Pacific Northwest winter behind, were battered by California's recent storms. Shelters in San Pedro and the San Francisco Bay Area too
are full of emaciated pelicans.
Researchers, at a loss to explain the casualties, are looking at unusual ocean currents and the depletion of fish stocks -- as well as warmer temperatures, toxic runoff and
algae booms -- as possible causes. (PhysOrg)
From CO2 Science Volume 13 Number 6: 10 February 2010
Medieval
Warm Period Record of the Week:
Was there a Medieval Warm Period? YES, according to data published by 804
individual scientists from 476 separate research institutions in 43
different countries ... and counting! This issue's Medieval Warm Period Record of the Week comes from the Boniface
River Area, Northern Québec, Canada. To access the entire Medieval Warm Period Project's database, click here.
Subject Index Summaryl Little Ice Age (Regional - South America: Peru): An externally-driven millennial-scale oscillatory
phenomenon has been influencing the climate of Peru -- and most all of the rest of the world as well -- as far back in time as researchers have been able to discern its
effects.
Plant Growth Data:
This week we add new results of plant growth responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment obtained from experiments described in the peer-reviewed scientific
literature for: Chinese Red Pine (Zhao et al., 2009), Reed
Grass (Zhao et al., 2009), Soybean (Kanemoto et al., 2009), and Sugar
Beet (Burkart et al., 2009).
Here’s the UAH lower tropospheric temperature anomaly map for January, 2010. As can be seen, Northern Hemispheric land, on a whole, is not as cold as many of us thought
(click on image for larger version). Below-normal areas were restricted to parts of Russia and China, most of Europe, and the southeastern United States. Most of Canada and
Greenland were well above normal: (Roy W. Spencer)
Question: Will instrumentation having sufficient temporal and spatial coverage and sufficient measurement
accuracy ever be available to validate the expected change in the radiative energy balance at the TOA?
As you can tell, my questions have focused on the energy balance that is fundamental to the AGW argument. I suspect that the UV reflectivity ( the albedo ) and IR
absorptivity ( the greenhouse factor ) are not know with sufficient precision to differentiate at the level of change associated with all AGW sources.
[thanks to Dan Hughes for asking!]
Answer:
We do not, in my view, even need the measurements of the TOA radiative imbalance since we can let the climate system itself perform the diagnosis. I discuss this in my
paper
Upper ocean (and total ocean mass) is the dominant reservoir of heat change in the climate system. We can use this component of the climate to accurately diagnose
the heating rate (i.e. the radiative imbalance at the top of the atmosphere). (Climate Science)
The Technical Summary of the most recent IPCC reports states that “Over the 1961 to 2003 period, the average rate of global mean sea level rise is estimated from tide
gauge data to be 1.8 ± 0.5 mm yr–1.” “The average thermal expansion contribution to sea level rise for this period was 0.42 ± 0.12 mm yr–1, with significant decadal
variations, while the contribution from glaciers, ice caps and ice sheets is estimated to have been 0.7 ± 0.5 mm yr–1. The sum of these estimated climate-related
contributions for about the past four decades thus amounts to 1.1 ± 0.5 mm yr–1, which is less than the best estimate from the tide gauge observations. Therefore, the sea
level budget for 1961 to 2003 has not been closed satisfactorily.” (WCR)
Geoengineering, says scientist David Keith, “is like chemotherapy. It’s something nobody should like.”
But if you can’t avoid cancer, chemotherapy may be your best option. And, if it becomes evident that the earth can’t avoid the catastrophic impacts of climate change, it is
not merely possible that governments will turn to geoengineering.
Some people believe that it is all but certain.
Geoengineering, as you probably know, is the deliberate large-scale manipulation of the planet to counter global warming. It can take a number of forms, as the graphic below
shows, some perhaps still to be discovered. Long a taboo subject, geoengineering is being talked about openly these days by scientists, environmentalists and policy thinkers.
The National Academy of Sciences held a workshop on geoengineering in June. Influential books including SuperFreakonomics and Whole Earth Discipline, by longtime
environmentalist Stewart Brand, argue that it’s time to take geoengineering seriously. A congressional subcommittee held its second hearing on geoengineering just last week.
( Marc Gunther, Energy Collective)
We already engineer our world on the small and medium scale, as we should. Engineering is a nice capacity to have but deliberately cooling the world?
That's a good way to start a fight (or three, probably more).
In 1997, Rob Seeley was assigned to a small team of engineers charged with finding a way to launch Canada’s first new oil sands mining and upgrading project in 20 years.
It was the year leading up to the Kyoto Protocol, which sought a globally binding agreement to reduce manmade carbon dioxide, which had been linked to rising global
temperatures, or climate change.
Seeley and his teammates saw Kyoto as a sign of the times, and they designed Shell’s oil sands project with two cogeneration power plants, producing 225 megawatts of
low-emissions electricity and thermal energy for their oil sands extraction plant.
Today, with one oil sands operation in production and another nearing completion, Seeley is working on Shell’s Quest carbon capture and storage project, the next big step in
reducing carbon dioxide emissions from the Shell oil sands operations.
If approved, Quest would attach a carbon capture and storage system to Shell’s two oil sands upgraders near Edmonton, reducing its combined carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by
up to 1.2 million tonnes per year, or nearly 40 per cent. ( Brian Burton, Calgary Herald)
There is absolutely no excuse for such a monumental waste of such a magnificent environmental resource -- atmospheric CO2 is an essential
trace gas, we can't live without it and its current abundance is critically low.
We can see the t-shirt slogan already: I paid $58,000 for solar panels and all I got was a $21 carbon credit that bought me this t-shirt. It’s not very catchy, but
that’s the story of a Harrisburg couple, Tami and Randy Wilson, who installed
solar panels in their home to reduce their electricity bill:
The Pennsylvania couple has sold the world’s first carbon credit awarded for a reduction in personal carbon emissions. About 1,800 others have signed up to follow suit
– underlining the US public’s readiness to press ahead on the issue. The Wilsons began by getting rid of their son’s heated water bed, turning off power to computers
and televisions when not in use, changing to energy-efficient light bulbs, hang-drying their laundry and, finally, investing $58,000 in a solar panel system – until they
reduced their electricity bill to zero.
Then they signed up on the MyEmissionsExchange.com site to have their energy savings calculated. They found that they had already saved one tonne of carbon, which earned
them a carbon credit. The exchange sold the credit for $21.50 to Molten Metal Equipment Innovations of Ohio, taking a 20 per cent commission.”
Make that $17.20 for the t-shirt after subtracting the
exchange’s take. But if we wanted to have some truth to a t-shirt for the Wilsons, it would read: Thank you taxpayers for paying for $36,000 of our investment and thanks
federal government for creating an artificial market for carbon dioxide credits. The Wilsons received
an $18,000 federal tax credit and an $18,000 rebate check from Pennsylvania’s state government and also expect to collect $2,700 in renewable energy certificates. Continue
reading... (The Foundry)
Two big US companies have decided to avoid suppliers that source fuel from Canada's oil sands to curb their carbon footprints.
The decisions by Whole Foods Market, an organic grocery chain, and Bed Bath & Beyond, a household goods company, underline how industry is moving to fill the void left by
inaction at Copenhagen and the failure of the US Congress to limit carbon emissions.
Both companies are responding to ForestEthics, a non-governmental organisation that last year began campaigning to lead the US corporate sector away from oil sands fuel, which
has a higher carbon content than conventional crude oil. (Financial Times
Great, if these two want their oils imported from hostile regimes and wish to fill the coffers of America haters, that's up to them. That will trivially
add to supply pressure on non-oil sands supply and cause more consumers to use oil sands crude as greater supply reduces price pressure. Net result, those yielding to
misanthropic watermelon pressure groups increase consumer costs and reduce shareholder profits while acting against American interests and no change in global oil supply or
consumption. Wonder if such pointless cowardice makes them proud?
Deputy chairman of Russia's Gazprom argues plans for renewable energy are irrational and should be replaced by more gas-fired power stations (Tim Webb, The Guardian)
He's partly right, although coal would be a much wiser fuel choice.
Avery points to a troubling provision of the Senate-passed health care bill that Democrats are trying to get through the House:
In a section creating a new Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute to conduct comparative-effectiveness
research, the bill allows the withholding of funding to any institution where a researcher publishes findings not “within the bounds of and entirely consistent with the
evidence,” a vague authorization that creates a tremendous tool that can be used to ensure self-censorship and conformity with bureaucratic preferences….As AcademyHealth
notes, “Such language to restrict scientific freedom is unprecedented and likely unconstitutional.”
He warns that government bureaucrats aren’t likely to let that power go unused.
In July 2007, AcademyHealth, a professional association of health services and health policy researchers, published results of a study of sponsor restrictions on the
publication of research results. Surprisingly, the results revealed that more than three times as many researchers had experienced problems with government funders related to
prior review, editing, approval, and dissemination of research results. In addition, a higher percentage of respondents had turned down government sponsorship opportunities
due to restrictions than had done the same with industrial funding. Much of the problem was linked to an “increasing government custom and culture of controlling the flow
of even non-classified information.”
Avery observes that such power enables bureaucrats to engage in “data manipulation to cover inconvenient findings,” much as the scientists at the Climate Research Unit
at the University of East Anglia appear to have done. Indeed, he points to evidence of U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency officials suppressing an, ahem, inconvenient internal debate. (Michael F. Cannon, Cato @ liberty)
WASHINGTON - Old tobacco smoke does more than simply make a room smell stale - it can leave cancer-causing toxins behind, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.
They found cancer-causing agents called tobacco-specific nitrosamines stick to a variety of surfaces, where they can get into dust or be picked up on the fingers. Children and
infants are the most likely to pick them up, the team at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California reported.
"These findings raise concerns about exposures to the tobacco smoke residue that has been recently dubbed 'third-hand smoke'," the researchers wrote in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
With the obligatory: "Children and infants are the most likely to pick them up". Well yes, that's possibly true but why would parents
worry about such an idiotically small risk (if it even exists)? Compare it say with the small but real risk junior will pick up pathogens walked in on mom's shoes - ever
thought about what's on that sidewalk? The rats and raccoons rummaging through garbage probably don't wipe their feet before scurrying across the sidewalk & their feces
are probably loaded with intestinal parasite eggs. What pathogens lurk in that dog poop smeared up and down by foot traffic and that guy who sneezed and spat, what is he
incubating?
Most kids in Western society survive the various environmental assaults thrown at them without too much problem and yet we search assiduously for the most trivial and
inconsequential of risks. Silly game, isn't it.
Marty Fujita of Ojai, co-founder of the Food for Thought nutritional program, died of lung cancer Monday morning. She was 56.
Fujita was an author, environmental scientist and community organizer.
“Of all her interests and passions, Marty was most inspired by her love of the Earth and her children. Caring for the Earth and its wild inhabitants was her vocation, her
avocation and her spiritual practice,” brother Rod Fujita said. “She was a big thinker and used her ability to understand and communicate difficult concepts to educate
people around the world about climate change and the perils of conventional food production. (Ventura County Star)
NEW YORK - A majority of the top-grossing films in recent years have featured food and beverage product placements -- with junk food and fast-food restaurants grabbing most
of the starring roles, a new study finds.
What's concerning, researchers say, is that brand placements were seen in a majority of PG and PG-13 films, which often target children and teenagers, and in one-third of
G-rated movies.
Whether those product placements affect kids' food preferences is the big question. And that will be a subject of future research, said Dr. Lisa A. Sutherland, of Dartmouth
Medical School in Lebanon, New Hampshire, the lead researcher on the current study.
For now, she told Reuters Health in an interview, parents should be aware that movies can be a source of junk-food advertising of sorts. (Reuters Health)
The association between television viewing and childhood obesity is directly related to children's exposure to commercials that advertise unhealthy foods, according to a new
UCLA School of Public Health study published in the American Journal of Public Health. (ScienceDaily)
CHICAGO - Severely obese teens who had surgery to limit what they could eat lost more weight and enjoyed more health benefits than those who did an intensive lifestyle
program, researchers said on Tuesday. (Reuters)
An odd thing happened during Sunday night’s Superbowl game: Joe
Romm at Climate Progress and I came to the same conclusion regarding an environmentally controversial Superbowl
commercial. We both thought the advertisement portraying Audi’s ability to thrive in an environmental police state with its ‘clean diesel’ technology missed
its mark here in the U.S., at least among left-of-center environmentalists.
Sure, Romm wanted the Saints and I the Colts in the big game … and Joe would probably likethe environmentalist police portrayed
in the commercial, while I’d hate it. But still, there were areas of agreement between us, including on the practice of so-called greenwashing.
As Romm puts it, casting a scurrilous aspersion on the appropriateness of Germanic humor:
I’m not sure the German car company understands that the idea of “Green Police” they are spoofing is, in fact, precisely what many conservatives in this country
actually think is the primary reason people who care about the environment—the apparent target audience of this ad—are trying to get the nation to take action on global
warming.
And by pointing out Audi’s incongruous focus on powerful cars, Romm sees a bit of greenwashing at work: “Audi isn’t perceived as a green car company, so
they aren’t poking fun at themselves, a typically much safer strategy.”
Romm is right on this point. On their website, Audi’s vehicle descriptions focus on
driving performance far more than environmental performance. Audi, we’re told, features “legendary,” “nimble,” and “supreme” performance (all euphemisms for high
horsepower). The focus is clearly on “Legendary Audi Power,” rather than “Legendary Audi Environmentalism,” as the ad would suggest.
But I wouldn’t call that modest greenwashing, I’d call it blatant and shameless greenwashing–in a league with that of Al Gore, the head of the IPCC, most
Hollywood green-advocates, the Obama Administration, and the Democrats in Congress, all of whom encourage others to live green lifestyles while consuming more energy
per capita than some of the small countries they claim will be drowned by global-warming-induced sea level rise. And did I mention Nancy Pelosi’s
entourage going to climate negotiations in Copenhagen? They put out enough carbon dioxide to fill 10,000 Olympic sized swimming pools! Now that’s a bodyprint, not a
footprint, by green standards!
But Romm’s big concern probably isn’t about the state of Germanic humor, nor is it really about greenwashing (he’s all for that when various companies flog his
favorite carbon-rationing schemes). It is that humor might inadvertently lead people to actually think about what a future of bag police, lightbulb police, foam-cup
police, recycling police, plastic bottle police, and hot-tub-temperature police might be like, and view such a development with less than a humorous attitude. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
LONDON - Pricing systems that encourage households to use energy more efficiently are the best way to help consumers to protect the environment, a senior General Electric Co
executive said on Tuesday.
Bob Gilligan, GE's vice president of transmission and distribution, said the development of appliances that adjust their own energy use in response to signals from utility
companies would be a key step in achieving this.
"As consumers ... we speak from our heart, we express concern about the environment but we respond from our wallet," he told a conference on the future of cities at
Chatham House, the London think-tank.
"If we really want to drive consumer behavior we have to have pricing mechanisms that encourage us to change." (Reuters)
The first phase of the long-delayed dredging of toxic chemicals from the Hudson River is over. The polluter, General Electric, and the Environmental Protection Agency have
issued separate reports evaluating the six-month cleanup, which was designed as a trial run for a much larger second phase that will finally rid the river of PCBs, industrial
lubricants that have poisoned its mud and fish for generations. (NYT)
If anyone else wanted to so disturb fish habitat and benthic organisms there'd be hell to pay but no, a bunch of zealots can wreck the place, at everyone
else's expense, just because they dislike modernity. Leave the Hudson alone, dipsticks!
I ONCE asked the boss of a big Australian company working on Hong Kong’s new airport what he’d advise young engineers back home.
“Leave,” he snapped.
Our culture had gone sour. Development was now a sin. If you wanted to build stuff, forget Australia.
In fact, Hong Kong showed it could squash an island into a giant landing strip and build a huge bridge, underwater rail link and massive airport in the time it took in
Australia to get an environmental effects statement for an extension to a milk bar.
Actually, the truth is more serious - and this week showed just how much.
It’s already a criminal betrayal of our future that we’ve had governments ban genetically modified crops, new uranium mines and nuclear waste facilities for purely
superstitious or rabble-rousing reasons.
It’s already beyond reckless that not a single state capital has built a new dam since 1983, which is the real reason for years of water restrictions in Melbourne.
But what we’ve seen this week from the Government now beats all that for sheer, mindless stupidity, as deep-sigh green dreaming triumphs over jobs, trade and the spirit of
adventure.
I’m talking about the report the Government released that declared an end to any dream of turning the nation’s vast north into a food bowl.
THE original chairman of the Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce has called for a Senate inquiry into the processes and outcome of its final report, which found the
Top End couldn't become the nation's next food bowl because of water shortages.
The taskforce came under more fire over the contentious findings, with its members accused by current and past Coalition MPs of having one goal: to lock up vast tracts of land
forever.
Former taskforce chairman and Liberal Senator Bill Heffernan told a Senate estimates hearing yesterday there should be an inquiry into how the taskforce arrived at its findings
and the findings themselves.
Earlier, Nationals Senator Ron Boswell, Liberal MP Barry Haase and Warren Entsch, the former MP for the north Queensland seat of Leichhardt, said the taskforce had failed to
address the north's development potential.
The findings, released on Monday, are that the north of Australia received about a million billion litres of rain a year, but there was not enough water available to create a
big new food bowl that could replace the drought-crippled Murray-Darling. The report only considered the north's agricultural potential in terms of available groundwater
supplies and not surface water and dams. (The Australian)
"The moratorium will be in place until all tests are carried out to the satisfaction of everyone ... If that means no start of production, so be it," Environment
Minister Jairam Ramesh told reporters on Tuesday.
Until the tests are done, the country should build a broad consensus to use GM technology in agriculture in a safe and sustainable manner, he said.
The decision is seen as boosting the Congress party among its main farming vote base, much of which is fearful of GM use, and comes despite pressure from Farm Minister Sharad
Pawar who supported introduction of genetically modified "BT Brinjal," or eggplant.
It also signals Congress's leading position within the ruling coalition made up of difficult allies such as Pawar's Nationalist Congress Party. The Congress and Pawar, who also
controls the food portfolio, are currently involved in a blame game over rising food prices. (Reuters)
Republican representatives in the US Congress have criticised the Penn
State investigation into Michael Mann's conduct.
The findings and, more importantly, the focus have set off a wave of criticism accusing the university panel of failing to interview key people, neglecting to conduct more
than a cursory review of allegations and structuring the inquiry so that the outcome -- exoneration -- was a foregone conclusion.
On Friday, Rep. Darrell Issa, the ranking Republican on the House Investigations Committee, charged that the Penn State's failure to settle all the charges and called into
question professor Mann's work. He is demanding that all grants to the noted scientist be frozen.
As whitewashes go, it has to be said that it was carried off very poorly. The failure to even go through the motions of interviewing aggrieved parties like Steve McIntyre
was a mistake by the Penn State authorities. They have brought this unwelcome attention down upon themselves. (Bishop Hill)
Seems they may even be getting a little encouragement from the Commonwealth Foundation:
Interview In 2001 the IPCC published its Third Assessment report prominently featuring a
graph that became "the logo of global warming". Previous historical reconstructions didn't show our modern warm climate as particularly anomalous. This was very
different, and was hailed as a "call to action". Yet Michael Mann's studies were deeply flawed. Omit one or two proxies, for example, and the scary warming 'spike'
disappears. Mann's model could produce hockey stick shapes using random data, such as baseball scores, or red noise. Critics alleged that Mann's choices of data and statistical
tools all cooled the Medieval Warm Period, and emphasised late 20th Century warming. (Andrew Orlowski, The Register)
It’s what they don’t say that counts. In response to the current chaos in the scientific establishment John Krebs wrote a
piece for The Times that is the epitome of the emollient – move along there is nothing to see here. These are the words he has
to say about the place of scepticism in science:
This philosophy of science was formally instituted 350 years ago in London by the small band of men,
including Christopher Wren and Robert Boyle, who founded the Royal Society, the world’s oldest national academy of science. Their motto, Nullius in verba
(“Take nobody’s word for it”) embodies the Royal Society’s founding principle of basing conclusions on observation and experiment rather than the voice of authority.
What he did not say was that as soon as the Greenies seized control of the Royal Society they abandoned that motto of centuries and replaced it with one that is apparently
bland but actually reverses the sentiment. As we said on the subject of global warming as religion:
The Royal Society, as a major part of the flowering of the tradition, was founded on the basis of scepticism.
Its motto “On the word of no one” was a stout affirmation. Now suddenly, following their successful coup, the Greens have changed this motto of centuries to one that
manages to be both banal and sinister – “Respect the facts.” When people start talking about “the facts” it is time to start looking for the fictions. Real science
does not talk about facts; it talks about observations, which might turn out to be inaccurate or even irrelevant.
If you include that “fact” the whole argument is reversed.
It reflects a program that addresses both global climate change (and the role science editors have in communicating relevant research on the topic) and the rapidly
changing nature of the workplace and technology in the 21st century.
This sounded pretty interesting. There are some huge lessons to be learned by scholarly publishers from the sorry story of the Hockey Stick and Climategate. Materials
availability, gatekeeping at journals is just the start of it. In fact I wondered why nobody had contacted me to speak on the subject. ;-)
Here's the reason: the Council is only interested in the role editors can play in promoting global warming scaremongering. Here's the notes on the keynote address:
It is striking that on climate change, the overwhelming majority of climate scientists (and the
scientific literature) are in consensus concerning climate change; yet a cloud (pun intended) of doubt and distractions like the recent “Climate Gate” email scandal
continues to exist. Like a jigsaw puzzle, the climate change picture is clear to climate scientists even with a few missing pieces. This talk will examine the current and
best science thinking on climate change and objectively discuss what “we know, don’t know, or need to know.”
So a body that exists to promotes ethical practices in publishing, when presented with evidence of unethical practices, gets in a speaker who is going to write them off as
"a distraction".
The Nobel-prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change faces new challenges following a call for an investigation of its conduct and for its chairman to resign
amid continuing criticism of the scientific basis of its reports.
Republican Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming called on Thursday for the independent investigation and for Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Geneva-based panel, to resign.
The panel has so far declined to make Dr. Pachauri available for an interview, and officials didn't return phone calls or emails over the weekend seeking further comment.
Republicans previously had pushed for him to resign in the fall.
The IPCC, whose vast reports on climate science influence policy makers and undergird global action against global warming, defends its work, saying that its reports "are
as solid as careful science can make them," and that it is required to include some literature that hasn't been peer-reviewed and therefore requires "additional care
and professional judgment" to evaluate.
Dr. Barrasso said that "new scandals" emerge "every day" about the "so-called 'facts'" in the panel's reports. "The integrity of the data and
the integrity of the science have been compromised.…The scientific data behind these policies must be independently verified," he said. (WSJ)
The number of big and little mistakes surfacing up day in and day out and known with various terms including “Gate
du Jour” is fatally undermining the very idea of the IPCC, not necessarily for the most obvious reasons. You see, it’s a matter of square science pegs and round
policy holes… Read
the rest of this entry » (Maurizio Morabito, OmniClimate)
Marc Sheppard says it’s bad enough that the IPCC
bought the theory of warmist Professor David Karoly that man-made warming was causing the higher temperatures and evaporation in the Murray Darling basin.
After all, new
research suggests almost the very opposite - that the higher temperatures come from a natural fall in cloud cover, and a lack of rain and a subsequent lack of evaporative
cooling. Drought causes higher temperatures, and not vice versa.
But Sheppard notes that Karoly’s theory was heavily relied upon in a chapter the IPCC’s alarmist 2007 report that was supposed to be reviewed by ... Karoly himself:
But amazingly, the story doesn’t end with how wrong the chapter was. Professor Franks also pointed out that ... David Karoly, whose work was also heavily cited in
WG1 Chapter 9, was its Review Editor.
Fabulous peer reviewing, guys. The man in charge of the reviewing supervises reviews of his own theory.
“It is because of this lazy reporting and repeating of memes that I refuse to talk to any newspaper
journalist including Paul Bignell of the ‘Independent on Sunday’.”
[The scientist, Paul
Dennis, in response to an attempt to smear him by association in the ‘Independent
on Sunday’ article (February 7), entitled: ‘“Think-tanks
take oil money and use it to fund climate deniers”’.
There is nothing angrier than a scientist scorned, or misreported, or misrepresented. I am often asked why so few scientists are willing to appear in the media.
There are a number of reasons, of course, including career pressure and a general lack of confidence in the public communication of science, but, unquestionably, one of the
most significant is that many practising scientists simply do not trust reporters one micron, even when the journalist appears to be on their side. Journalists are perceived to
have little interest in reporting the complexities and uncertainties of the science, and to be out to distort, or to cherry-pick, what the scientist states merely to obtain a
‘good’ story, or one that fits the current media fashion.
Yesterday, we witnessed a classic, and, in my opinion, entirely justified, angry response from one scientist, namely Paul
Dennis, Head of the Stable Isotope and Noble Gas Geochemistry Laboratories, Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia (UEA), with respect to an
article published in the Independent on Sunday[February 7], in which Dennis was clearly smeared by that old journalist trick of guilt by
association: (The Clamour of the Times)
Cost of the corruption of climate science by the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change (IPCC) is likely a trillion dollars already and there is no measure of the lives
lost because of unnecessary reactions like biofuels affecting food supplies. Stories appear about the corruption at the IPCC and others about the leaked emails from the
Climatic Research Unit (CRU). Most people, including the media, don’t seem to realize the IPCC is the CRU. Some articles mention both but don’t make the connection. A
recent article in the Globe and Mail is a good example.
The article is a small shift because the Globe has consistently promoted human caused warming and attacked skeptics. However, failure to make the connection allows people
involved to develop defenses, withdraw from associations or go into hiding. (Tim Ball, CFP)
With UN climate guru Rajendra Pachauri under fire for alleged conflicts of interest and the purveying of flawed “science,” another United Nations eco-official is
stepping forward to defend UN climate findings.
His name is Achim Steiner, executive director of the UN Environment Program, or UNEP, based in Nairobi. If you are curious about potential conflicts of interest among the UN
climate crowd, Steiner, along with Pachauri, is someone to watch.
Like Pachauri, Steiner is still talking about “overwhelming evidence” supporting the findings of Al Gore’s co-Nobelist Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change —
despite the growing body of evidence that the IPCC’s findings were more a product of UN politics than of science. In recent remarks featured as a top item on the UN’s
official news site, Steiner has just praised the IPCC and re-issued the UN’s usual apocalyptic warnings: “Any delay… risks of a magnitude…urgent international
response” — etc. (Claudia Rosett, PJM)
The past chairman of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has joined the growing list of IPCC critics. According to the Sunday Telegraph, Rajendra Pachauri,
the disgraced current IPCC chair, now faces criticism from his immediate predecessor, Robert Watson. The Telegraph reports that Watson “stressed that the chairman must take
responsibility for correcting errors.” In another indication that Watson is taking pains to distance himself from the organization he once headed, the Sunday Times, in
a story entitled Top British scientist says UN panel is losing credibility, reports that Watson warned the IPCC that it must tackle its blunders.
Watson’s comments come on the heels of another glaring embarrassment to come out of the IPCC, this time a claim that global warming could cut crop production in north
Africa by up to 50% by 2020. “Any such projection should be based on peer-reviewed literature from computer modelling of how agricultural yields would respond to climate
change,” Watson stated. “I can see no such data supporting the IPCC report.”
In this latest high-profile IPCC gaffe, which has been repeated around the world, including by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the IPCC seems to have relied on a 2003 report
from a Winnipeg-based think tank called the International Institute for Sustainable Development. The report, which was not peer-reviewed, in turn seems to have relied on
submissions to the UN by civil servants from Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco, which also appear not to have been peer-reviewed.
Apart from his post as past IPCC chair, Watson is also the UK’s highest level environmental scientist, as Chief Scientist at the UK’s environment ministry. Prior to his
current position, which he assumed in 2007, Watson was Chair of Environmental Science and Science Director of the Tyndall Centre at the University of East Anglia, the same
university caught up in the Climategate scandal.
Watson’s new-found scepticism of the science being produced by the IPCC represents an ironic reversal. In 2002, he remarked that "The only person who doesn't believe
the science is President Bush." (Financial Post)
Chief Scientist at the Department for the Environment, Professor Robert Watson on the science of climate change, and whether the case for man-made global warming is now
unravelling after months of damaging revelations. (BBC)
Experts who worked on the IPCC report say the error by social and biological scientists has unfairly maligned their work (The Guardian)
India Supports a Toothless IPCC - The less credibility the
climate body has, the less it can do to block vital economic development.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressed support for the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and its leader, Rajendra Pachauri, at a local energy
conference in New Delhi Friday. The move has surprised many observers, but it may prove to be politically astute.
The IPCC's credibility is in tatters. From climategate to glaciergate, Amazongate, natural-disaster gate, and now Chinagate, the revelations of bad science keep coming.
Given all that, plus the much-publicized flap between Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh and Mr. Pachauri over the science behind "melting" Himalayan glaciers weeks
before the Copenhagen climate summit in December, superficially one might have expected the Indian government to jettison Mr. Pachauri as soon as possible.
But Delhi isn't just offering him and the organization rhetorical backing. At Friday's annual flagship event of the Energy and Resources Institute—which Mr. Pachauri has
headed for almost 30 years—the prime minister offered to provide technical assistance through a newly established glacier research center. The government has also formed a
network of scientific institutions to develop domestic science and research capacities on climate issues.
The explanation for this support is simple: It is in the Indian government's interest to perpetuate a weak IPCC and a toothless Mr. Pachauri at its helm. Given the recent
scandals, the IPCC is hardly in a position to lobby India for carbon concessions. No one from the IPCC can again cavalierly dismiss their critics as promoting
"voodoo" science or "vested interests," as was Mr. Pachauri's wont. By offering scientific support to the IPCC, the Indian government is actually confirming
its lack of confidence in the U.N. body's scientific credentials. (WSJ)
As Democrats descend into a spiral of panic about the 2010 midterm elections, strategists for both parties are wondering how big an issue the cap-and-trade energy plan will
be.
On June 26, the House, in a tight 219-212 vote, passed a Democratic bill that aims to reduce emissions through tradable pollution credits. Republicans say the bill would burden
the economy and jack up electricity rates while producing uncertain benefits.
Forty-four Democrats — many from energy-producing or industrial districts — abandoned their party, but at least two dozen vulnerable Democrats bit the bullet and voted yes.
As the bill awaits Senate action, Republicans believe they have a winning issue.
“The bill may be stopped dead in its tracks, but this vote will still haunt them until Election Day,” said National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Paul
Lindsay. (Politico)
Claudia Rossett, who helped to expose UN corruption in the oil-for-food scandal, now turns her attention to the UN warmists. One in particular:
With UN climate guru Rajendra Pachauri under fire for alleged conflicts of interest and the purveying of flawed “science,” another United Nations eco-official is
stepping forward to defend UN climate findings.
His name is Achim Steiner, executive director of the UN Environment Program, or UNEP, based in Nairobi. If you are curious about potential conflicts of interest among the
UN climate crowd, Steiner, along with Pachauri, is someone to watch.
Like Pachauri, Steiner is still talking about “overwhelming evidence” supporting the findings of Al Gore’s co-Nobelist Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change —
despite the growing body of evidence that the IPCC’s findings were more a product of UN politics than of science. In recent remarks featured as a top item on the UN’s
official news site, Steiner has just praised the IPCC and re-issued the UN’s usual apocalyptic warnings: “Any delay… risks of a magnitude…urgent international
response” — etc.
Who is Achim Steiner? A German, born in Brazil, he is a longtime environmentalist, former head from 2001-2006 of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, or
IUCN....
With the science under siege and the politics in disarray, it may fall to civil society to keep this still crucial fight alive (Ian Katz, The Guardian)
But Ian, there can be no case for gorebull warbling because we do not know what temperature the planet "should" be, nor what it is or even if
this has any validity as a climate metric.
Why Bjorn Lomborg chooses to stay with the climate fiasco is a mystery
By
Peter Foster
What is the most appropriate way to deal with a non-existent problem? Say, for example, that we are concerned about an invasion by Little Green Men from Mars. Would it be
more appropriate to stage a preemptive strike on the Red Planet, devote more money to Star Wars-type technology, or perhaps look to bio-warfare of the type suggested in H.G.
Wells’ War of the Worlds, where the Martian invaders were offed by germs?
Most sensible people’s immediate reaction to this range of “policy alternatives” would be: “Don’t be ridiculous. The problem doesn’t exist.”
WASHINGTON - A proposed new U.S. NOAA Climate Service is meant to help businesses adapt to the impact of climate change, and to spur development of new technologies to cope
with it, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke on Monday.
"Even with our best efforts, we know that some degree of climate change is inevitable and American citizens and businesses, and American governments ... must be able to
rise to environmental and economic challenges that lie ahead," Locke told reporters in announcing the move. (Reuters)
The European Union's Emissions Trading System (ETS) is failing to deliver vital green investment after a collapse in carbon prices, MPs warn in a report out today.
The environmental audit committee is calling on the government to introduce measures such as a new carbon tax to push the price of carbon from its level of €15 (£13) a tonne
to what the MPs see as a more credible price of €100. (The Guardian)
The poll of Australians commission by the Australian Climate Science Coalition is more sophisticated than the BBC
poll, and shows a similar trend against the theory of man-made global catastrophe. But, perhaps not surprisingly, as with the nature of fraud and misinformation, the
results also contain contradictions. It’s quicksand out there in voter-world. Half the population is no longer sold on the emissions trading scheme, but the other half is
unaware of what is unfolding. A bare majority of Australians still want to do “something” to combat climate change (I wonder if the same number of people want to do
“something” to combat the weather), but even those who want action don’t want to spend very much.
Skepticism is growing in Australia since Climategate (and all the other gates) and the failure of Copenhagen.
There is a great deal of ignorance out there on both sides of the fence. (The science communication on this topic has been poor, worse, and awful.)
The population is politically split: The half that doesn’t believe in the scare campaign is also the half more likely to vote conservative or independent.
People are polarized. It’s not a bell shaped curve, where most people are in the middle, and the fringes thin out. It’s a U-shape, where the middle
is deserted. From the graph above, 28% strongly support action, while 33% strongly oppose it. On this matter, around 60% of Australians are passionate,
and half of them are wrong.
No transcript or video yet, but Kevin Rudd will be worried by his reception on the ABC’s
Q&A last night.
Everything was in his favor. Host Tony Jones is a fellow warming alarmist. The live audience comprised school children of the “aware” kind. The usual format was junked
so that Rudd had no fellow panellists to challenge him.
And yet, while most of the students still seemed indeed of the Left, as you’d expect from that age group, the evening did not go smoothly.
Rudd was openly laughed at for his mannerisms and tendency to blather. Never have I heard the phrase “you know what?” said so often. He was challenged on his broken
promises.
There was huge laughter and prolonged applause when Jones noted that in answering whether he supported lifting the drinking age to 21 (at 16:30), Rudd first said “of
course”, then claimed he’d rely on “evidence” before having an opinion, and then (so characteristically) asked for a show of hands on whether such a ban would be good. Tell
me what to think. I couldn’t think of a more classic demonstration of Rudd’s essential emptiness.
One student even asked (at 42:20) him whether the Climategate and IPCC scandals, and the Dutch Government’s decision to review the IPCC advice, made him think twice about
relying on the IPCC, too. Even more interesting, the question got sustained applause and Rudd was visibly angered. He refused to look at the student while answering, knowing
the young man had his hand in the air, wanting to object to his claim that the IPCC just comprised 4000 (sic) scientists who just “measured things”. True, there was even
more applause for Rudd’s I’ll-save-you-from-warming exhortation, but the strong division among the students was extraordinary. The great scare is crumbling, even on
Rudd’s turf.
Another student, again with applause, noted that the Copenhagen climate summit was a failure (at 44:47), and Rudd struggled to show it wasn’t.
They’re on to him, these students. On to the scares, on to the spin, on to the populism.
If you thought the drought affecting south-west WA since the 1970s was extreme, you were right.
But just how extreme has been a matter of contention.
Now, scientists believe it could be the worst of its kind in 750 years, after making an unexpected discovery.
Researchers from the Australian Antarctic Division and Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Co-operative Research Centre have identified a link between the drought, which began in
the early 1970s, and snowfall at a site in East Antarctica over the same period.
In research published in Nature Geoscience, they say the relationship is inverse - high snowfalls at the Law Dome site correlate with low rain in the South-West.
That is as a result of the atmospheric circulation pattern that brings dry, cool air to Australia, while sending warm, moist air to East Antarctica.
However, the high snowfall at Law Dome was unlike any other in the past 750 years, and led the researchers to believe the drought was similarly unusual.
Since the 1970s, there has been a decline of up to 20 per cent in winter rainfall in the South-West and, though the cause of the drought remains unclear, others have pointed to
land-use changes, ocean temperatures, air circulation changes and natural variability. (WA Today)
I continue to get lots of e-mails asking how global average tropospheric temperatures for January, 2010 could be at a record
high (for January, anyway, in the 32 year satellite record) when it seems like it was such a cold January where people actually live.
I followed up with a short sea surface temperature analysis
from AMSR-E data which ended up being consistent with the AMSU tropospheric temperatures.
I’m sure part of the reason is warm El Nino conditions in the Pacific. Less certain is my guess that when the Northern Hemisphere continents are unusually cold in winter,
then ocean surface temperatures, at least in the Northern Hemisphere, should be unusually warm. But this is just speculation on my part, based on the idea that cold continental
air masses can intensify when they get land-locked, with less flow of maritime air masses over the continents, and less flow of cold air masses over the ocean. Maybe the Arctic
Oscillation is an index of this, as a few of you have suggested, but I really don’t know.
Also, remember that there are always quasi-monthly oscillations in the amount of heat flux from the ocean to the atmosphere, primarily in the tropics, which is why a monthly
up-tick in tropospheric temperatures is usually followed by a down-tick the next month, and vice-versa.
So, it could be that all factors simply conspired to give an unusually warm spike in January…only time will tell.
But this event has also spurred me to do something I’ve been putting off for years, which is develop limb corrections for the Aqua AMSU instrument. This will allow us to
make global grids from the data (current grids are still based upon NOAA-15, which we know has a spurious warming over land areas from orbital decay and a changing local
observation time). Since the Aqua AMSU is the first instrument on a satellite whose orbit is actively maintained, there will be no problem with those data since Aqua came
online in mid-2002.
[Don't get confused here...we use NOAA-15 AMSU ONLY to get spatial patterns, which are then forced to match the Aqua AMSU measurements when averaged in latitude bands. So,
using NOAA-15 data does not corrupt the global or latitude-band averages...but they do affect how the warm and cool patterns are partitioned between land and ocean.]
I might also extend the analysis to specifically retrieve near-surface temperatures over land. I did this several years ago with SSM/I data over land, but never tried to get
it published. It could be that such a comparison between AMSU surface and near-surface channels will uncover some interesting things about the urban heat island effect, since I
use hourly surface temperature observations as training data in that effort. (Roy W. Spencer)
The paper includes a very important conclusion on what is achievable in terms on seasonal (and thus) longer term forecast skill.
The abstract reads
“Skilful seasonal climate forecasts have potential to affect decision making in agriculture, health and water management. Organizations such as the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) are currently planning to move towards a climate services paradigm, which will rest heavily on skilful forecasts at seasonal (1 to
9 months) timescales from coupled atmosphere-land-ocean models. We present a careful analysis of the predictive skill of temperature and precipitation from eight seasonal
climate forecast models with the joint distribution of observations and forecasts. Using the correlation coefficient, a shift in the conditional distribution of the
observations given a forecast can be detected, which determines the usefulness of the forecast for applications. Results suggest there is a deficiency of skill in the
forecasts beyond month-1, with precipitation having a more pronounced drop in skill than temperature. At long lead times only the equatorial Pacific Ocean exhibits significant
skill. This could have an influence on the planned use of seasonal forecasts in climate services and these results may also be seen as a benchmark of current climate
prediction capability using (dynamic) couple models.”
The discussion part of the paper has the very important finding (which comments on climate predictions)
“Given the actual skill demonstrated by operational seasonal climate forecasting models, it appears that only through significant model
improvements can useful long-lead forecasts be provided that would be useful for decision makers – a quest that may prove to be elusive.” (Climate Science)
The Obama administration has determined that the American pika, a small rabbit-like mammal, is not threatened by climate change.
The decision underscores how the Endangered Species Act has become the latest battlefield in the fight over global warming.
Environmentalists consider the pika to be the animal most vulnerable to climate change in the continental United States due to its inability to survive even small increases in
temperature.
The pika lives on alpine mountain ranges throughout the West, and as average temperatures have increased in recent decades, some populations have disappeared at lower
elevations while others have moved to higher peaks, according to scientific studies.
In an initial finding issued last April, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said that protecting the pika under the Endangered Species Act “may be warranted because of the
present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or range as a result of effects related to global climate change.”
But after a full review, government scientists have concluded that the pika could survive temperatures projected to increase 3 degrees Celsius in its mountain habitat as well
as the loss of snow pack, which the animals depend on for shelter. “The American pika has demonstrated flexibility in its behavior and physiology that can allow it to adapt
to increasing temperature,” the scientists wrote in the finding released Friday. (Todd Woody, Green Inc.)
Global warming could be changing seasonal timing with profound consequences, according to analysis of 726 species of plants and animals (David Adam, The Guardian)
Using Smokestack Gases to Pump Oil - Denbury Resources, Seeking
Source of Carbon Dioxide for its Fields, to Scrub Emissions From Dow Chemical Plant
Carbon dioxide pouring from smokestacks hardly has a reputation as a valuable commodity. But one company has launched a series of projects to see if it can use the refuse of
the industrial economy to breathe new life into tired oil fields.
How well Denbury Resources Inc.'s projects go will be closely watched not just by environmentalists but other oil producers. For decades, companies have pumped
naturally-occurring carbon dioxide from geological basins into existing oil wells. The gas acts like a solvent for the oil, removing it from rock formations.
Denbury is a regional oil and natural-gas producer based in Plano, Texas, whose primary source of carbon dioxide is a basin near Jackson, Miss. It is hoping to add to that
finite supply by using carbon dioxide recovered from industrial plants. Next month, it is slated to acquire Encore Acquisition Co., an oil company in the Rocky Mountain region
that is considering using similar industrial sources of carbon dioxide to recover oil.
By mid-2011, Denbury plans to treat and ship its first batch of industrial emissions from a Dow Chemical Co. factory in Plaquemine, La., to its oil fields in Texas via a
pipeline network it is building. Although the U.S. government recently announced funding for a host of other "industrial carbon capture" projects, the Dow project is
unique because itappears to be economically viable without government aid. (WSJ)
Provided you have a profitable use for the CO2, great. CCS, for the sake of CCS is simply foolish.
Editor note: Julian Simon (1937–1998) is a primary inspiration for this free-market energy
blog, the name of which comes from his characterization of energy as the master
resource.
Twelve years ago today came the shocking news: Julian Simon, age 65, had died of heart failure after his regular morning workout in Chevy Chase, Maryland. He had undiagnosed
heart disease.
Just two months before, I had visited extensively with Simon when he came Houston to give what would be his last major address, titled: “More People, Greater Wealth,
Expanded Resources, Cleaner Environment.” A full house of 200 heard Simon that day, and one in attendance, free-market entrepreneur Gordon
Cain, was so impressed that he mailed Simon an unsolicited $25,000 check for research.
Simon invited me to coauthor an energy paper with him for a conference he was planning. This excited me, as did his warm inscription to my first edition copy
of The Ultimate Resource. After all, he was the latest major influence on me in a line of thinkers that began with Ayn Rand and had continued with Ludwig von
Mises and F. A. Hayek. Not unlike other libertarians, I had gone from individualism-is-cool (Rand’s The Fountainhead) to free-markets-work (Mises’s Human
Action) to the-perils-of-government-planning (Hayek, various).
I am not the only one to list Simon alongside other top classical liberal/libertarian scholars. Don
Boudreaux, chair of the department of economics at George Mason University, wrote:
The three scholars who have had the the greatest impact on my own thinking are F. A. Hayek, James Buchanan, and Julian Simon…. [Simon's] vital idea of “the
ultimate resource” … is one of the most profound—and least understood—in all of the social sciences.
Hayek, in fact, credited Julian Simon for having crystallized the big picture for him and wrote a self-described “fan letter” to him in 1981.
Dear Professor Simon,
I have never before written a fan letter to a professional colleague, but to discover that you have in your Economics of Population Growth provided the empirical evidence
for what with me is the result of a life-time of theoretical speculation, is too exciting an experience not to share it with you. The upshot of my theoretical work has been
the conclusion that those traditional rules of conduct (esp. of several property) which led to the greatest increases of the numbers of the groups practicing them leads to
their displacing the others — not on “Darwinian” principles but because based on the transmission of learned rules — a concept of evolution which is much older than
Darwin.
I doubt whether welfare economics has really much helped you to the right conclusions. I claim as little as you do that population growth as such is good — only that it
is the cause of the selection of the morals which guide our individual action. It follows, of course, that our fear of a population explosion is unjustified so long as the
local increases are the result of groups being able to feed larger numbers, but may become a severe embarrassment if we start subsidizing the growth of groups unable to feed
themselves.
Sincerely, F. A.Hayek
Hayek wrote a second letter upon reading The Ultimate Resource: [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
While there have been strong protests from the Argentine Government about the drilling program due to start in Falkland Islands waters this month, it has not deterred other
companies wanting to join Desire Petroleum, Rockhopper Exploration and Falklands Oil and Gas in the search for oil. (Merco Press)
CALGARY -- A small British lobby group, for the second time in four weeks, has tabled a shareholder resolution with a major international oi-and-gas company demanding more
information about the financial risks tied to oil-sands operations.
FairPensions, which is funded by charities, trade unions and non-governmental organizations, said Monday it filed a resolution with BP PLC and has the support of about 150
institutional and individual shareholders.
BP’s annual shareholders meeting is scheduled for April 15. (Carrie Tait, Financial Post)
President Obama’s recent public support of clean coal and his waning interest in cap-and-trade legislation may not be enough to save the American coal industry from a
perfect storm of competitive technology, stricter regulation and growing obsolescence. (Trevor Curwin, CNBC.com)
An advertising campaign that previously pushed the phrase "clean coal" launches new spots this week focused on jobs and low-cost power, the latest offering in a
three-year, nearly $120 million effort to sell Congress and the White House on coal's future. Increasingly, there are signs that it is working. (Greenwire)
Bottom line: we need coal, lots of it and will do so for a very long time to come.
MANY herbal medicines are contaminated with potentially lethal doses of heavy metals such as arsenic and mercury, belying their reputation as low-risk "natural"
products.
Cheaper and less effective herbs may be substituted for the one on the label, and some medicines are often secretly adulterated with conventional prescription or
over-the-counter drugs to boost their effectiveness.
The warnings come from an Australian expert, who conducted a review of the potential hazards linked to herbal medicines -- and came away shocked by how many different dangers
there were.
A previous analysis of 251 herbal products sold in the US found arsenic in 36, mercury in 35 and lead in 24 of the preparations, according to the review by Roger Byard, a
forensic pathologist at the University of Adelaide. (The Australian)
PEOPLE who drink at least two soft drinks a week nearly double their risk of developing pancreatic cancer, a study has revealed.
Researchers collected data on the consumption of soft drinks, juice and other dietary items, as well as lifestyle and environmental factors of 60,524 people who were part of
the huge Singapore Chinese Health Study, following up with study participants for up to 14 years.
The research found there was a 87 per cent higher risk of developing pancreatic cancer for those who drank two or more soft drinks per week. No link was found between drinking
fruit juice and developing pancreatic cancer, said the study which was published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention said.
"The high levels of sugar in soft drinks may be increasing the level of insulin in the body, which we think contributes to pancreatic cancer cell growth," lead
researcher Mark Pereira of the University of Minnesota said. (AFP)
Are they using soft drink consumption as a marker of sweet tooth or something? Never mind the fact they are still only talking RR 1.87 (3.0 might be of
interest, 2.0 is boring and less than that simple chance), it is not clear why they fixated on soft drinks (are they talking aerated sodas, cordials, flavored water... what
about diet formulations? Weird.
Nonetheless, you have a very small likelihood of developing pancreatic cancer and even double that remains, well, a very small risk.
CHICAGO - Being an older mother significantly increases the risk of having a child with autism, but being an older father only increases the risk when the mother is under
the age of 30, U.S. researchers said on Monday.
They found that a 40-year-old woman's risk of having a child later diagnosed with autism was 50 percent greater than that of a woman between 25 and 29.
But being an older father - 40 or older - only contributes significantly to autism risk when the mother is under 30.
"The older the mother, the more the risk that the child will develop autism, regardless of whether the father is young or old," said Irva Hertz-Picciotto of the
University of California Davis MIND Institute, who worked on the study published in the journal Autism Research.
The findings contradict a 2006 study of children born in Israel that suggested paternal age played a much larger role. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will begin a drive this week to expel Pepsi, French fries and Snickers bars from the nation’s schools in hopes of reducing the
number of children who get fat during their school years.
In legislation, soon to be introduced, candy and sugary beverages would be banned and many schools would be required to offer more nutritious fare. (NYT)
Washington -- A federal program that began in 1946 to remedy the shocking malnutrition among World War II recruits is being transformed into ground zero in the nation's new
war against obesity.
The national school lunch program and other food programs under the Child Nutrition Act may be the most promising avenue to improve the nutrition of a generation of children
who think food comes out of a wrapper and who face shorter lives because of their rising weight. (SF Chronicle)
The newly appointed school food tsar will today urge headteachers to bar pupils from leaving the premises at lunchtime in an effort to promote healthy eating habits.
Rob Rees, a former chef who now runs a private cookery school and his own food consultancy, has taken over from the television cook Prue Leith as chairman of the School Food
Trust, which was set up by the Government to promote healthy school dinners.
In his first interview since taking office, he said: "I would like headteachers to have a policy of no one being offsite during lunchtime. Schools that have done this have
found improvements in behaviour in the afternoon."
He said that schools unwilling to lock up pupils at lunchtime should at least demand that local fast-food outlets provide healthier fare. (The Independent)
NEW YORK - Our ever-expanding waistlines may have outgrown the doctor's needle, researchers say, in what could be another casualty of the obesity epidemic. (Reuters Health)
Local paramedics and firefighters don't need to follow television shows about a half-ton teen or biggest losers to track the obesity trend.
They carry that knowledge with them.
Calls for patients weighing 350 pounds come daily in the District. A patient between 400 pounds and 600 pounds is part of every workweek for many crews throughout the region.
Patients topping 600 pounds are transported by emergency teams every few months.
Girth is a separate challenge.
"I think everyone has struggled with this issue, and technology is just now coming to grips with it," said Fairfax Deputy Fire Chief Christine Louder.
Across the Washington region and the country, departments have been adapting steadily to plus-size patients. They have added specialty equipment and training to reduce their
back injuries and avoid the spectacle of moving a person on planks, tarps or the floor of an ambulance. (Washington Post)
When first lady Michelle Obama launches her campaign to reduce child obesity today, many Americans will be cheering her on — including parents, teachers, doctors, business
leaders ... and retired generals and admirals such as me. Generals and admirals?
Yes, child obesity has become so serious in this country that military leaders are viewing the epidemic as a potential threat to our national security.
Obesity, it turns out, is the No. 1 reason why applicants fail to qualify for military service, and it is posing serious health problems within the services. The issue is
causing heartbreak among some military families that have always had a son or daughter in the service. Today, otherwise excellent recruit prospects, with generations of
military service in their family history, are being turned away because they are just too heavy. (AJC)
BERKELEY — Swiss, California and Spanish researchers have found that particulates from auto exhaust can lead to the thickening of artery walls, possibly increasing chances
of a heart attack and stroke.
In a study reported this week in the journal PLoS ONE, the researchers used ultrasound to measure the carotid artery wall thickness of 1,483 people who lived near freeways in
the Los Angeles area. The researchers took these measurements every six months for approximately three years, and correlated them with estimates of outdoor particulate levels
at the study participants' homes.
They found that the artery wall thickness among those living within 100 meters (328 feet) of a highway increased by 5.5 micrometers – one-twentieth the thickness of a human
hair – per year, or more than twice the average progression observed in study participants. (UC Berkeley)
India will decide tomorrow whether to approve its first genetically modified (GM) food crop. It is a move that supporters argue will help to avert a global food crisis but
which critics say is being rushed through recklessly.
The new vegetable, an aubergine — or brinjal in Hindi — contains a toxic gene that poisons insect pests and will boost yields while reducing dependence on pesticides, its
champions say. It would also open up the world’s second most-populous nation to at least 56 other GM crops that are in the final stages of development.
Scientists have warned that not enough is known about the effects of the new variety on human beings and the environment. Long-term toxicity and the risk of dangerous mutations
have not been ruled out, they say. (The Times)
POLITICIANS reacted angrily to yesterday's taskforce report rejecting major agricultural development of Australia's north, labelling the committee lightweight and
ineffective.
Country Liberals senator Nigel Scullion said the taskforce seemed more interested in presenting barriers to development than finding solutions.
"I'm very disappointed that the great vision of the north of Australia becoming the food bowl of Asia and the future for Australia -- well, if you read this report, it's
going to be a hungry future," Senator Scullion said.
The West Australian government said it would have an extra 8000ha of irrigated land for agriculture available in the remote Kimberley by next year as it pushed ahead with its
plan to create the northern food bowl.
State Nationals leader Brendon Grylls dismissed as "naysayers" those predicting that limited water supplies would stifle agricultural growth.
Mr Grylls said people who doubted Western Australia's potential should visit the Ord River irrigation scheme. (The Australian)
As they should, the 'report' was a pathetic green sop -- so bad it was not even [merely] wrong.
A RESEARCH report that found there was insufficient water to make northern Australia a food bowl for the nation did not consider building dams because it was against Labor
policy.
The Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce relied heavily on the work done by the CSIRO's Northern Australia Sustainable Yields project, whose scientists were told not to
worry about investigating dams.
The CSIRO's Richard Cresswell said: "At the time of the study, all jurisdictions (the West Australian, Queensland and NT governments) had a no-dams policy, and therefore
we did not investigate the opportunities for dams in the north.
"We weren't asked not to investigate them, but we were told it wasn't necessary to investigate them," Dr Cresswell said.
During the course of the project, the West Australian government changed from Labor to a Liberal-Nationals alliance, "and the prospect of putting dams on some of the
rivers was put back on the table", Dr Cresswell said. (The Australian)
TONY Abbott has challenged Kevin Rudd to use the promise he made in delivering the national apology to the Stolen Generations two years ago to overturn the Queensland
government's Wild Rivers legislation.
Introducing his private member's bill in parliament last night, the Opposition Leader said that when the Prime Minister made the apology, he said that unless the great
symbolism of reconciliation was accompanied by even greater substance, it would be little more than a clanging gong.
"In making that statement, the Prime Minister was absolutely right," Mr Abbott told parliament.
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh announced last year that three major waterways on Cape York - the Archer, Stewart and Lockhart Rivers - had been declared wild rivers. The
declaration, opposed by most indigenous people and cattle producers, imposed severe restrictions on future development of land near the rivers or catchment areas.
At the time, the Wilderness Society welcomed the move and congratulated Queensland's parliament for passing the necessary law with bipartisan support to preserve Cape York as
one of the earth's great natural wonders.
Cape York indigenous leader Noel Pearson has accused the Bligh government of creating the wild rivers legislation as part of a deal with the Greens for preferences at last
year's state election. (The Australian)
Marine scientists are reporting that a colony of sea lions, previously unique to the Galapagos Islands, has unexpectedly decamped 900 miles south-east to an island just off
the coast of Peru in what may be another symptom of global warming.
According to the Peru-based Organisation of Research and Conservation of Aquatic Animals, it is the first recorded instance of a colony of Galapagos sea lions abandoning their
familiar waters around the archipelago, which belongs to neighbouring Ecuador. About 30 of the animals in the group have moved. (The Independent)
A few dozen sea lion exploit conditions while they suit? Wow! Call out the guard!
We are not weighing in on the climate debate. We are not opining on whether the world’s climate is changing, at what pace or due to what causes, Securities and Exchange
Commission Chairman Mary Shapiro insisted on announcing the SEC’s new “interpretive guidance” on climate change.
The Commission’s two Republican members objected that the Obama Administration was using the Commission to promote its global warming and renewable energy agenda (along with
the EPA, NASA, Defense and Interior Departments and others). It’s true, but irrelevant.
Environmentalists and “ethical investing” groups had pressured the Commission for years to require corporate disclosure on climate matters. Now, as the SEC steps in, the
Copenhagen treaty negotiations have collapsed in disarray. Cap-and-trade has bogged down over senators’ fears of further damage to the economy and their reelection chances.
The Environmental Protection Agency has decreed that plant-fertilizing carbon dioxide is a “dangerous pollutant,” because senators are increasingly reluctant to micromanage
the economy, companies and families, but the regs are likely to go nowhere. (Paul Driessen, Townhall)
A LEADING British government scientist has warned the United Nations’ climate panel to tackle its blunders or lose all credibility.
Robert Watson, chief scientist at Defra, the environment ministry, who chaired the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) from 1997 to 2002, was speaking after
more potential inaccuracies emerged in the IPCC’s 2007 benchmark report on global warming.
The most important is a claim that global warming could cut rain-fed north African crop production by up to 50% by 2020, a remarkably short time for such a dramatic change.
The claim has been quoted in speeches by Rajendra Pachauri, the IPCC chairman, and by Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general.
This weekend Professor Chris Field, the new lead author of the IPCC’s climate impacts team, told The Sunday Times that he could find nothing in the report to support the
claim. The revelation follows the IPCC’s retraction of a claim that the Himalayan glaciers might all melt by 2035.
The African claims could be even more embarrassing for the IPCC because they appear not only in its report on climate change impacts but, unlike the glaciers claim, are also
repeated in its Synthesis Report.
This report is the IPCC’s most politically sensitive publication, distilling its most important science into a form accessible to politicians and policy makers. Its lead
authors include Pachauri himself. (Sunday Times)
Watson is, of course, no better angel, having been prevaricator-in-chief for the IPCC before Pachauri. The IPCC had no credibility with Watson as co-chair
either.
Following
an investigation by this blog (and with the story also told in The
Sunday Times), another major "mistake" in the IPCC's benchmark Fourth Assessment Report has emerged.
Similar in effect to the erroneous "2035" claim – the year the IPCC claimed that Himalayan glaciers were going to melt – in this instance we find that the IPCC
has wrongly claimed that in some African countries, yields from rain-fed agriculture could be reduced by up to 50 percent by 2020.
At best, this is a wild exaggeration, unsupported by any scientific research, referenced only to a report produced by a Canadian advocacy group, written by an obscure Moroccan
academic who specialises in carbon trading, citing references which do not support his claims.
Unlike the glacier claim, which was confined to a section of the technical Working Group II report, this "50 percent by 2020" claim forms part of the key Synthesis
Report, the production of which was the personal responsibility of the chair of the IPCC, Dr R K Pachauri. It has been repeated by him in many public fora. He, therefore, bears
a personal responsibility for the error.
In this lengthy post, we examine the nature and background of this latest debacle, which is now under investigation by IPCC scientists and officials. (Richard North, EU
Referendum)
The United Nations panel on climate change is facing fresh criticism today as The Sunday Telegraph reveals new factual errors and poor sources of evidence in its influential
report to government leaders. (TDT)
PRINCE Charles rejected mounting evidence that climate change is a myth and insisted there is overwhelming proof of global warming today.
In his first riposte to the furore over claims that scientists have covered up research casting doubt on the greenhouse effect, voiced his dismay and alarm at those
who question the science behind climate change.
The heir to the throne raised the controversy in a speech in Manchester, where he launched a new initiative, called Start, to provide the public with advice on how to lead more
environmentally sustainable lives.
Charles, who has campaigned on global warming for more than 20 years, said: “I have watched with growing dismay and alarm the glee with which the sceptics have leapt upon the
recent news stories that question the science that climate change is man-made and suggesting it is nothing more than a myth. (Daily Express)
I mean “Mad” in a good way. This was the day when so many wheels came off Al Gore’s AGW gravy train and flew off in so many different directions, it was all but
impossible to keep track of them. (James Delingpole, TDT)
As the wheels keep falling off the climate alarmist bandwagon, it's suddenly become fashionable to be a sceptic. Out of the woodwork have crawled all sorts of fair-weather
friends.
But where were they when the going was tough, when we were being hammered as Holocaust deniers, planet wreckers, in the pay of the "Big Polluters", bad parents,
pariahs, equivalent to murderers? It was pure McCarthyism.
But now, even the most aggressive alarmists have gone quiet or softened their rhetoric and people who sat on the fence have morphed into wise owls.
They still think it's acceptable to mock touring British sceptic Lord Christopher Monckton's protruding eyes, a distressing symptom of his thyroid disease, in an effort to
marginalise him as a lunatic, rather than address his criticisms. But, when even the British left-leaning, warmist-friendly Guardian newspaper has begun to investigate
the fraud involved in "sexing up" climate change science, it's clear the collapse of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's credibility and the holes in the
case for catastrophic man-made climate change can no longer be ignored.
We are witnessing an outbreak of neo-open-mindedness and face-saving from people who brooked no nuance. (Miranda Devine, SMH)
Programs do more and more scientific work - but you need to be able to check them as well as the original data, as the recent row over climate change documentation shows (
Darrel Ince, The Guardian)
A new BBC poll shows a major shift in public opinion in the UK since just last November. Look at the
swing. Of the 41% of people who then said the cause of climate change was “well established,” more than 1 in 4 have switched sides. These people made up the
major base of the active support, yet they are now questioning the assumption that man-made gases are driving the change.
Only 26% of people think “climate change is happening, and is now established as largely man-made”; on the other hand, 25% are so skeptical, they don’t believe climate
change is happening at all. More » (Jo Nova)
My colleague Geoffrey Lean is upset by the vitriol he attracts on the internet. I feel for him. Though I have never met Geoffrey colleagues tells me he’s a delightful
fellow who means very well. I’m sure he does and, though our views on AGW are very different, I take no more pleasure in seeing him taken to pieces by Telegraph-reading
sceptics than I do from all the charming emails I get from George Monbiot groupies calling me something beginning with “C”. (And it’s shorter than “Climate change
denier”).
But there appears to be something Geoffrey doesn’t understand and I’d like to take this opportunity to explain. This misconception is implicit in his headline: “We need
to cool this climate row.” What it implies is that somewhere in the AGW debate is a sensible, moderate, middle ground and that if we can only approach this business in the
spirit of a sort of Tony-Blair-style Third-Way triangulation, everything can be solved and we can all live happily ever after. No it can’t and we won’t. ( James Delingpole,
TDT)
Oh dear! As global warming fanaticism wanes in the Town of Titipu, Ko-Ko, the Lord High Executioner, is on the warpath for likely customers. So, who then has Ko-Ko in mind for
the chop? Here is his famous list:
"As someday it may happen that a...
Read
more... (Philip Stott, The Clamour of the Times)
“When sorrows come, they come not single spies/But in battalions” [Claudius, ‘Hamlet’, Act IV, Scene V]
This Sunday may prove to be one of the more important in the collapse of the Global Warming Grand Narrative, newspaper after newspaper striking blow upon blow as the already
bruised science, economics and politics totter before a near-perfect storm. I thought it might thus be useful to place on...
Read more... (Philip Stott, The Clamour of the
Times)
Today, The Observer hosts a vitriolic ‘Debate’ [pp.28 - 29] between
its long-standing Science Editor, Robin McKie, and Dr. Benny Peiser, Director of the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF). The fact
that this newspaper is now holding a debate is in itself indicative of the media change with respect to ‘global warming’, and I congratulate Dr. Peiser on being willing to
enter the lion’s den....
Read more... (Philip Stott, The Clamour
of the Times)
Two years ago, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was the world’s most celebrated organization, guardian of the world against the peril of
climate change and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for “its outstanding scientific work!”
Today, the IPCC stands among the world’s most infamous organizations, its reputation in tatters, unable to respond to a growing chorus of critics because the critics now
include many of its once-fiercest champions, among them its own scientists, and because its chairman and chief spokesman, India’s Rajendra Pachauri, is himself thoroughly
disgraced. “The IPCC needs to regain credibility. Is that going to happen with Pachauri?,” asks John Sauven, director of Greenpeace UK, “I don’t think so.”
What caused a fall from grace so sudden that IPCC’s insiders now demand Pachauri’s ouster, and that leads the Indian government to set up an “Indian IPCC” as a
national alternative to the IPCC, declaring that it “cannot rely” any longer on the organization that its own representative heads? (Financial Post)
At the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the various governing pooh-bahs of the organization–its chairs, vice-chairs and co-chairs – appear to have
decided not to follow the advice that damage control experts and other gurus of corporate social responsibility have been handing out to poor old Toyota Motors. As anybody
following the news knows, Toyota management has been grappling with alleged problems with unintended acceleration on various models and the braking system on its new Prius.
What should Toyota do? The advice from the corporate lovelorn crowd: Come clean, get all the bad news out, confess to all mistakes past and present, don’t hide the facts, be
honest, take the recall hit, don’t pretend there are no problems, apologize, grovel and then create some massive phony campaign promoting safety and good corporate
citizenship.
To the extent Toyota has been following this advice, it has clearly not been working all that well. In fact, Toyota’s troubles mounted when it spoke honestly of its
struggles in finding a cause and solution to the acceleration problem. Maybe Toyota could learn a few things from the IPCC. The wheels are practically falling off the climate
change organization, with fresh evidence of faulty science, false advertising and flawed procedures being revealed almost daily. Even worse, the records show that the IPCC has
a long history of scientific crashes, data manufacturing and out-of-control spins.
Clearly the IPCC is not taking any instruction from the corporate goodness community. For example, it took the IPCC more than two months to officially acknowledge its false
claim that Himalayan glaciers would disappear by 2035. Rather than rush to come clean on the mistake, the IPCC dragged its feet for weeks, calling it “voodoo” science,
before issuing a self-congratulatory statement. “It has...recently come to our attention that a paragraph in the 938-page Working Group II contribution to the underlying
assessment refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers. In drafting the paragraph in question, the clear
and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures, were not applied properly.” That’s a little like Toyota saying it actually copied its brake
system from an old Lada and nobody checked to see if it worked. (Financial Post)
Professional global warming alarmists better think about looking for new jobs. It looks like they're in for a long, cold winter — and a frigid spring and summer as well.
Those who've been spreading global-warming fears must be waking up each morning and asking themselves: What's going to happen today? A new revelation about the corruption of
climate science has become almost a daily event. (IBD)
The publication of false claims by the IPCC has been compounded by its imperious attitude, says the professor of climate change Mike Hulme. From SciDev.net, part of the
Guardian Environment Network
The research institute run by the head of the UN’s climate body has handed out a series of environmental awards to companies that have given it financial support, The
Sunday Telegraph can disclose. (TDT)
In the wake of Climategate, Chinese climate researchers have been looking for a way forward. For the past few years, the Chinese government has been supportive of the
“consensus” western position on climate change. Wanting very much to be liked and accepted internationally, China went along with the climate change predictions being put
forward by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. They publicly agreed with the potential dangers posed by climate change while all along making it clear that
they would not accept any mandatory limits on their carbon dioxide emissions. (Michael Economides and Xina Xie, Energy Tribune)
Its author, Ms Li Xing, attended the Copenhagen summit and was impressed by Fred Singer. So was I, when I met him in Berlin (and before). He showed her lots of data and she
wanted to know the opinion of the other side - the "IPCC side". What can they say about these issues?
Imagine the scenery in the Danish capital. She had clearly heard a lot of details, understanding many of them, while being confused about some others. A lot of stuff to
discuss. The "IPCC types" would only tell her:
"Warming in the climate system is unequivocal".
You have heard the holy word. Global warming is real (and that surely means man-made). Amen.
It must be strikingly obvious to her - and anyone else - that all details or verifications are just unwelcome to those folks because they don't support the primary thesis of
the AGW orthodoxy. This quasi-religious thrives on fear and ignorance. Knowledge is chasing it out of the holes.
Almost all AGW believers react in the same way. They never want to analyze any detailed questions. They never want to penetrate deeply enough into them. What they care about is
the key religious commandment about AGW. They just think that the holy greatness of the AGW God will impress you and intimidate you much like it has apparently done with them.
Too bad, it only works for irrational (or corrupt) people like themselves.
Pajamas Media ask the subtle question whether the U.S. is really a more free and democratic country than China if the journalist from the official Chinese media actually had
the freedom to go to the conference, to talk to both sides, and to form and publish her opinion.
Yes, I do think that China is less democratic and free when you look at all issues that are important for human lives. But the AGW debate is clearly an example where the
situation is different. The U.S. mainstream media really seem to be the worst ones in the world when it comes to the recent climatological scandals. An unusual cartel between
the media, politicians, scientific institutions, and certain big business groups effectively transformed America into a totalitarian country - fortunately when we talk about
this single issue only.
The Chinese journalist used some old Chinese wisdom to predict that the number and depth of recent scandals we have seen is enough for the IPCC to perish.
AfricaGate
Just one link to AfricaGate. It's becoming hard
to follow all the scandals. Just a partial list:
Almost each of them is composed out of thousands of scandalous files or documents or pages.
We're lucky that they haven't begun to approve the cap-and-trade bills yet because if they had, there would be lots of BillGates to remember, too. :-) (The Reference Frame)
OSLO - The U.N.'s panel of climate experts said on Friday it was reviewing whether it wrongly said that more than half of the Netherlands is below sea level in a new glitch
after exaggerating the thaw of Himalayan glaciers. (Reuters)
It is now clear that the IPCC has made several factual errors in their Fourth Assessment Report. The Himalayan glaciers will not melt by 2035, and more than half of the
Netherlands are not below sea level. I may have found another error. If it is not an error, it is certainly some very sloppy work. (Climate Quotes)
An orchestrated campaign is being waged against climate change science to undermine public acceptance of man-made global warming, environment experts claimed last night.
The attack against scientists supportive of the idea of man-made climate change has grown in ferocity since the leak of thousands of documents on the subject from the
University of East Anglia (UEA) on the eve of the Copenhagen climate summit last December.
Free-market, anti-climate change think-tanks such as the Atlas Economic Research Foundation in the US and the International Policy Network in the UK have received grants
totalling hundreds of thousands of pounds from the multinational energy company ExxonMobil. Both organisations have funded international seminars pulling together climate
change deniers from across the globe. (Jonathan Owen and Paul Bignell, The Independent)
Uh-huh... a relative few pennies to skeptics is sufficient to overwhelm the multibillion dollar orchestrated international climate cartel? Says a lot about
the strength of the relative cases then. Funny too that they run a picture of Stephen McIntyre, great image of a self-funded skeptic but not the least supportive of their
case for big oil (or anyone else) funding a campaign to undermine climate "science". The liberated e-mails also show how climate hysterics were farming oil company
grants and funding and yet still The Sindy is trying to claim big oil conspiracy against poor honest used car salesmen climate scientists.
Full disclosure: I have a financial relationship with oil companies -- I pay every time my wife fuels up at the pump (although not personally, I walk and train about
everywhere I need to go now that the kids don't need me to move them around -- the advantage of where I live in Queensland -- I guess my GoCard fares also support big coal
since our electric trains are juiced by coal-fired electrickery).
The Meteorological Office is blocking public scrutiny of the central role played by its top climate scientist in a highly controversial report by the beleaguered United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Professor John Mitchell, the Met Office’s Director of Climate Science, shared responsibility for the most worrying headline in the 2007 Nobel Prize-winning IPCC report –
that the Earth is now hotter than at any time in the past 1,300 years.
And he approved the inclusion in the report of the famous ‘hockey stick’ graph, showing centuries of level or declining temperatures until a steep 20th Century rise.
By the time the 2007 report was being written, the graph had been heavily criticised by climate sceptics who had shown it minimised the ‘medieval warm period’ around
1000AD, when the Vikings established farming settlements in Greenland.
In fact, according to some scientists, the planet was then as warm, or even warmer, than it is today.
Early drafts of the report were fiercely contested by official IPCC reviewers, who cited other scientific papers stating that the 1,300-year claim and the graph were
inaccurate.
But the final version, approved by Prof Mitchell, the relevant chapter’s review editor, swept aside these concerns.
Now, the Met Office is refusing to disclose Prof Mitchell’s working papers and correspondence with his IPCC colleagues in response to requests filed under the Freedom of
Information Act.
The block has been endorsed in writing by Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth – whose department has responsibility for the Met Office.
Documents obtained by The Mail on Sunday reveal that the Met Office’s stonewalling was part of a co-ordinated, legally questionable strategy by climate change academics
linked with the IPCC to block access to outsiders. (Mail on Sunday)
As Jonah and I have written here previously, "climate change" is not only a scientific scandal but also a massive journalistic failure. While the
"Canadian Journalism Project" continues to insist that dissenting from the orthodoxy is "irresponsible
journalism", Matt Ridley at The Spectator acknowledges the
reality:
Journalists are wont to moan that the slow death of newspapers will mean a disastrous loss of investigative reporting. The web is
all very well, they say, but who will pay for the tenacious sniffing newshounds to flush out the real story? ‘Climategate’ proves the opposite to be true. It was amateur
bloggers who scented the exaggerations, distortions and corruptions in the climate establishment; whereas newspaper reporters, even after the scandal broke, played poodle to
their sources.
Mr Ridley credits various British, Canadian and American bloggers, and then makes this observation:
Notice that all of these sceptic bloggers are self-employed businessmen. Their strengths are networks and feedback: mistakes get
quickly corrected; new leads are opened up; expertise is shared; links are made.
The correcting mechanisms of competitive businesses are largely alien to America's unreadable monodailies, which is why they'll be extinct long before the
polar bear. As an example of what Matt Ridley's talking about, consider this piece designed to prop up the increasingly discredited IPCC from ABC Australia's Margot O'Neill.
It's a simulacrum of reporting rather than the real thing. It has quotes from impressive sounding experts, but, as Mr Ridley put it above, she is playing "poodle
to her sources": (Mark Steyn, NRO)
Following leaked emails from the University of East Anglia and evidence for sloppy referencing in the IPCC’s 2007 report, the work of thousands of remarkable scientists is
now being questioned, not just by the public but also by other members of the scientific community. To understand the implications, it helps to consider how this parlous
situation has arisen. ( David King, TDT)
The British Government has been pouring millions of pounds into 'climate-related' projects all over the world, says Christopher Booker
Dr Rajendra Pachauri embraces Jairam Ramesh, India's environment minister, at a meeting in New DelhiPhoto: MANISH SWARUP/AP
In all the coverage lately given to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and its embattled chairman, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, one rather important part of the
story has largely been missed. This is the way in which, in its obsession with climate change, different branches of the UK Government have in recent years been pouring
hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers' money into a bewildering array of "climate-related" projects, often throwing a veil of mystery over how much is being
paid, to whom and why. (TDT)
Talking of "powerful vested interests", it is interesting to see how much we, the taxpayers, are and have been paying those dedicated public servants at the Met
Office to study climate change.
Two entries in the DEFRA science database give some hint. The entry for 1990-2007
puts the sum at £146,275,582, while the next tranche for 2007-2012
stands at £72,536,724.
That is a cool £218,812,306, paid in addition to the basic overhead payments. And on top of that, there are many millions more paid for specific
research projects - the total funding declared
by DEFRA amounting to £243,620,197.
These sums, themselves, are a tiny proportion of the overall money extracted from our pockets, to pay for the government's obsession with global warming. The problem is that
the payments are spread between so many different groups, and made by so many different departments, that it is very difficult to put an overall figure on it.
Of one thing, I am certain, however, the total – over term – runs to many billions. These sums here are just the tip of the iceberg. We could have bought our aircraft
carriers, with change to spare, from the amount of money frittered away on climate change. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
STRIKING parallels between the BBC’s coverage of the global warming debate and the activities of its pension fund can be revealed today.
The corporation is under investigation after being inundated with complaints that its editorial coverage of climate change is biased in favour of those who say it is a man-made
phenomenon.
The £8billion pension fund is likely to come under close scrutiny over its commitment to promote a low-carbon economy while struggling to reverse an estimated £2billion
deficit.
Concerns are growing that BBC journalists and their bosses regard disputed scientific theory that climate change is caused by mankind as “mainstream” while huge sums of
employees’ money is invested in companies whose success depends on the theory being widely accepted. (Daily Express)
Indian environmentalists have joined critics of Dr R.K. Pachauri, the head of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, accusing him of damaging the country's
environment and protecting "polluter" corporations who fund his research institute. (TDT)
PHOTOGRAPHS of Professor Phil Jones show a handsome, smiling, confident-looking man. Not chubby exactly, but in blooming good health. The man who meets me at the University
of East Anglia (UEA) looks grey-skinned and gaunt, as if he has been kept in prison.
In a way, he has. Since November last year he has been a prisoner of public opprobrium and a target of such vilification that was he was almost persuaded to comply with the
wishes of those who wanted him dead. (Sunday Times)
Penn State's probe that mostly cleared climate change scientist Michael Mann for any wrongdoing doesn't begin to scratch the surface, say critics. ( Ed Barnes, FOXNews.com)
Public confidence will be inspired more by frankness about what science cannot explain ( The Observer)
Trying actually talking about "enhanced greenhouse effect" (the alleged risk) and mention we have no measures which suggest it might be in any
way significant. Do you really think it "must remain a priority"?
Conservatives propose an initiative that would delay curbs on greenhouse gas emissions until the state's unemployment rate drops to 5.5%, a level not seen since 2007. (Los
Angeles Times)
Good God, yet more errors in the IPCC’s 2007 report. And to think Kevin Rudd has based his colossal plan to completely reengineer our economy on this deeply suspect
document:
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) report is supposed to be the world’s most authoritative scientific account of the scale of global warming.
But this paper has discovered
a series of new flaws in it including:
The publication of inaccurate data on the potential of wave power to produce electricity around the world, which was wrongly attributed to the website of a commercial
wave-energy company.
Claims based on information in press releases and newsletters.
New examples of statements based on student dissertations, two of which were unpublished.
More claims which were based on reports produced by environmental pressure groups.
They are the latest in a series of damaging revelations about the IPCC’s most recent report, published in 2007.
Last month, the panel was forced to issue a humiliating retraction after it emerged statements about the melting of Himalayan glaciers were inaccurate.
Last weekend, this paper revealed that the panel had based claims about disappearing mountain ice on anecdotal evidence in a student’s dissertation and an article in a
mountaineering magazine. And on Friday, it emerged that the IPCC’s panel had wrongly reported that more than half of the Netherlands was below sea level because it had
failed to check information supplied by a Dutch government agency…
However, senior scientists are now expressing concern at the way the IPCC compiles its reports and have hit out at the panel’s use of so-called “grey literature” —
evidence from sources that have not been subjected to scientific scrutiny.
And yet more evidence that the IPCC “sexed up” its report with gross exaggerations, hype and outright untruths:
At best, this is a wild exaggeration, unsupported by any scientific research, referenced only to a report produced by a Canadian advocacy group, written by an obscure
Moroccan academic who specialises in carbon trading, citing references which do not support his claims.
Unlike the glacier claim, which was confined to a section of the technical Working Group II report, this “50 percent by 2020? claim forms part of the key Synthesis
Report, the production of which was the personal responsibility of the chair of the IPCC, Dr R K Pachauri. It has been repeated by him in many public fora.
What a fiasco. And for this we must have a huge green tax on everything, and shut down our sources of cheap power. To risk so much on such disintegrating evidence is
grotesquely irresponsible. (Andrew Bolt)
A DEFIANT Malcolm Turnbull has confirmed he will cross the floor when a vote is held on the emissions trading scheme this week, pitting him squarely against Opposition
Leader Tony Abbott.
Mr Turnbull denied he was under pressure from frontbenchers to tone down his outspoken support for the scheme, as reported by a newspaper yesterday. Instead, he launched into a
passionate defence of the scheme that cost him the Liberal leadership last year, warning action on climate change could not come without a price.
''There has to be cost. By putting a price on carbon, it allows the market to work out the cheapest way of costing emissions,'' Mr Turnbull said.
''The final question is this: 'Are we serious about cutting emissions?' If the answer is yes, the cheapest and most effective way to do that is a market-based mechanism.'' (SMH)
A coalition of academics who doubt the science on the causes of climate change has called on the Rudd government to dump plans for an emissions trading scheme and consider
alternatives.
Their call comes as a Nielsen poll, published in Fairfax newspapers on Monday, shows Australians prefer the federal coalition's climate action policy.
Of those polled, 45 per cent favoured the opposition's direct action emissions fund over the 39 per cent who backed Labor's carbon pollution reduction scheme.
The Australian Climate Science Coalition believes the government is losing the political high ground on global warming.
"The debacle in Copenhagen demonstrated the futility of Australia adopting a go-it-alone strategy," executive director Max Rheese said in a statement.
Public faith in the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had been shaken following revelations about some of its information-gathering processes, he said.
(AAP)
KEVIN Rudd is not showing much political or environmental nous by sticking with his Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme to reduce carbon emissions.
Its big initial political virtue - its diabolical complexity - became a huge political liability when the federal opposition switched from principled support for the CPRS under
Malcolm Turnbull to unprincipled opposition under Tony Abbott.
What makes it worse for Rudd is that ''cap and trade'' emission plans are fundamentally flawed and the Australian variant is worse than most. The failure to get a legally
binding agreement to reduce emissions at Copenhagen was the final setback to emission trading schemes being an effective means of reducing global greenhouse gases.
This is not an excuse to do nothing. Britain's Met Office says the world is on a path towards a potential increase in global temperatures of 4 degrees as early as 2060. If this
occurs, only about half a billion people out of about 9 billion will survive, according to Professor Kevin Anderson, director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate change and
adviser to the British government. (Kenneth Davidson, The Age)
ALL Australian homes will have to undergo a mandatory energy-efficiency assessment - costing up to $1500 per property - before they can be sold or rented under new laws to
tackle carbon emissions.
The mandatory assessment - being drafted into law by the federal and state governments - will rate homes by an energy efficiency star system, similar to the ratings given to
fridges and washing machines.
It will apply to all commercial properties from later this year and to all residential properties from May 2011.
A spokesman for State Energy Minister Pat Conlon said the ratings would inform prospective owners or tenants of a building's energy use, so they could factor it in to their
buying or rental decision.
The spokesman said details of the "Mandatory Disclosure" scheme - including who would carry out the assessments and how much they would cost - were yet to be decided.
(Sunday Mail)
"Rising and falling sea levels over relatively short periods do not indicate long-term trends. An assessment of hundreds and thousands of years shows that what seems an
irregular phenomenon today is in fact nothing new," explains Dr. Dorit Sivan, who supervised the research. (University of Haifa)
WINNIPEG, Manitoba – Climate change is transforming the Arctic environment faster than expected and accelerating the disappearance of sea ice, scientists said on Friday in
giving their early findings from the biggest-ever study of Canada's changing north.
The research project involved more than 370 scientists from 27 countries who collectively spent 15 months, starting in June 2007, aboard a research vessel above the Arctic
Circle. It marked the first time a ship has stayed mobile in Canada's high Arctic for an entire winter. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON - Arctic ice melting could cost global agriculture, real estate and insurance anywhere from $2.4 trillion to $24 trillion by 2050 in damage from rising sea
levels, floods and heat waves, according to a report released on Friday.
"Everybody around the world is going to bear these costs," said Eban Goodstein, a resource economist at Bard College in New York state who co-authored the report,
called "Arctic Treasure, Global Assets Melting Away."
He said the report, reviewed by more than a dozen scientists and economists and funded by the Pew Environment Group, an arm of the Pew Charitable Trusts, provides a first
attempt to monetize the cost of the loss of one of the world's great weather makers.
"The Arctic is the planet's air conditioner and it's starting to break down," he said.
The loss of Arctic Sea ice and snow cover is already costing the world about $61 billion to $371 billion annually from costs associated with heat waves, flooding and other
factors, the report said. (Reuters)
Glaciologists at the Laboratory for Space Studies in Geophysics and Oceanography (LEGOS – CNRS/CNES/IRD/Université Toulouse 3) and their US and Canadian colleagues
(1) have shown that previous studies have largely overestimated mass loss from Alaskan glaciers over the past 40 years. Recent data from the SPOT 5 and ASTER
satellites have enabled researchers to extensively map mass loss in these glaciers, which contributed 0.12 mm/year to sea-level rise between 1962 and 2006, rather than 0.17
mm/year as previously estimated.
Mountain glaciers cover between 500 000 and 600 000 km2 of the Earth’s surface (around the size of France), which is little compared to the area of the
Greenland (1.6 million km2) and Antarctic (12.3 million km2) ice sheets. Despite their small size, mountain glaciers have played a major role in recent
sea-level rise due to their rapid melting in response to global climate warming. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
OSLO - The main impact of climate change will be on water supplies and the world needs to learn from past cooperation such as over the Indus or Mekong Rivers to help avert
future conflicts, experts said on Sunday.
Desertification, flash floods, melting glaciers, heatwaves, cyclones or water-borne diseases such as cholera are among the impacts of global warming inextricably tied to water.
And competition for supplies might cause conflicts.
"The main manifestations of rising temperatures...are about water," said Zafar Adeel, chair of UN-Water which coordinates work on water among 26 U.N. agencies.
(Reuters)
We better produce more CO2 then since one of the primary effects is greater water efficiency in photosynthesizing plants, making crops less
thirsty and increasing catchment runoff to impoundments.
Melbourne University alarmist David Karoly once claimed a rise in the Murray Darling Basin’s temperatures was “likely due to the increase in greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere from human activity” and:
BRENDAN Nelson was yesterday accused of being “blissfully immune” to the effects of climate change after he said the crisis in the Murray-Darling Basin was not
linked to global warming…
In parliament yesterday, Kevin Rudd attacked Dr Nelson, accusing him of ignoring scientific facts.
“You need to get with the science on this,” the Prime Minister said. “Look at the technical report put together by the CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology.”
But the latest evidence that Rudd and Karoly were wrong. In fact, there’s no evidence in the Murray Darling drought of man-made warming, says a new study in
Geophysical Research Letters, this new study: (Andrew Bolt)
The
debate over anthropogenic global warming—a theory propounded by the UN IPCC—is often portrayed as an argument between deniers and true believers. The deniers supposedly
claim that there is no global warming, man made or otherwise, and that the whole theory is a plot by left-wing agitators and closet socialists bent on world domination. The
true believers, conversely, accept every claim of pending future disaster uttered by scientists and activists alike. As with most controversies both extreme positions are wrong
and the truth lies somewhere in-between. As a scientist, I have studied the evidence and find the case for imminent, dangerous, human caused global warming unconvincing—here
is why I am an AGW skeptic. (Doug L. Hoffman, The Resilient Earth)
The notion that scientists understand how changes in Earth's orbit affect climate well enough for estimating long-term natural climate trends that underlie any anthropogenic
climate change is challenged by findings published this week. The new research was conducted by a team led by Professor Eelco Rohling of the University of Southampton's School
of Ocean and Earth Science hosted at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton.
"Understanding how climate has responded to past change should help reveal how human activities may have affected, or will affect, Earth's climate. One approach for this
is to study past interglacials, the warm periods between glacial periods within an ice age," said Rohling.
He continued: "Note that we have here focused on the long-term natural climate trends that are related to changes in Earth's orbit around the Sun. Our study is therefore
relevant to the long-term climate future, and not so much for the next decades or century."
The team, which included scientists from the Universities of Tuebingen (Germany) and Bristol, compared the current warm interglacial period with one 400,000 years ago (marine
isotope stage 11, or MIS-11).
Many aspects of the Earth-Sun orbital configuration during MIS-11 were similar to those of the current interglacial. For this reason, MIS-11 is often considered as a potential
analogue for future climate development in the absence of human influence.
Previous studies had used the analogy to suggest that the current interglacial should have ended 2-2.5 thousand years ago. So why has it remained so warm?
According to the'anthropogenic hypothesis', long-term climate impacts of man's deforestation activities and early methane and carbon dioxide emissions have artificially held us
in warm interglacial conditions, which have persisted since the end of the Pleistocene, about 11 400 years ago.
To address this issue, the researchers used a new high-resolution record of sea levels, which reflect ice volume. This record, which is continuous through both interglacials,
is based on the 'Red Sea method' developed by Rohling.
Water passes between the Red Sea and the open ocean only through the shallow Strait of Bab-el-Mandab, which narrows as sea levels drop, reducing water exchange. Evaporation
within the Red Sea increases its salinity, or saltiness, and changes the relative abundance of stable oxygen isotopes.
By analysing oxygen isotope ratios in tiny marine creatures called foraminiferans preserved in sediments that were deposited at the bottom of the Red Sea, the scientists
reconstructed past sea levels, which were corroborated by comparison with the fossilised remains of coral reefs.
The researchers found that the current interglacial has indeed lasted some 2.0 ± .5 millennia longer than predicted by the currently dominant theory for the way in which
orbital changes control the ice-age cycles. This theory is based on the intensity of solar radiation reaching the Earth at latitude 65 degrees North on 21 June, the northern
hemisphere Summer solstice.
But the anomaly vanished when the researchers considered a rival theory, which looks at the amount of solar energy reaching the Earth the same latitude during the summer
months. Under this theory, sea levels could remain high for another two thousand years or so, even without greenhouse warming.
"Future research should more precisely narrow down the influence of orbital changes on climate," said Rohling: "This is crucial for a better understanding of
underlying natural climate trends over long, millennial timescales. And that is essential for a better understanding of any potential long-term impacts on climate due to man's
activities." (National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (UK))
The latest submission to arXiv:physics.ao-ph by Gerald E. Marsh
Summary:
It has been shown above that low altitude cloud cover closely follows cosmic ray flux; that the galactic cosmic ray flux has the periodicities of the glacial/interglacial
cycles; that a decrease in galactic cosmic ray flux was coincident with Termination II [the warming that initiated the Eemian, the last interglacial] ; and that the most
likely initiator for Termination II was a consequent decrease in Earth’s albedo. The temperature of past interglacials was higher than today most likely as a consequence of a lower global albedo due to a decrease in galactic cosmic ray flux
reaching the Earth’s atmosphere. In addition, the galactic cosmic ray intensity exhibits a 100 kyr periodicity over the last 200 kyr that is in phase with the
glacial terminations of this period. Carbon dioxide appears to play a very limited role in setting interglacial temperature.
A very insightful film on carbon trade, where the idea came from and what’s the problem with it by Annie Leonard. Not surprisingly a very controversial issue, too as a lot
of money, power, and “hey, I am right” is at stake.
In the face of a changing fiscal and political environment, Congress and various states are belatedly rethinking their far-flung efforts to restructure and
regulate the nation’s energy markets. The opportunity is to change course and base their actions on facts, not emotion–and slow down and even reverse governmental
largesse. The global warming scare has been cut down to size, after all, and the problems of politically dependent energies are more evident than ever.
Too many legislators and interventionists cling to basic energy myths, however. Here are five major ones.
Myth: Foreign Oil Provides Most of Our Energy
According to the U.S. Department of Energy and the Energy Information Administration, oil represents less than 40% of our energy use. A full two-thirds of that oil comes
from North America, primarily Canada, not the Middle East.
A related myth is that alternative energy sources will reduce the use of petroleum. Such sources may first reduce domestic production, but they will not appreciably affect
production in unstable regions.
Myth: Renewables Will Replace Conventional Energy Sources
A correlated and persistent myth is that increasing wind- and solar-generated electricity will reduce our dependence on foreign oil and thus boost our energy security. Less
than 1% of our electricity is generated using petroleum, so any renewable generation will have no appreciable effect on petroleum demand. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
First, do the science to determine if it works. Then support it with public funds if necessary and not the other way around.
I just had an interesting correspondence with the editor of an energy publication. Here’s a story that should put it into perspective. Tell me if I’m crazy.
Let’s say some investors and developers step forward with a reportedly new type of commercial grade electrical power. They named it “Zephyr Integrated Power” (ZIP). Since
these people are clever types, they spent a lot of time and money on the marketing aspect of ZIP. (They knew that this was necessary to be able to break into the system — and
they want on the grid in a big way.)
So they tell us that ZIP is “free, clean, and green.” Sounds good!
Oh yes, for good measure they also add that implementing ZIP will create oodles of jobs.
So the basic question is this: exactly what do we do before we allow these people and their new product on the electric grid?
We wouldn’t be so gullible to just take their word for ZIP’s purported benefits, would we?
At the current time, the disturbing answer is yes, that is exactly what we do! (John Droz, Jr., PJM)
It’s hard to believe, but the Obama administration’s energy policies just keep getting further and further removed from reality. On Wednesday, the administration’s
fantasies centered on corn and coal, with the EPA taking the lead on corn while the White House led the way on coal. [Read
More] (Robert Bryce, Energy Tribune)
Ministers could save £12bn of public spending over four years by clamping down on tax breaks and support for polluting oil exploration, cement, aluminium and transport,
according to a report from green campaigners this week.
With all three major parties committed to cutting the projected £178bn budget deficit, and to a low-carbon economy, a report by the high-level Green Alliance thinktank argues
that many spending cuts could achieve both ends. Perhaps the most controversial suggestion is to halve the £10bn national and regional roads spending budget. ( Juliette Jowit,
The Guardian)
How ironic that during the ‘drill, baby, drill’ demonstrations as gasoline prices spiked in 2007 and 2008, a silent revolution with natural gas was already underway that
will make those concerns largely irrelevant. (Max Schulz, The American)
Natural gas, composed mostly of methane, is the cleanest of all the fossil fuels, emitting 25-50% less carbon dioxide than either oil or coal for each unit of energy
produced. In recent years, natural gas supplied approximately 20-25% of all energy consumed in the United States. Methane hydrate is a potentially enormous and as yet untapped
source of methane. The Department of Energy's Methane Hydrate Research and Development Program has been tasked since 2000 to implement and coordinate a national methane hydrate
research effort to stimulate the development of knowledge and technology necessary for commercial production of methane from methane hydrate in a safe and environmentally
responsible way.
Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States evaluates the program's research projects and management processes since its congressional
re-authorization in 2005, and presents recommendations for its future research and development initiatives. (NAP)
Suppose you began this morning by learning that some investors and developers had stepped forward with a reportedly new type of commercial grade electrical power called
“Zephyr Integrated Power” (ZIP). Being clever, they are spending a LOT of time and money marketing ZIP, knowing that this is their chance to break into the grid in a BIG
way.
Their message– ZIP is “FREE, CLEAN, AND GREEN”–sounds great! Oh yes, and for good measure, ZIP will create oodles of jobs.
So the basic question is this: exactly what do we do before we allow these people and their new product on the electric grid?
We wouldn’t be so gullible to just take their word for it, would we? Yet this is exactly what we are doing today!
And there is more: our politicians are so enamored with ZIP that they tell these promoters that we will not only allow them on the grid, we will FORCE utilities to use ZIP.
(Hmmm. Wouldn’t utilities WANT to use ZIP if it was so great?) How are utilities going to be forced to use ZIP? Lobbyists have sold our politicians a clever tool called
the Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) to do just that.
Yet there is more. Despite the supposed benefits (which a free market would obviously jump on without government involvement), our wise government is going to
offer the ZIP promoters billions of dollars of taxpayer money and ratepayer guarantees to support their product.
Remember, all this is without independent proof that ZIP has any real benefits…
Sadly, this astounding state of affairs is how our currently lobbyist-driven system operates.
Policy Proposal for the Environmental Left
The Left looks to government to do good things for the environment. My Pollyanna vision is that complex technical matters should be solved by science. So here
is my (government-involved) proposal (with apologies to the libertarian bloggers and readers of MasterResource). It would go something like this… [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
Driving
and the Built Environment: The Effects of Compact Development on Motorized Travel, Energy Use, and CO2 Emissions -- Special Report 298
TRB Special Report 298: Driving and the Built Environment: Effects of Compact Development on Motorized Travel, Energy Use, and CO2 Emissions examines the relationship
between land development patterns and vehicle miles traveled (VMT) in the United States to assess whether petroleum use, and by extension greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, could
be reduced by changes in the design of development patterns. The report estimates the contributions that changes in residential and mixed-use development patterns and transit
investments could make in reducing VMT by 2030 and 2050, and the impact this could have in meeting future transportation-related GHG reduction goals. (NAP)
WASHINGTON - H1N1 swine flu is still circulating around the world and still killing people, although it is on the decline everywhere, global health officials said on Friday.
The H1N1 strain is the dominant form of influenza globally, but some seasonal strains are starting to emerge in China and Africa, the World Health Organization reported.
The United States remains one of the hardest hit countries, but many Americans seem unconcerned and most have rejected the vaccine, according to a poll by the Harvard School of
Public Health released on Friday.
"Many people believe the outbreak is over and I think it is too soon for us to have that complacency," Dr. Anne Schuchat of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention told reporters in a telephone briefing. "This pandemic isn't over yet."
The CDC said nine more children had been reported killed by H1N1 last week. It estimates that as many as 80 million Americans have been infected with swine flu and about 11,000
people have died. (Reuters)
EXPERTS predict a second wave of swine flu will hit Australia as early as the end of this month.
Figures obtained by The Sun-Herald show that just one-fifth of NSW adults have been immunised against H1N1.
Robert Booy, an infectious disease expert at The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, said there was evidence a second wave was coming and it was possible that it could be worse
than the first round last year.
He referred to the H1N1 pandemic in 1918, widely known as the Spanish flu. ‘‘That’s the last time we had one and that one was definitely worse the second round.’’
Professor Booy said children returning to school after going on holiday in the northern hemisphere could speed up the rate of infection. (SMH)
Many worried and angry parents of an autistic child believe that vaccines may cause the disease. But it's pure myth - disproved by numerous studies and now a final slap from
a British journal disowning a report that started the dangerous nonsense.
Will these parents accept reality - and allow their children to receive shots against a dozen or more illnesses? And will fringe groups that play to fears of autism give up
their indefensible claims?
The answers can't come soon enough for public health experts. Vaccination rates, while generally high, have shown dips partly because parents are citing the notion of vaccine
dangers in skipping shots for their children.
Smallpox and polio have been virtually eradicated thanks to vaccines. But whooping cough, pertussis and measles - all but stamped out years ago - can reappear via unvaccinated
patients.
A law that allows parents to opt out of school-required shots has raised the worry level. This so-called exemption rate statewide is 2 percent, but it was 6.3 percent in Marin
County and 5.8 percent in Sonoma County in 2008, according to the state Department of Health Services. Vaccine "denialism" has become a public health issue. (San
Francisco Chronicle)
Twelve years ago, the British Medical Journal linked the measles-mumps-rubella vaccination to autism. Now the Journal says that the study was compromised due to researcher
Dr. Andrew Wakefield's reputed unethical and "callous disregard" for the children used in the study.
As a result, the Journal has retracted its claims. But does this necessarily indicate that the results are wrong? ( Raven Clabough, New American)
The so-called 'study' was always the worst kind of scaremongering rubbish -- it should never have been published and all involved should have had their
license to practice medicine revoked immediately and permanently.
This week, Dr. Andrew Wakefield's now infamous study linking the MMR vaccine to autism was finally retracted by the prestigious Lancet medical journal. The move came days
after medical officials in the United Kingdom found the doctor guilty of multiple ethics violations. For doctors, this is a victory -- but a bittersweet one.
As a pediatrician, I grapple daily with what Wakefield wrought: parents who are twisted in knots -- to the point of tears -- about whether to immunize their child. In the 12
years since the publication of Wakefield's study, 10 of his fellow co-authors have denounced him, and an unremitting series of revelations have exposed just how corrupt his
motives and methods were. Most important, multiple studies verified there is no link between the MMR (or any other) vaccine and autism. Meanwhile, infectious diseases once
confined to medical history have broken out in our communities. To say the retraction is criminally overdue is an understatement. (Salon)
I tried to avoid blogging about this topic, since I've spent 12 years dealing with it (and I'm sick of it!). But since it is the lead medical story of the week...
The esteemed British medical journal, The Lancet, retracted a little case report they published 12 years ago.. This is a pretty historic event in the world of medicine. But, do
you care? If you are a parent who has spent any time wondering about vaccine safety, you should.
This "little case report" tried to link the combination MMR vaccine to autism and it was the shot (literally) heard around the vaccine world. And, when I refer to it
as "little", I am not kidding. Just 12 patients were researched regarding bowel problems and a possible association to autism. The 13 researchers (yes, there were
more researchers than patients being studied) inferred that these children developed both intestinal problems and autism from receiving the combination Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR)
vaccine. They did not prove a link at all.
But, that did not really matter to the media who took the story and ran with it. This was the esteemed journal, The Lancet, after all, and their acceptance of the paper for
publication made its findings important, right? Wrong. (Ari Brown, Child Health 411)
The false idea that our bodies have become ‘toxic waste dumps’ is not just wrong but counterproductive.
Chemophobia is not a new phenomenon in our culture. Since the 1960s, much of the public has been afraid of exposure to chemicals. This is not surprising considering
environmental disaster stories about toxic waste dumps or the history of chemicals such as vinyl chloride, aniline dyes, thalidomide, dioxin, and PCBs.
Exposure to toxic, or possibly toxic, chemicals has been drastically reduced over the past several decades through regulations and new ways of handling chemicals by industry.
And yet the chemophobia epidemic has gained new momentum with recent media coverage of the “chemical body burden crisis” on websites, print articles, and TV specials (such
as CNN’s “Planet in Peril”). The reality is that behind all of the media hype about chemicals in our bodies, there is little scientifically meaningful substance. In other
words, it is not a crisis at all. ( Seymour Garte, The American)
China's reckless use of antibiotics in the health system and agricultural production is unleashing an explosion of drug resistant superbugs that endanger global health,
according to leading scientists. (TDT)
Seeking a new weapon in the fight against obesity, the Food and Drug Administration wants to encourage manufacturers to post vital nutritional information, including calorie
counts, on the front of food packages.
The goal is to give people a jolt of reality before they reach for another handful of chips. But the urgency of the message could be muted by a longstanding problem: official
serving sizes for many packaged foods are just too small. And that means the calorie counts that go with them are often misleading.
So to get ready for front-of-package nutrition labeling, the F.D.A. is now looking at bringing serving sizes for foods like chips, cookies, breakfast cereals and ice cream into
line with how Americans really eat. Combined with more prominent labeling, the result could be a greater sense of public caution about unhealthy foods. (NYT)
Well, it'll be a bit more meaningful information, I guess. Whether it actually influences consumption is another matter entirely and I'm unimpressed by
claims of "healthy and unhealthy" foods (unless they mean food that's really unwell, in which case I'd recommend against eating it).
The soft drink industry has worked to smother a proposal to tax sugared beverages, a plan advocates said would have reduced obesity and helped finance health care reform.
Only months ago, supporters of the soda tax saw it as an idea whose hour was near. The sheer magnitude of the medical cost of obesity added urgency to the issue: Being
overweight is so widespread and so closely tied to diabetes, heart disease and other health problems that this generation of young people may be the first in the U.S. to live
shorter lives than their parents.
But opponents questioned any link between sugary drinks and obesity, and expressed concern about a slippery slope of taxes on other products.
Proponents, meanwhile, thought a tax that drove down consumption while raising money for health care seemed like a natural with Democrats controlling Congress.
The White House has dismissed the idea, however, even after President Barack Obama had expressed interest last summer. A key congressional committee, though initially seeming
receptive, ended up refusing to consider it. Several minority advocacy groups, including some committed to fighting obesity, lined up against the tax after years of receiving
financial support from the industry.
First lady Michelle Obama, who consulted with fast-food and soft drink representatives on her new healthy eating initiative, scheduled for unveiling Tuesday, is expected to
steer clear of taxes. (Tom Hamburger and Kim Geiger, Tribune Newspapers)
NEW YORK - A few minutes a day of midday summer sun can raise most fair-skinned people's vitamin D levels to sufficient, but not optimal, levels, according to new research
from the UK.
The skin's production of vitamin D upon exposure to ultraviolet B radiation in sunlight is the body's main source for the nutrient, which is scarce in most foods, Dr. Lesley E.
Rhodes of Salford Royal NHS Foundation Hospital in Manchester and colleagues note in their report.
Vitamin D is required for healthy bones and muscles, the researchers add, and there's also evidence it may help reduce the risk of cancer, high blood pressure, diabetes and
other diseases.
UK health authorities say "casual exposures to summer sunlight" will allow the body to produce adequate amounts of vitamin D. They also recommend limiting sun
exposure beyond a brief amount of time.
To test whether such casual exposures would be enough, the researchers exposed 109 fair-skinned men and women to light equivalent to 13 minutes of midday summer sun three times
a week for six weeks. Study participants wore shorts and T-shirts during their brief sun baths.
The study was done during the winter months, when people would be getting very little vitamin D from sunlight, to focus on the effects of the sun baths. All of the study
participants had low vitamin D intakes, and none were taking vitamin D supplements.
Participants' average blood level of vitamin D rose from around 18 nanograms per milliliter to 28 nanograms per milliliter. Recent studies have suggested that 20 nanograms per
milliliter and above is sufficient, while 32 nanograms per milliliter and above is "optimal."
Based on the results, the researchers predicted that with this amount of sun exposure, 90 percent of white adults in Manchester under the age of 65 would have sufficient
vitamin D levels, while 26 percent would have optimal levels.
The findings don't apply to darker-skinned people, who need longer stretches of sun exposure because their skin color acts as a natural sunblock.
Depending on latitude, the average amount of sun exposure required for similar effects in North America would range from nine to 16 minutes, the researchers say.
"We propose that future public health messages could promote regular short exposures to midday summer sunlight, their duration limited to below the sunburn
threshold," the researchers write. But people at high risk of skin cancer should avoid the sun, they add. "Oral supplements may be important in these
individuals."
SOURCE: Journal of Investigative Dermatology, online January 14, 2010. (Reuters Health)
Bottom line for most people is: don't get burned; do get sun exposure -- it is really good for you, whatever your age.
Helium has long been the subject of public policy deliberation and management, largely because of its many strategic uses and its unusual source-it is a derived product of
natural gas and its market has several anomalous characteristics. Shortly after sources of helium were discovered at the beginning of the last century, the U.S. government
recognized helium's potential importance to the nation's interests and placed its production and availability under strict governmental control. In the 1960s, helium's
strategic value in cold war efforts was reflected in policies that resulted in the accumulation of a large reserve of helium owned by the federal government. The latest
manifestation of public policy is expressed in the Helium Privatization Act of 1996 (1996 12 Act), which directs that substantially all of the helium accumulated as a result of
those earlier policies be sold off by 2015 at prices sufficient to repay the federal government for its outlays associated with the helium program.
The present volume assesses whether the interests of the United States have been well served by the 1996 Act and, in particular, whether selling off the helium reserve has had
any adverse effect on U.S. scientific, technical, biomedical, and national security users of helium. (NAP)
The assessment has to be done before any property can be sold or rented under new laws to tackle carbon emissions.
Didn’t Kevin Rudd once claim his great global warming policies would cost you only a dollar or two a week?
What’s the betting this scheme will prove every bit the rip-off disaster that this similar one of Rudd’s is now:
It was pitched as yet another federal government plan to help Australians tackle climate change - a free energy assessment for hundreds of thousands of homes and
“green loans” for those who wanted them. Not only would it boost household energy efficiency, it would create jobs in the process.
Queensland already has a similarly intrusive and largely useless law in place. Before you sell your house, you now have to fill in this
form. Read it, and ask how migrants and the elderly would even understand the damn thing, let alone be able to afford for the check and the changes demanded. Example:
E12 No air-conditioning or
fixed evaporative air-conditioner or
___ out of ___ air-conditioners are energy efficient
(minimum 2.9 Energy Efficiency Ratio [EER])
NORTHERN Australia will never become an important food bowl to replace the drought-stricken Murray-Darling, despite massive irrigation plans and a billion litres of rain a
year, a Rudd government taskforce has concluded.
The expert panel, comprising the Northern Australian Land and Water Taskforce, will today release a landmark report into economic opportunities for the northern parts of
Queensland, the Northern Territory and Western Australia that places new and strict limits on the region's potential for agricultural production.
There is some good news amid the gloomy outlook for Top End food production, with the report predicting that northern Australia's billion-dollar beef industry - in which cattle
live on native grasses - will more than double production by 2030.
Committee member Stuart Blanch said yesterday: "Northern Australia can never be a food bowl for Southeast Asia or anywhere else because we just don't have enough water.
But we can be world's best-practice environment managers and beef producers; there are thousands of indigenous jobs to be created."
Referring to a water study by the CSIRO, the taskforce concludes the growth of agricultural production in the north will be limited, despite rainfall of up to 2m a year in some
areas. By 2030, there will be less water available in the north than there was in 2000, the taskforce predicts. (The Australian)
Not very imaginative, except the part about how little rain the region receives -- "a billion liters of rain" per square kilometer could
be true if the region received a mere meter of annual rainfall (much of it receives far more) but there's a million square kilometers of irrigation viable farmland available,
so that's one million, million cubic meters of rainfall and each meter cubed is 1,000 liters but what's a few orders of magnitude when you are government zealots?
Then there's imagined water shortage in an allegedly warmer world (weird hypothesis given that catastrophic enhanced greenhouse actually relies on dramatic water cycle
enhancement). Other regions of Australia solved the problem of water seasonality on flood plains by the simple implementation of ring tanks and pumping to elevated
impoundment.
Has green faith destroyed a marvellous chance to grow Australia?
NORTHERN
Australia will never become an important food bowl to replace the drought-stricken Murray-Darling, despite massive irrigation plans and a billion litres of rain a year, a
Rudd government taskforce has concluded. The expert panel, comprising the Northern Australian Land and Water Taskforce, will today release a landmark report into economic
opportunities for the northern parts of Queensland, the Northern Territory and Western Australia that places new and strict limits on the region’s potential for
agricultural production.
On the face of it, it seems strange that the hot and often wet north is ruled out for intensive agriculture, when other nations at the same latitude seem to be able to
manage it.
But suspicion grows that what’s really holding back agriculture in the far North is not the dry season, but green philosophy - especially that advanced by the warmist
CSIRO - when I read this:
Referring to a water study by the CSIRO, the taskforce concludes the growth of agricultural production in the north will be limited, despite rainfall of up to 2m a
year in some areas. By 2030, there will be less water available in the north than there was in 2000, the taskforce predicts.
So already the task force is accepting the global warming predictions of the CSIRO, relying on regional climate models which studies have found worthless.
But it gets worse:
Though the north receives about a billion litres of rain a year, equivalent to eight-and-a-half times the annual runoff in the Murray-Darling Basin or 2000 times the
capacity of Sydney Harbour, about 20 per cent of it enters the rivers and streams and about 15 per cent recharges groundwater resources. The remaining 65 per cent enters the
soil and is absorbed by plants.
“Despite these huge volumes of water, the north can be described as being water-limited,” the report states. The taskforce says this paradox arises because there is
almost no rain for the remaining six months.
Easy fixed. So build a dam, right? But no:
The CSIRO water study, presented to the taskforce last year, found there was not enough water to irrigate large swaths of land in the north without doing major damage
to the rivers and the surrounding environment. The report rules out more dams on environmental grounds...
The CSIRO also says dams in that area will be hard to build - but where there’s no will there’s always no way.
UPDATE
The membership of this taskforce strongly suggests it has indeed a green,
anti-development agenda, and the CSIRO, too. Yes, there are a few presumably pro-business representatives, but most of the 14 are either from Aboriginal land rights and
“development” groups, or have ties to green and pro-warming bodies. Examples:
Dr Stuart Blanch is the Coordinator of the Environment Centre of the Northern Territory (and)...was formerly the Manager of Northern Landscapes for
the World Wildlife Fund Australia and previously worked on national water policy and restoring the Murray-Darling Basin with the Inland Rivers Network and Australian
Conservation Foundation.
Dr Rosemary Hill is the Vice-President of the Australian Conservation Foundation and a Senior Scientist at CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems.
Dr Hill has been an active conservationist for 25 years …
Dr Andrew Johnson is Group Executive - Environment at the CSIRO and ...is also a member of various advisory Boards of organisations responsible
for environmental management in Australia. Previously Dr Johnson ... (was) Chief CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems Division.
(Warmist campaigner) Professor Bob Wasson ... was previously Director of the Centre for
Resource and Environmental Studies in the Institute of Advance Studies at the Australian National University…
Yes, the CSIRO admit it’s actually been raining more heavily in this past decade of alleged warming:
In recent years (1996 to 2007), rainfall intensity (rainfall per rainy day) has increased slightly across the north compared to the past (1930 to 2007)....
But, honest, the models insist warming must instead make things drier:
The future will be warmer; rainfall may be more intense; some areas may receive slightly less rainfall. The near future (around 2030) is expected to be warmer, with
less rainfall than in recent years (1996 to 2007) but about the same as in the historical past (1930 to 2007). As a result, it should be drier than recent years.
And here’s one reason why the CSIRO can’t find rivers to dam:
Seventeen rivers (six in the Northern North-East Coast Drainage Division and 11 in the Gulf of Carpentaria drainage division) are either declared, proposed or
potential wild rivers. This imposes management rules that constrain future development on, or near, these rivers.
Or: there are no rivers to dam because we’ll soon slap green bans on the ones that would be perfect. Again, we know this game in Victoria, where the Labor Government turned
a dam reservation into a national park - and then declared the river a “wild river”, too, just to make sure no dam would be built on the best site in the state.
UPDATE 3
Reader Charles is the first of several readers to point out an error worse than the kind that had the media pillory Barnaby Joyce:
Even the most basic numbers in this are hugely wrong. “One billion litres per year”??? The actual amount is more than ONE THOUSAND TRILLION litres (one metre of
rain over one million square kilometres). Wrong by a factor of one million or more, which I think is extreme even by the standards of environmental (so-called) reportage in
this country.
UPDATE 4
Dissent among the taskforce members. The National Farmers Federation emails:
NFF President David Crombie, who is a member of the Northern Australia Land and Water Taskforce, is in Canberra today and keen to comment on the release of the report.
He has a very positive view of agriculture’s expansion in northern Australia. The report takes a cautious approach due to a lack of research. However, the NFF believes that
just underscores the need for more research so the potential in the north can be unlocked.
UPDATE 5
Stuart Blanch makes the green agenda of his taskforce explicit:
One task force member, NT Environment Centre coordinator Dr Stuart Blanch, thinks even 60,000 hectares (of agriculture in the North) is too much....
Blanch says he is disappointed the taskforce’s report was not unequivocal in banning the construction of dams.
“I don’t think anyone on a task force really wants to see our great rivers like the Daly or the Fitzroy Dam [dammed], but I do regret that we were not
able to get stronger more explicit language in the report saying there should be no dams,” he said.
Forests
and their soils are one of our planet's major sinks of biologically active carbon and contain the majority of Earth’s terrestrial carbon stock. Some climate change alarmists
have said that the world's forest are in danger from the effects of climate change. Recent studies have shown increases in plant growth across many forest types. Now, a new
paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reports that the increase in forest biomass is due to rising CO2 levels and warmer
weather—in other words, trees love global warming whether human caused or natural.
That there has been a resurgence in forest growth over the past century in North America, Europe and parts of Asia has been widely reported but the source of
this growth spurt has remained uncertain. For example, growth could be caused by normal recovery from unknown disturbances. Without knowing the history of a forest, it is
impossible to clearly know why the treas are growing faster. Using a unique dataset of tree biomass collected over the past 22 years, collected from 55 temperate forest plots
with known land-use histories, researchers found that recent biomass accumulation greatly exceeded the expected growth caused by natural recovery. (Doug L. Hoffman, The
Resilient Earth)
OSLO - Losses of animal and plant species are an increasing economic threat and the world needs new goals for protecting nature after failing to achieve a 2010 U.N. target
of slowing extinctions, experts said Friday.
Losses of biodiversity "have increasingly dangerous consequences for human well-being, even survival for some societies," according to a summary of a 90-nation U.N.
backed conference in Norway from February 1-5.
The United Nations says that the world is facing the worst extinction crisis since the dinosaurs were wiped out 65 million years ago, driven by a rising human population and
spinoffs such as pollution, expanding cities and global warming. (Reuters)
Gorebull warbling is imploding: what are they going to terrorize the populace with now?
Washington, D.C. - The Obama administration is killing a national livestock tracking program that never got off the ground amid widespread complaints by farmers and
ranchers.
Instead, all cattle, hogs and poultry that cross state lines sometime during their life - which includes much of Iowa's hog production and more than a million beef cattle
yearly - would be required to participate in some type of state tracking program.
Livestock that spend their entire lives in a single state, even if their meat is distributed elsewhere, would be exempt, according to the U.S. Agriculture Department.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Friday that after holding a series of public hearings on the issue, it was "apparent that a new strategy for animal disease
traceability is needed." (Des Moines Register)
“Eat local” is the latest intellectual fad on the Left Coast. These “locavores,” as adherents like to call themselves, want you to eat only food grown near where you
live — say, within 100 miles of your home. The goal, in theory, is to foster “sustainable agriculture,” to lower the carbon footprint of your food (which generally
travels thousands of miles from farm to kitchen table), and consequently get that warm-and-fuzzy back-to-the-earth type feeling.
Oh, did I mention that the locavore movement is most popular in California?
This little detail is significant because California is just about the only state in the entire union that has the climate and the soil to grow such a wide variety of produce
that it could even theoretically support its current population with “locally grown” food. (PJM)
A former federal regulator has some advice on how U.S. companies should respond.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is demanding that
publicly traded U.S. companies disclose their risks from man-made global warming to shareholders.
As a former federal regulator, I can foresee a whole range of possible risk assessments. Companies could tell their stockholders:
– To protect your share values, our company is planning to relocate our production assets to China. We’ll send our forwarding address when we get there.
– We believe it will be impossible to profitably manufacture aluminum under the proposed energy tax regime, and will sell out before everybody else realizes this.
– We believe the U.S. government can and will sharply reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, and that Europe, China, and India will be persuaded to follow suit. Thus there
will be no risk of the planet overheating, and your shares will retain their full value.
Here’s the risk assessment I would suggest they give their stockholders:
There’s still an urgent debate on whether the recent global warming has been caused by man-made CO2 or solar variation. The correlation between CO2 and our thermometer
record is a meager 22 percent; the correlation with sunspots is a much stronger 79 percent.
Ice cores, seabed sediments, fossil pollen, and ancient Chinese court records all clearly indicate a long, moderate climate cycle of 1,500 years, plus or minus 500. The
cycle puts an abrupt 2-4 degree Celsius kink in the temperature record every few hundred years at the latitude of Washington and Beijing. There have been five such previous
warmings just since the end of the last ice age — all of them moderate. The warmings were the good times for humanity. The “little ice ages” were bitter and harsh,
featuring famines, frostbite, and disease epidemics — all extremely bad for business.
Never have we seen the “runaway warming” predicted by Dr. James Hansen when he appeared before a Senate committee in 1988. When he testified again in 2008, global
temperatures had actually declined. Clearly, the computer models have failed to predict the climate future.
In 2003, meteorologist Eugenia Kalnay used temperature records from satellites and high-altitude balloons to backcast U.S. surface temperatures “without cities or
land-use changes.” She concluded U.S. land temperature increases since 1940 have been overestimated by 40 percent. James Goodridge, then California State Climatologist,
reported in 1992 that the state’s urban counties (more than a million residents) had had temperature gains of more than 3 degrees Fahrenheit per century, while rural
counties showed no temperature trend. Thus the real warming of the past 70 years is probably no more than 0.1 degree Celsius — well within the range of normal variability.
Our company cannot forecast how long the current warming will last, but we sincerely hope it will persist for several more centuries. The next climate cooling could be
merely harsh or a full-bore ice age, with temperatures dropping 10 degrees Celsius.
Either would be very bad for business.
Thank you. We look forward to your continued support.
If the SEC demands a more politically correct agreement with the global warming alarmists, let them dictate it — and sign it.
Resources:
E. Kalnay and M. Cai, 2003, “Estimating the Impact of Urbanization and Land Use on U.S. Surface Temperature Trends: Preliminary Report,” Nature 423, pp. 528-531.
James D. Goodridge, 1992, “Urban Bias Influences on Long-term California Air Temperature Trends,” Atmospheric Environment 26B, pp 1-7
Rebecca Lefton, writing a report for the Center for American Progress, tries to debunk
a study of the Boxer-Kerry bill published by The Heritage Foundation. Instead she demonstrates that she
didn’t read the study or doesn’t understand the economic logic of the bill she supposedly supports. Further she offers as a substitute for Heritage’s work an analysis
done by the Environmental Protection Agency. Either she didn’t read the EPA report, doesn’t understand it, or is willfully misrepresenting it.
The economic fallacies of Lefton’s review are many, but the primary one is her assertion that Heritage cost projections are “grossly overestimated.” In support of her
assertion she claims the EPA projects an annual cost of between “$80 and $111 annually”
per household. EPA’s actual, inflation-adjusted annual costs range up to $1,288 annually. Unlike Heritage, the EPA did not do a complete, new economic analysis of the
Boxer-Kerry bill (S. 1733), but instead based their report on the economic analysis of the Waxman-Markey bill (H.R. 2454). So it is necessary to go to page
14 of EPA’s analysis of H.R. 2454 to find these inflation adjusted cost household cost projections. However, even these larger impacts would be an apples-to-oranges
comparison next to the Heritage estimates. Continue
reading... (The Foundry)
UN claim of Himalayan glaciers disappearing in 25 years reportedly came from activists
February 4, 2010
WASHINGTON – U.S. Reps. Joe Barton, R-Texas, ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Greg Walden, R-Ore., ranking member of the Oversight and
Investigations Subcommittee, today wrote to Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson asking her for information related to the peer-review process and
scientific objectivity underpinning the agency’s endangerment finding on greenhouse gases.
Is here. I’ll comment later. See RA-10 here
and RA-47 here
4 p.m. A couple of quick points. Readers should understand that I have limited expectations from this sort of inquiry. What I do expect is that the authors not make untrue
statements that can be easily disproven. (At least make them hard to disprove.)
Point 1. Penn State President Spanier is quoted as saying:
“I know they’ve taken the time and spent hundreds of hours studying documents and interviewing people and looking at issues from all sides,” Spanier said.
The only interviews mentioned in the report (aside from Mann) are with Gerry North and Donald Kennedy, editor of Science. [Since they are required to provide a transcript or
summary of all interviews, I presume that the Inquiry did not carry out any other interviews.] What does Donald Kennedy know about the matter? These two hardly constitute
“looking at issues from all sides”. [A CA reader observed below that "North [at a Rice University event] admitted that he had not read any of the EAU e-mails and did
not even know that software files were included in the release.”] They didn’t even talk to Wegman. Contrary to Spanier’s claim, they did not make the slightest effort to
talk to any critic or even neutral observer.
Point 2. The Penn State Committee stated:
The so-called “trick” was nothing more than a statistical method used to bring two or more different kinds of data sets together in a legitimate fashion by a
technique that has been reviewed by a broad array of peers in the field.
This is untrue on a variety of levels. The “trick” is not a “legitimate” statistical method; its essence is the failure to show adverse data. See Climate Audit here
or the DailyMail here.
Did they do any investigation of the “trick”? They don’t even seem to have read the relevant Climate Audit post – only realclimate.
Point 3. The Report states: ... (Steve McIntyre, Climate Audit)
WASHINGTON, DC - Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Ranking Member of the Committee on Environment and Public Works, responded to Penn State's announcement today concerning its
investigation into possible research misconduct by Dr. Michael Mann.
Penn State's internal inquiry found further investigation is warranted to determine if Dr. Mann "engaged in, directly or indirectly, any actions that seriously deviated
from accepted practices within the academic community for proposing, conducting or reporting research or other scholarly activities."
"I want to commend Penn State for recognizing the seriousness of the allegations leveled at Dr. Mann by launching an initial inquiry into whether he committed research
misconduct," Senator Inhofe said. "As the University moves to the next phase of its investigation, I believe the Inspector General of the National Science Foundation
should also commence an investigation to examine possible violations of federal laws and policies governing taxpayer-funded research.
"The stakes involved here are enormous. The scientific work in question is part of a larger enterprise behind federal climate change policies that will cost American
consumers trillions of dollars. So when we learn, as we did last week, that the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report included serious errors, raising questions about the integrity
of its work, we need to reassure the American people that their tax dollars are supporting objective scientific research rather than political agendas." (EPW)
University of East Anglia scientist Paul Dennis denies leaking material, but links to climate change sceptics in US drew him to attention of the investigators (The Guardian)
I have never seen this talk by Christopher Monckton and it's just cool!
This example actually suggests how complicit the media has been in keeping the global warming scare alive by failing to report what was actually under its nose.
But now there’s a great change. There is now a race on to uncover the next big IPCC scandal, and I doubt the great climate change scare can survive. The papers will, of
course, take the credit. (Andrew Bolt)
The scientist at the centre of an ongoing row in the UK about climate research, Phil Jones, will be vindicated by "rock solid" evidence that shows global warming
is happening, according to his colleagues. (TDT)
We already know about Wang, inter alia, so how could gorebull warbling be "rock solid"?
If you write long enough, you will eventually have second thoughts about an article from your past. In our April 1996 issue, I wrote “The Angry Sky,” about the alarming
impacts Hawai‘i expected from ozone depletion and global warming. You never hear about the ozone layer anymore, but global warming has come to dominate our conversations in
ways I never imagined.
I never expected the terms “green,” “sustainability” and “carbon footprint” would be hurled at us daily, secular guilt crammed into every consumer choice. But I
especially never expected that some of the leading scientists who argue the case for manmade global warming would be revealed as political partisans, who hid evidence against
global warming, attempted to redefine the meaning of “peer-reviewed journals” to mean “only peers who agree with us” and, worst of all, conspired to delete data in
anticipation of Freedom of Information requests.
Let me back up. Because of manmade global warming, I warned in 1996, that “sea levels could rise as much as three feet by the year 2100 … warming can lead to hotter and
more frequent heat waves … stronger and more frequent hurricanes to Hawai‘i … endanger native plants species [and] coral reefs.” These dire predictions came from the
United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Researchers at the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia provide much of the
IPCC’s analysis and predictions. In November 2009, hackers released thousands of e-mails from the CRU, going back years, and it is these e-mails that reveal the very
unscientific, unethical activities I described above.
Tonite
I was on BBC Newsnight (screenshot above) with Professor Chris Field, the (new) head of IPCC Working Group II. I knew that the interview was not going to go well when Professor
Field explained, not-so-accurately, that as soon as the IPCC heard about the glacier error it quickly came out with a statement clarifying the matter. No mention of "voodoo
science" or "schoolboy science" or the extended period of
denial of error by the IPCC leadership.
I had a chance to summarize the problems in the IPCC associated with its creation of the "mystery
graph" and the outright falsification of my views in the IPCC review
comments. Professor Fields completely ignored these issues and instead chose to obfuscate and deny any problem whatsoever. This is remarkable because all Professor Field
would have had to say was something like the following, "These are serious allegations, especially about the misrepresentations of Roger's views in the review process. We
should tighten up our procedures to make sure this sort of thing does not happen again." And then the IPCC should follow it up with some improvements to the process.
Instead, Professor Field tried to talk over me and deny, deny, deny. As I said in the interview, this issue is not ambiguous. The studies are not equivocal. There is no signal
of rising temperatures in the disaster record. Period. Maybe there will be in the future, but there wasn't in 2006, when the IPCC deadline for publication occurred and there is
not now. Further, both the "mystery graph" and the falsification of my views are unambiguous failures of the IPCC process to ensure that accurate information is
included in its reports. How can this be denied?
Why the IPCC has chosen to take a stand on this issue -- to defend the indefensible -- is beyond me. If you truly believe that science is self-correcting and truth wins in the
end, then the IPCC has staked out a position that it cannot win on in the long term, no matter how much spin is applied in the short term. Apparently, however the short term
has a ways yet to run -- Rajendra Pachauri makes the front page of tomorrow's
Guardian, where he says:
"You can't expect me to be personally responsible for every word in a 3,000 page report."
Well then, who is? Because I'd sure like to know who is responsible for the IPCC
lying about my views.
If you are in the UK you can see the first half of the Newsnight segment here (not sure where the rest
is) and if it shows up on YouTube I'll provide a link to the segment in an update. (Roger Pielke Jr)
Where "An Inconvenient Truth" deployed frightening images of rising sea levels to illustrate the threat of global warming, director Michael Nash hopes to send an
equally compelling wakeup call with the-sky-is-falling docu "Climate Refugees," using infographics of giant red arrows moving from threatened Third World countries to
your backyard. "Consider the concerns we have about a few million people crossing the border from Mexico," the pic warns, assembling stunning footage and all the
right talking heads into a tiresome, TV-ready essay (like an extended "60 Minutes" segment), repeating the same point from different corners of the world.
Billing itself as "the human face of climate change," "Climate Refugees" depicts the impact on two very different scales. First, it shows actual human faces
-- the frowning victims of Mother Nature's wrath -- in heart-wrenching closeup as Nash interviews individuals in countries hammered by hurricanes, floods and the like. Then
there are the larger-scale pictures of devastation, overwhelming montages of destruction bound to make auds feel like ants drowning on a planet gradually slipping underwater.
Some may choose to contest the idea of global warming or question man's role in it, but as Nash's narration insists, "The fact remains, our climate is changing." With
leading researchers and high-profile political figures (including John Kerry, Newt Gingrich and Nancy Pelosi) popping up at regular intervals, "Climate Refugees"
presents a swell of compelling opinion about the challenges such change puts on the global population. Nash's sources are uncannily on-message, using virtually the same wording
from interview to interview, which gives the impression of either consensus or coaching, depending on your personal stance on the issue. (Variety)
Pioneering graph used by IPCC to illustrate a compelling story of man-made climate change raises questions about transparency (Fred Pearce, The Guardian)
Fred thinks the hokey hokey stick graph is "persuasive" -- poor gullible twit. At least he admits there's been plenty of controversy although
there shouldn't have been -- it was crap when first produced and it is still crap.
John Coleman, founder of the Weather Channel, in an hour-long television documentary titled "Global Warming: The Other Side," presents evidence that our National
Climatic Data Center has been manipulating weather data just as the now disgraced and under investigation British University of East Anglia Climate Research Unit. The NCDC is a
division of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Its manipulated climate data is used by the Goddard Institute of Space Studies, which is a division of the
National Aeronautical and Space Administration. John Coleman's blockbuster five-part series can be seen here.
( Walter E. Williams, Townhall)
THE cost of cutting carbon pollution would be borne by taxpayers under a Coalition plan to pay incentives to farmers and businesses that make cuts voluntarily.
The policy, released yesterday by Tony Abbott to rival the government's emissions trading scheme, would cost $3.2 billion over four years and more than $10 billion over the
decade to 2020. It would be funded from budget cuts.
Cementing climate change as a central election issue, Mr Abbott said the impact on taxpayers would be less than the ETS, which would increase the cost of living by 1.1 per cent
over a decade.
''Our policy will be simpler, cheaper and more effective than the government's because it relies on incentives, not penalties,'' he said. (SMH)
Of course the gorebull warming-besotted Left-leaning media portrays it as "carbon pollution" but what can you expect from people who hate carbon
based life (us, mostly).
TONY Abbott has promised to attack climate change with a $3.2 billion plan that does not cap carbon emissions but instead proposes direct action such as planting trees.
And while Kevin Rudd has ridiculed the direct-action plan as "a climate con job", most business groups have backed the plan, agreeing with the Opposition Leader's
assertion it is "cheaper, simpler and more cost-effective" than Labor's proposed carbon emissions trading scheme. (The Australian)
Looks like an enhanced and rebranded landcare and vegetation scheme, which is OK, provided it's used to control ferals like the rabbits, goats, pigs,
camels, donkeys, horses and buffalo denuding much of Australia's center and north. Could do some good if managed properly.
Amid the torrent of "climate change" news, we missed this
one, the government's very own "cap and trade" scam, disarmingly labelled the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme – formerly the Carbon Reduction Commitment.
This is the child of the Climate Change Act 2008 (approved by parliament in October of that year, while it was snowing outside), a new "carbon tax" which takes effect
this April. As the official guide helpfully
explains:
CRC will affect large organisations in both the public and private sector. Organisations that meet the qualification criteria, which are based on how much electricity they
were supplied in 2008, will be obliged to participate in CRC.
Participating organisations will have to monitor their emissions and purchase allowances, initially sold by Government, for each tonne of CO2 they emit. The more CO2 an
organisation emits, the more allowances it has to purchase.
Following on from the "shock” announcement that the Tories were co-opting Nicholas
Stern to help them develop a "green investment bank", Stern has issued
a denial.
"I should stress that I am not, and have no plans to be, an adviser to any political party," he said in a statement. This, says Sky News "may be an
embarrassment for shadow chancellor George Osborne," who announced in a high-profile speech that he was "delighted that Lord Stern has agreed to advise us."
After the debacle over the appointment of General Dannatt as a Tory defence advisor,
this is yet another unforced error which projects the Tory team – and Boy George Osborne in particular – as a bunch of kack-handed amateurs.
Even Iain Martin on the WSJ
blog thought the appointment "odd", while Witterings
from Witney chews over the implications. When the Tories have their announcement subsequently denied, "odd" doesn't even begin to describe it. (Richard
North, EU Referendum)
KEVIN Rudd's insistence that the Great Barrier Reef could be "destroyed beyond recognition" by global warming grates with new science suggesting it will again
escape temperature-related coral bleaching.
The Prime Minister yesterday put the reef at the centre of political combat over climate policy, telling parliament it would be obliterated in the worst-case scenario that
"temperatures went through the roof".
But for the second year running, the reef has defied predictions of its imminent demise, with researchers from the Australian Institute of Marine Science reporting that mass
coral bleaching was unlikely this summer.
While the finding was welcomed by the research community and those on the Queensland coast whose livelihood depends on the reef, it will entrench scepticism about gloomy
forecasts for climate change.
Going head-to-head with Tony Abbott for the first time since he became Opposition Leader, Mr Rudd said the reef would be destroyed if global temperatures increased by 4C. ( The
Australian)
Even Kevni's extreme (and basically impossible) scenario is dead flat wrong -- it would merely increase the latitude at which warm water corals could grow
(the GBR would get bigger and even more vibrant, how awful!).
Major efforts are underway to improve climate models both for the advancement of science and for the benefit of society. But early results could cause problems for the
public understanding of climate change. (Kevin Trenberth, Nature Reports Climate Change )
Uh-huh... what certainty would that be then, Kev? This one, maybe?
Key Revelation: "we are no where close to knowing where energy is going"
Click here to see what we think is perhaps the single most significant scientific revelation yet in
Climategate.
On Oct 14, 2009, at 10:17 AM, Kevin Trenberth wrote:
Hi Tom
How come you do not agree with a statement that says we are no where close to knowing where energy is going or whether clouds are changing to make the planet brighter. We
are not close to balancing the energy budget. The fact that we can not account for what is happening in the climate system makes any consideration of geoengineering quite
hopeless as we will never be able to tell if it is successful or not! It is a travesty!
Kevin [My emphasis]
Seems very explicit, doesn't he? What possible context could change its meaning? Note, too, the recent date, long after the frequently cited Kiehl & Trenberth (1997) and
subsequent revision (2008). This from the guy who claims we have a net surface absorption of 0.9 Wm2.
Why is this so important? It really invalidates climate models since they are allegedly driven by the global energy budget and how energy moves through the system.
If we can not account for what is happening in the climate system we can not model it nor is there any basis for climate model "projections",
"predictions" or whatever you want to call the fairytales released by Gore, the IPCC or anyone else.
From CO2 Science Volume 13 Number 5: 3 February 2010
Editorial Looking Beyond the Mark: A failure to adequately address the ills of the present is the sad consequence
of those people who continually conjure up futuristic fantasies of climatic catastrophes.
Medieval
Warm Period Record of the Week
Was there a Medieval Warm Period? YES, according to data published by 802
individual scientists from 476 separate research institutions in 43
different countries ... and counting! This issue's Medieval Warm Period Record of the Week comes from Korallgrottan,
Caledonian Mountain Range, Jämtland County, Sweden. To access the entire Medieval Warm Period Project's database, click
here.
Subject Index Summary Agriculture (Feeding the World): An enrichment of the air with CO2 may well
have been responsible for the beginning of agriculture; and another such enrichment will likely be required to lift the life-sustaining enterprise to the enhanced intensity
level needed to support our still-surging population.
Plant Growth Data
This week we add new results of plant growth responses to atmospheric CO2 enrichment obtained from experiments described in the peer-reviewed scientific
literature for: Purple Clover (Wu et al., 2009), Sorghum
Hybrid (Wu et al., 2009), Sugar Beet (Burkart et al., 2009), and Wheat
(Hogy et al., 2009).
Journal Reviews Boreal Wildfires and Climate Change: Did the former increase in frequency and severity as the Northern Hemisphere
warmed over the course of the 20th century?
Climate Change as a Stimulus for Evolution: Plants possess the ability to respond to changes in climate in a
number of different ways, all of which may interact with the others, creating a wide range of ultimate evolutionary responses.
There is an article in a recent edition of the Economist titled No hiding
place? [thanks to Don Bishop for alerting us to it!]. It reports on the
The article starts with the text
“The betting is that 2010 will be the hottest year on record. But understanding how the planet’s temperature changes is still a challenge to science.”
Excerpts read
“IT MAY seem implausible at the moment, as northern Europe, Asia and parts of America shiver in the snow, but 2010 may well turn out as the hottest year on record.
Those who doubt that greenhouse gases are quite the problem they have been cracked up to be by most of the world’s climatologists have taken comfort from the fact that the
Hadley Centre, part of Britain’s Meteorological Office, reckons the warmest year since records began was 1998 (see chart 1). Twelve years without a new record would, the
sceptics reckon, be rather a large lull in what is supposed to be a rising trend. Computer modelling by the Met Office, though, gives odds-on chances of the lull being
broken.”
“Balancing the books-
Dr Smith and his colleagues are trying to predict some of the natural variability to come. Kevin Trenberth of America’s National Centre for Atmospheric Research wants to
understand in detail the natural variability just seen. His quest gained unexpected prominence when one of his forcefully expressed e-mails on the subject—“The fact is that
we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t”—found its way into the public domain as one of thousands of e-mails from the
Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia in the “climategate” furore of November 2009. “
“Dr Trenberth was not, he has since been at pains to stress, saying that the relatively unwarmed 2000s were particularly out of the ordinary. Instead, he was saying
that, given the panoply of satellites and measurement networks that are being installed to monitor the climate, it should now be possible to identify the places and processes
that hide energy from the prying eyes of climatologists. That would make it possible to determine what has actually happened to the energy trapped by increasing levels of
greenhouse gases.”
“For the first part of the decade this turns out to be possible. From 1998 to 2003, although surface temperatures were not rising, a lot of energy was mopped up by the
oceans (see chart 2). This is borne out by the rise in sea level during the period, which matches (once the additional effects of melting glaciers and ice sheets are taken into
account) the expansion of the water in the oceans caused by this heating. Until the middle of the 2000s, therefore, the sums seem to balance.”
“It is after that that the problem comes. Runoff’s role in the rising sea level increases, meaning the fraction attributable to expansion, and thus the amount of
heat taken up by the sea, has fallen (and the chart therefore levels out). The missing heat must therefore be going somewhere else. One possibility is that it is being
reflected back into space by changes in cloud cover. The data, however, seem to say no. America’s CERES programme, the result of observations by seven different instruments
on six different satellites, suggests the Earth has actually absorbed more energy and reflected away less over the past few years, rather than the other way round. It is all
rather mysterious.”
and ends with
“The fact that the books cannot currently be balanced is therefore an admission of ignorance—an ignorance that better, future measurements should help abolish. That,
in turn, should allow predictions of what the climate will do next, for good or ill, to become significantly better, and thus deprive climatic bookies of their trade.”
The article, however, not only perpetuates the diagnosis of upper ocean heat content with an unrealistic spike in 2002-2003, but also ignores the evidence of a
significant warm bias in the global average surface temperature record as we reported in Klotzbach et al
2009. The admission that “the books cannot currently be balanced is therefore an admission of ignorance” should be ample evidence that skillful forecasts
for this year (or any upcoming year) are also more wishful thinking on their part than a scientifically robust forecast. (Climate Science)
The oil and trucking industries went to court today to challenge California's low-carbon fuel standard, a massive set of regulations aimed at combating global warming.
In a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Fresno, the standard was attacked as unconstitutional and costly by the National Petrochemical & Refiners Association, the American
Trucking Associations and two other groups.
The standard will mean "higher fuel costs for consumers, dramatic reductions in the availability of those fuels, and a rapid expansion of the state's already unacceptable
level of dependence on foreign, unstable regimes for its energy," said Michael Whatley of the Consumer Energy Alliance, one of the groups filing suit. The group said the
standard will cost Californians billions while doing little to actually fight climate change. (Sacramento Bee)
The cold weather is creating a number of unintended consequences for new energy designs. First, snow accumulating on LED traffic light bulbs wouldn’t melt because the lights
failed to heat up resulting in car accidents, and in some instances, death. In Minnesota, the weather resulted in wind turbines freezing and thus not turning even if it is
windy. This local news story has the details:
But that’s not the only problem with wind power. It’s not the economic savior
the government thought it would be. The stimulus money is failing to create the clean energy jobs the White House said
it would:
BRUSSELS/LONDON - Britain could struggle to hit its target of getting 15 percent of its energy from renewable resources within the next decade, according to a UK government
report submitted to the European Union.
Interim targets for the next six years will cause even greater problems, causing Britain to fall behind its EU neighbors. (Reuters)
BRUSSELS - European nations agreed on Tuesday how they would carve up billions of euros of European Union funding to help develop advanced renewable power or carbon-trapping
technology.
The issue has divided the EU's 27 members for more than a year, and Tuesday's vote was seen as the last chance to secure a deal that will help the EU in its race against China
and the United States to dominate low carbon technologies. (Reuters)
The Lancet today finally retracted the paper that sparked a crisis in MMR vaccination across the UK, following the General Medical Council’s decision that its lead
author, Andrew Wakefield, had been dishonest.
The medical journal’s editor, Richard Horton, told the Guardian today that he realised as soon as he read the GMC findings that the paper, published in February
1998, had to be retracted. “It was utterly clear, without any ambiguity at all, that the statements in the paper were utterly false,” he said. “I feel I was
deceived.”
But surely the paper was reviewed before publication? You know, by peers? Yes, it was, according to Horton:
The Lancet had done what it could to establish that the research was valid, by having it peer-reviewed. But there is a limit, he said, to what peer-review can
ascertain.
All of this comes a little late for some:
Children had been subjected to invasive procedures that were not warranted, a disciplinary panel ruled. They had undergone lumbar punctures and other tests solely
for research purposes and without valid ethical approval.
Fred Pearce has further on peer-style reviewishness. (Tim Blair)
WASHINGTON - U.S. researchers have linked mothers' infection during pregnancy to asthma, the most common chronic disease among American children, in their offspring.
A 16-year study following nearly 400,000 births in California found that when mothers had an inflammation known as chorioamnionitis and if a baby was born pre-term, that child
was more likely to develop asthma by age 8.
Such inflammation of the placenta or amniotic fluid can result from a number of bacterial infections of the vagina, including E. coli and group B streptococci.
Chorioamnionitis complicates 8 percent of pregnancies, according to the study published on Monday in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
Dr. Darios Getahun of the Kaiser Permanente Department of Research & Evaluation in Pasadena, California, who led the study, said doctors had assumed that being born
pre-term was the reason children developed asthma later in life.
The study showed that chorioamnionitis is a factor in asthma independent of pre-term birth, Getahun said in a telephone interview.
Getahun said the findings point out the importance of prenatal care. (Reuters)
Last week, an insurance industry report found that bans on using hand-held cell-phones while driving in California, New York, Washington, D.C. and Connecticut did not reduce
the number of car crashes. To the contrary, crashes went up in Connecticut and New York, and slightly in California, after the bans took effect.
Think about it: Insurers are the most risk-averse, nag-happy, fun-killing folks in the private sector. If ever there was an industry that loved nanny-state laws and had nothing
to gain in raising information that does not support them, that would be the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
But its report found that the crash statistics simply aren't there. The institute's spokesman, Russ Rader, told me his group was "surprised there was zero effect"
from the bans, as his group is well aware that cell phone use can and does distract drivers. (Debra J. Saunders, Townhall)
LONDON - Forty percent of the 12 million people diagnosed with cancer worldwide each year could avert the killer disease by protecting themselves against infections and
changing their lifestyles, experts said Tuesday.
A report by the Geneva-based International Union Against Cancer (UICC) highlighted nine infections that can lead to cancer and urged health officials to drive home the
importance of vaccines and lifestyle changes in fighting the disease.
"If there was an announcement that somebody had discovered a cure for 40 percent of the world's cancers, there would quite justifiably be huge jubilation," UICC
president David Hill told Reuters in a telephone interview.
"But the fact is that we have, now, the knowledge to prevent 40 percent of cancers. The tragedy is, we're not using it."
Cervical and liver cancer, both caused by infections which can be prevented with vaccines, should be top priorities, the report said, not only in rich nations, but also in
developing countries where 80 percent of global cervical cancers occur. (Reuters)
Gail Donnelly's classmates nicknamed her "Knobby" because she was so skinny all her bones seemed to poke out from under her skin. But when Donnelly turned 27, that
once knobby frame disappeared under mysteriously ballooning weight. Her diet hadn't changed, she was still walking several miles a day, but she gained 50 pounds in just six
months.
Her doctor thought the cause was ovarian cysts. It took ten years and two surgeries before a new doctor accurately diagnosed her with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). It's a
serious metabolic disorder and one of the major causes of hormonally related infertility, yet the disorder remains largely undiagnosed and unknown. About 5 million women in the
U.S. are affected by it.
"Women are told they are too fat and aren't taken seriously for a long time," said Andrea Dunaif, M.D., the Charles F. Kettering Professor of Medicine at Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine and a physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. "They go to an average of four doctors before they are diagnosed. They have been
to physicians who say 'there is nothing wrong with you, don't worry'." (Northwestern University)
Relax, it's called "marketing": Battle of the fat-fetish
restaurants - A bizarre lawsuit pits two heart attack-themed obesity-celebrating establishments against each other
By Sara Breselor
barely, Flickr
Signage at Arizona's Heart Attack Grill
To call something the saddest news of the month this early in February isn't saying much, but I suspect the gloom I feel after reading reports of a lawsuit between two American
fast food restaurants will last at least through Presidents' Day.
The Heart Attack Grill in Chandler, Arizona ("A Taste Worth Dying For") is suing Heart Stoppers Sports Grill in Delray
Beach, Florida for stealing its ideas. The Heart Attack Grill, whose menu features single through quadruple bypass burgers (one beef patty for each bypass), "flatliner
fries" deep fried in pure lard, unfiltered cigarettes, and Jolt Cola, filed a lawsuit against Heart Stoppers that, according to SlashFood.com,
"outlines about 30 ways Heart Stoppers is similar, including signs with EKG heart monitors on them, waitresses dressed as nurses and offers of free food to patrons
weighing more than 350 pounds."
Yes, that's right, free food for people who weigh more than 350 pounds. The Quadruple Bypass Burger packs an estimated 8,000 calories (which presumably doesn't include a side
of flatliner fries), and this, enough calories for four full days, is free to anyone who weighs over 350 pounds. (Salon)
The environmental movement is about more than just climate change, though from the coverage of the last few years you might be hard pressed to notice. (Mother Nature
Network)
Do you suppose these guys will ever notice "mother nature" is no nurture figure but rather a pernicious old bitch, at best indifferent to the
well being of Earth's denizens and more frequently downright malevolent?
“Unrestricted mobility is every bit as important to American freedom and economic health than health care reform. I hope that the people who have fought socialized
health care will work just as hard to fight the congestion coalition.” – R. O’Toole
The United States is the most mobile nation on earth, with the average American traveling nearly twice as many miles per year as the average resident of any other country.
That mobility, the vast majority of which is provided by automobiles, has produced enormous benefits, including higher incomes, lower cost consumer goods, better housing, and
access to a wide variety of social and recreational opportunities.
Transportation touches everyone’s lives every single day, and most American have to deal with traffic congestion several times a week. So when Congress takes up the
subject of federal transportation funding, which it does every six years, people ought to be as concerned as they have been in the ongoing health-care debate.
This is especially true because there is a congestion coalition of powerful interests that wants to reduce our mobility. This coalition includes:
Big city officials who view the suburbs as rivals;
Downtown property owners who similarly would like to limit the growth of edge cities;
Rail contractors who make far larger profits building;
Subsidized rail lines than from roads paid for out of highway user fees;
Urban planners who think Americans should be happy to live in cramped, European-like cities;
Natural area advocates who think no one should be allowed to live in rural areas except for an elite few who know how to appreciate nature; and
Environmentalists who argue getting people out of their cars is critical to stopping global warming.
The Obama administration has gladly joined this coalition, saying it wants to emphasize livability,
not mobility. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood recently threw
out rules designed to insure that federal transportation funds are cost-effectively spent. Instead, LaHood prefers projects that do not encourage “urban sprawl.” Since
the low-densities that planners derisively call sprawl are a direct result of mobility, LaHood is saying he wants to fund wasteful transportation projects that don’t truly
enhance personal mobility. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
No, it’s not a joke. It’s the finding from a new paper published in the journal Environmental Science
& Technology. The argument is school choice leads to more driving which results in more vehicle emissions. The abstract says,
“that eliminating district-wide school choice (i.e., returning to a system with neighborhood schools only) would have significant impacts on transport modes and emissions”
and the findings “underscore the need to critically evaluate transportation-related environmental and health impacts of currently proposed changes in school policy.”
Why stop with education? Perhaps another future study can be on the environmental impact of supermarket choice. After all, with people free to drive wherever they wish to
buy groceries, it’s almost certainly the case that too many of us drive hither and yon unnecessarily, wasting our time and fouling the air. I’ll bet that your research
will show that restricting each American to shopping only at that supermarket nearest to his or her home will reduce vehicular emissions and, hence, help the environment.
In yet another analysis of the causes behind the current financial crisis, it turns out that vehicle ownership and a lack of access to public transportation may be just as
predictive of mortgage foreclosure rates as low credit scores and high debt-to-income ratios.
Such are the results of a study, commissioned by the Natural Resources Defense Council, of foreclosure rates in San Francisco, Chicago and Jacksonville, Florida. The survey
found mortgage holders were less likely to face foreclosure (.pdf) if they lived in “compact”
neighborhoods with sufficient public transit to make owning a car optional. For example, a hypothetical borrower in the Chicago area with a credit score of 680, a debt to
income ratio of 41 percent and a 20 percent down payment would be 2.7 percent more likely to default if the home is in a sprawling suburb instead of a compact urban area.
While it’s easy to dismiss the report as just another environmental advocacy group’s indictment of McMansions and SUVs, there’s a more nuanced interpretation of the
findings that could affect future transportation and housing policies. (Wired)
Um, no... it really is just the ravings of misanthropic whackos desperate to jam people into inadequate space.
The simple fact is the "hypothetical borrower" scenario above is not equivalent since they are paying a lot less buying into urban slums than the Chicago 'burbs.
The real difference is people assuming greater debt for nicer habitation are only a statistically insignificant 2.7% more likely to default, meaning people will try harder to
get and keep suburban housing.
Not exactly the impression the people haters were trying to give, is it?
THE Green Loans debacle is widening after it was revealed the Federal Government predicted up to 200,000 homeowners would take up the loans and only 1000 have done so.
The Courier-Mail reported on Saturday the $70 million Green Loans program was expected to run out of money by April, leaving thousands of energy assessors jobless amid
allegations of rorting by industry "cowboys".
The program was projected to last until 2012 but lax rules resulted in a feeding frenzy for training dollars.
Instead of training 1500 to 2000 well-qualified assessors, the Government permitted a blowout.
It is now estimated there will be up to 11,500 assessors.
Shadow environment minister Greg Hunt said his office had been inundated with calls from "real people hurting because of the poor mismanagement of this program" by
the federal Environment Department.
"Last week I called for a full investigation into this scandal and I repeat that call now."
Mr Hunt said he would raise questions about the program in Senate estimates next week.
"We look forward to hearing from the Government and the department on just how they intend to fix the problem."
Under the program, the Government is paying $200 for each energy audit of up to 360,000 homes across Australia.
The Courier-Mail has obtained documents showing the Government expected about 75,000 to 200,000 of those people would obtain zero-interest bank loans for energy improvements.
But six months into the scheme, only 1000 loans have been issued from only 1600 applications. Sources told The Courier-Mail the poor take-up was caused by assessors rushing
through two-hour audits to maximise earnings and a dodgy system for booking households for the program.
Call centres being run by some training organisations were misleading people into believing the audits were mandatory to get fast bookings before funding ran out. (
Courier-Mail)
Families must be prepared to pay more for food instead of holidays or entertainment, says country's biggest organic body, as part of 'war effort' to transform farming.
Patrick Holden, director of the Soil Association, said the UK is in danger of running out of food because of the increasing world population, rising fuel prices and climate
change.
He said the only way to avoid the "food crunch" is to transform farming in Britain to a sustainable organic system.
This will mean spending more money on food and changing our diets so that people eat less meat and exotic produce.
Mr Holden said Britain needs to return to a "national attitude" where people are prepared to spend as much on food as entertainment.
However farmers argue that the best way to feed the world is to continue using chemicals and look at new technologies like genetic modification (GM). (TDT)
The plaintive bleat that primitive agriculture and superstition can feed the world is a blatant lie -- then the world really wouldn't be big enough to
support humanity.
The reintroduction of the otter, one of Britain’s best-loved wild animals, has been a catastrophe for the £1.1billion a year coarse-fishing industry, the Angling Trust
claimed yesterday. Dozens of angling clubs, fish farms and fishing lakes say they have been forced out of business because they have been unable to protect their stock from
otters.
Owners of fishing lakes are resorting to desperate measures to keep the otters out, including erecting fences, and are pressing the Government to allow a cull to keep numbers
to manageable levels. Some experts claim that without special measures the sport of coarse freshwater fishing could be wiped out within five years.
Otters have enjoyed a remarkable renaissance since the 1950s and 1960s when they were all but wiped out by hunting, pollution and loss of habitat. They were reintroduced in the
1980s and 1990s and have exhausted food supplies in many places. Now they have found easy pickings in artificially stocked fishing lakes.
Last autumn the Environment Agency made available £100,000 a year in grants to fisheries towards otter-proof fencing. The fund does not go far when it can cost more than £10,000
to protect a small lake. (The Times)
The Internet is full of ads: “clean, smooth, hypoallergenic” is the pitch for boa constrictors on one breeder’s site. Other snakes can be delivered to your home the
next day. The problem is that owners often tire of these living conversation pieces.
Some snakes, like the Burmese python, can grow to more than 20 feet long and weigh 200 pounds. And their preferred diet runs to live animals instead of little pellets from the
pet store. So far too many owners do the worst thing possible for the environment: they let these animals loose.
Florida’s fragile Everglades are of particular concern. Over the last decade, more than 1,300 Burmese pythons and other constrictors have been removed from the Everglades.
And the rule of thumb is that for every one you can see (and their markings make them very hard to see), there are another 1,000 out there. With no natural predators, these
eating machines are stripping the delicate ecosystem of birds, mammals and fish. (NYT)
Wetlands to be recreated in England - Farmland in
England is to be flooded to recreate wetlands under Government plans to boost wildlife and tackle climate change.
Government watchdogs the Environment Agency will be building ditches, planting reeds and flooding fields between Huntingdon and Peterborough in a project to return 20 square
miles to ancient fenland.
It is part of a controversial nationwide project to increase the amount of wetlands in Britain. (TDT)
One must wonder how creating more methane sources (a far more effective greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide) will supposedly tackle climate change (enhanced
greenhouse effect). Odd claim really. Good thing enhanced greenhouse is an insignificant effect, isn't it.
It's a truism that politics offers yesterday's solutions to today's problems. Now it appears that a clueless SEC, pursuing a green political agenda, wants to do its part to
solve yesterday's problems.
That is, if global warming ever really was a problem. Don't tell the commissioners, whose mission is to protect investors, ensure market integrity and encourage capital
formation, but the case for global warming is a shambles.
"After years in which global warming activists had lectured everyone about the overwhelming nature of the scientific evidence," writes Walter Russell Mead, "it
turned out that the most prestigious agencies in the global warming movement were breaking laws, hiding data and making inflated, bogus claims resting on, in some cases, no
scientific basis at all."
Mead, who plays the traditional role of the public philosopher, moves in respectable centrist circles. When he proclaims "The Death of Global Warming," as he does in
the American Interest, then policymakers can't ignore it.
Unless you're one of the SEC's new majority and intent on repairing the agency's image after the financial meltdown and the failure to detect mega-swindler Bernie Madoff. Then
you press ahead to force corporations to disclose their carbon impact. (IBD)
In fact it would have been a great deal worse but for:
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 // -- Though it no longer exists, the impact of the Free Enterprise Action Fund on the global warming debate was concretized last week when the Securities
and Exchange Commission decided to require that publicly-owned companies disclose the risks of global warming laws and regulation.
"The Free Enterprise Action Fund turned the tables on the green activists and the U.S. Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) companies that were seeking to use the SEC to
advance the global warming agenda," said Steve Milloy, who along with Tom Borelli, co-managed the Free Enterprise Action Fund.
"Rather than forcing publicly-owned companies into helping make climate change regulation inevitable as the greens tried to do, our efforts have resulted in the SEC
requiring companies to expose the business-killing nature of junk science-fueled climate regulation," Milloy added. (PRNewswire-USNewswire)
WASHINGTON - The White House on Monday dropped prospects for revenue from a climate cap-and-trade system opposed by many lawmakers, but its proposed budget still called for
a "market-based" policy to fight climate change.
Last year the administration forecast revenues of $646 billion for 2012-2019 from a program in which the output of greenhouse gas would be capped and polluters would be forced
to buy, and could later trade, emissions permits.
"Unlike last year, we do not show an assumed amount of cap-and-trade revenue since the exact nature of the legislation remains in flux," an administration official
told Reuters.
LONDON - Suppliers that fail to manage their greenhouse gas emissions could lose clients, said a report published on Monday.
Some 56 percent of large firms would in the future deselect suppliers for failing to meet criteria on managing carbon emissions, according to a survey by the Carbon Disclosure
Project (CDP).
The CDP Supply Chain report said that six percent of its members, which include Google, Dell, PepsiCo and Cadbury, would today stop doing business with suppliers that did not
manage their carbon.
"This is no longer a 'nice to have' for leaders, it is becoming a 'need to have' and we expect to see this trend growing across the whole business sector," said the
CDP's head Paul Dickinson. (Reuters)
The carbon scammers are desperately trying to keep the carbon bubble inflated but its bursting is inevitable.
This is no NGO. The “conservation organization” is not as independent as you might think.
What exactly is WWF? The mission of the self-described “conservation organization” is so nebulous that it is not even entirely clear for what words the acronym stands.
Back in 1961, when WWF was founded as a private initiative, the initials stood for “World Wildlife Fund.” These are undoubtedly the words that most Americans at least still
associate with them. In the meanwhile, however — since WWF began, as its online
FAQ explains, “expand[ing] its work to conserve the environment as a whole (reflecting the interdependence of all living things)” — the official name of the
organization has been changed to “WWF-World Wide Fund For Nature.” “More and more, however,” the FAQ entry continues tautologically, “ … WWF is known as simply
‘WWF’” — i.e., who cares what it stands for!
What we do know, however, is that WWF has in recent years been one of the principal purveyors of climate alarmism. It would seem that the organization has still further
expanded its brief to cover the conservation not only of “all living things,” but even of that non-living and, frankly, purely notional thing known as “climate.” It was
thus WWF that served as the cited source for the IPCC’s now famously debunked claim, according to which at current rates of “warming” the Himalayan glaciers could be
expected to melt by 2035. Indeed, Debbie Framboise has turned up dozens
of citations of WWF in the IPCC’s 2007 “Fourth Assessment Report,” on everything from “mudflows and avalanches” to the allegedly destructive effects of climate change
on “marine fish and shellfish.” Richard North of the EUReferendum blog has uncovered yet
another dodgy WWF-referenced claim on the alleged effects of climate change on the Amazonian forests.
That the IPCC’s assessment would rely so heavily on the claims of an activist organization raises obvious questions about its objectivity. But the issues raised by the
IPCC’s reliance on WWF are even more troubling than might appear on first glance. For exactly what sort of activist organization is WWF? It is commonly assumed that
it is a private advocacy organization funded by donations from the public: in other words, a “non-governmental organization” or “NGO.” But closer inspection of WWF’s
finances reveals that the “NGO” moniker is here — as indeed in so many cases — a misnomer. It would be more accurate to describe WWF rather as a “PGO”: a para-governmental
organization. In fact, WWF receives massive funding from states. Moreover, it receives massive funding not from just any states, but from precisely that federation of states
that has made combating supposed “global warming” into one of its highest policy priorities, if not indeed its highest priority — namely, the European Union. (John
Rosenthal, PJM)
Exclusive: Key study by East Anglia professor Phil Jones was based on suspect figures
Professor Phil Jones, who was director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and a professor of environmental sciences at the University of East Anglia in Norwich. Photograph:
University of East Anglia
Phil Jones, the beleaguered British climate scientist at the centre of the leaked emails controversy, is facing fresh claims that he sought to hide problems in key temperature
data on which some of his work was based.
A Guardian investigation of thousands of emails and documents apparently hacked from the University of East Anglia's climatic research unit has found evidence that a series of
measurements from Chinese weather stations were seriously flawed and that documents relating to them could not be produced.
Jones and a collaborator have been accused by a climate change sceptic and researcher of scientific fraud for attempting to suppress data that could cast doubt on a key 1990
study on the effect of cities on warming – a hotly contested issue.
Today the Guardian reveals how Jones withheld the information requested under freedom of information laws. Subsequently a senior colleague told him he feared that Jones's
collaborator, Wei-Chyung Wang of the University at Albany, had "screwed up". (Fred Pearce, The Guardian)
In the first part of a major investigation of the so-called 'climategate' emails, one of Britain's top science writers reveals how researchers tried to hide flaws in a key
study (Fred Pearce, The Guardian)
It was the Russians. Or possibly the Chinese. No, wait, it was the Americans. Yes, our very own version of Inspector Clouseau is on the case of the leaked emails from the
University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit.
Yesterday Sir David King, Tony Blair's former chief scientific advisor, told this newspaper: "It was an extraordinarily sophisticated operation. There are several bodies
of people who could do this sort of work. These are national intelligence agencies... there is the possibility that it could be the Russian intelligence agency." However,
King goes on to suggest that the expense of such an operation would be too great for the entire Russian state to undertake: "In terms of the expense, there is the American
lobby system, which is a very likely source of finance, so the finger must point to them."
And why is it that Sir David thinks that the Kremlin joined forces with unspecified "American agencies" to leak emails from the UEA's Climatic Research Unit? He
claims it was to undermine the UN's Copenhagen climate Conference (as if it hadn't been doomed anyway). (The Independent)
Sir David King, the totally sane, not remotely hysterical, and non-aluminium-foil-hat-wearing former advisor to much-loved and respected former Prime Minister Tony Blair,
has spoken out on the Climategate emails. (James Delingpole, TDT)
The government's former chief scientist has backed away from his sensational claim that a foreign intelligence agency or wealthy US lobbyists were behind the hacking and
release of controversial emails between climate scientists.
Sir David King admitted he possessed no inside information about the leaks of embarrassing emails from the University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit, and had merely
been speculating on material already in the public domain. His remarks to a journalist had been a "side-issue", he said.
Sir David said the leak was probably a deliberate and sophisticated attempt to derail the Copenhagen climate summit. The story came a day after the climate change secretary Ed
Miliband declared a "battle" against the "siren voices" who denied global warming was real or caused by humans.
Sir David told the Guardian today : "The operation looked amazingly efficient and amazingly sophisticated. It looks very much like an intelligence operation."
But it emerged that he had been misinformed about key facts. One of his grounds for believing a high-powered team of professionals were behind the leak, he said, was that there
had been a wide spread of emails going back decades "between very different people". He told the Independent: "The emails date back to 1996, so someone was
collecting the data over many years."
In fact, as UEA confirmed today, all the files and emails were archived on a single backup server on the Norwich campus. Once access was gained, it would have been simple to
copy all the material.
Guardian inquiries indicate police investigators have no evidence of foreign intelligence involvement. (The Guardian)
A panel of Penn State faculty and staff concluded the inquiry of Penn State meteorology professor Michael Mann this weekend and is slated to release its
"Climategate" findings later in the week, university officials said.
The end of the two-month inquiry marks a major point in the worldwide climate debate. Penn State's inquiry began after hundreds of illegally obtained e-mails were leaked last
November from a private server in the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia in England, containing comments critics say suggest Mann and his colleagues may
have distorted climate change evidence.
The inquiry's findings will determine if the university will further investigate Mann's work. Penn State President Graham Spanier addressed the inquiry and the panel's work
during the Board of Trustees meeting on Jan. 22.
"I know they've taken the time and spent hundreds of hours studying documents and interviewing people and looking at issues from all sides," Spanier said.
But conservative groups are already mobilizing to respond to the university's findings. Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) -- a Penn State student group working to "advance
the principles of individual and economic freedom, limited government and traditional values" -- has taken an interest in the Mann inquiry.
On Feb. 12, YAF will host a demonstration in front of the HUB to protest what the group feels is a violation of academic integrity, YAF member Samuel Settle said. The 9-12
Project of Central PA, a conservative group, will join the demonstration.
Settle (sophomore-political science and history) said the university's handling of the inquiry unsettles him.
"What the university has done is they've taken three Penn State employees and assigned them to deciding whether or not Mann violated university policy," he said.
"That's an awful lot of power in the hands of three with no external oversight." (Colleen Boyle, Daily Collegian)
You’d think, being academics and all, that Penn State’s internal investigation of Dr. Michael Mann would contact the people who raised questions about the MBH98 paper
and the “hockey stick”.
More major embarrassment for New Zealand's 'leading' climate research unit NIWA tonight, with admissions that it "does not hold copies" of the original reports
documenting adjustments to New Zealand's weather stations.
The drama hit the
headlines worldwide in late November when serious questions were raised about the "adjustments" NIWA had made to weather records. The adjusted data shows a strong
warming trend over the past century, whereas unadjusted records had nowhere near as much warming.
NIWA promised to make its data and
corrections fully available, but responding to an Official Information Act request their legal counsel has now admitted it cannot provide copies of the original adjustment
records.
The intense public debate on how rapidly the Himalayan glaciers are retreating highlights the necessity for the constant monitoring of glaciers worldwide by satellites.
Since glaciers are among the most reliable indicators of climate change and because they can have a major influence on water availability, knowledge of the recent changes and
future behaviour is of great interest for climate scientists and governing bodies. A key to assess these changes or to model their future evolution is the existence of a
detailed glacier inventory.
Data from satellites allow scientists to measure glacier extent in detail, providing authoritative evidence of trends. They also allow local measurements to be expanded to a
regional scale. Considering the valuable role satellites can play in determining the state of Earth’s glaciers, the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS) has called for the
systematic monitoring of glaciers by satellites in support of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. (ESA)
Dr. Romm will not publicly debate his distinguished opponents either, just as Paul Ehrlich refused to debate the late Julian Simon. Though thin-skinned and trigger
happy, Romm has not attempted to rebut a four-part post at the Breakthrough Institute by Michael Shellenberger, Ted Nordhaus, et al., Joe
Romm and Climate McCarthyism, a widely disseminated and discussed event on the Left. (Updates on the Romm series are
available at the Breakthrough Institute blog.)
Nor will Romm show the courage of his convictions by betting on his predicted global warming trend, which
has led some to speculate that Romm deep down is really a global lukewarmer. In a similar vein, a reasonable oil
production bet offered by Michael Lynch to put Romm’s peak-oil belief to the test has also been ignored by the uber-confident senior fellow at CAP.
Critics may ask: Is the MIT doctorate who commands a top bully pulpit for the Party in Power an intellectual scarecrow?
Yet sometimes loyal readers at Climate Progress reveal much in their (permitted) comments. And they are fighting the blues as the key issue to which they are
emotionally chained continues to fray, politically and intellectually.
Retreating Romm
Romm himself has waxed and waned in the great climate tumult of the last year, often retreating to an I’ll-take-anything position in the service of the Obama
agenda. Once a flaming radical, Romm as a Democratic Party operative is now an incrementalist.
And his incrementalism has shrunk with new developments. It must be sad for climate Left veterans to read such Romm statements as the outcome of Copenhagen being a glass
two-thirds full. [Read more →] (MasterResource)
The underlying science of man-made global warming has always been quite thin and tenuous, with little hard measurable evidence to support the hypothesis. In fact many
temperature stations have shown either no warming or actual cooling over the past 80 years or more.
Similarly exaggerations by many UN nations of sea level changes have flourished and in turn blamed the United States for imagined damages. These are alleged by many nations,
even when actual sea level measurements show little changes from the estimated 8 inches per century which has gone on for millennia ( http://tinyurl.com/ykb3ctc ).
Even though the man-made global warming theory is now collapsing scientifically, it is utterly amazing to realize that many of the most powerful leaders and governments in the
world had bought into fiction. Now named Climategate, this was aided and abetted by most (but not all) of the media, the greens, Hollywood, even the educational system.
Skeptics have been pointing to the dearth of such evidence which, if it had been widely understood, would have ended the exaggerations. Actual measured scientific evidence
often does that.
The UN and its many sub-organizations have led the charge in promoting the scare around the world, with most of their members subscribing to it. The billions that have been
spent for global warming research also suggests that these billions actually helped promote the failed science involved. ( Michael R. Fox, Hawaii Reporter)
Guess what? The man responsible for looking after the fat pensions of the boys and girls at the BBC is a climate change fanatic, and he is part of an international group of
investment managers who bust a gut to invest in 'climate change' schemes. He's called Peter Dunscombe,
and he runs the £8.2bn corporation pension fund, advising trustees on a day-to-day basis
about their investments. Mr Dunscombe, who addresses conferences about 'ethical investments', is also chairman of the Institutional
Investment Group on Climate Change (IIGCC), which has 47 members and manages four trillion euros' worth of investments; yes, four trillion.
Their goal is to find as many 'climate change' investment opportunities as possible:
The IIGCC Investor Statement on Climate change was launched in October 2006. Asset owners and asset managers who signed the Statement committed to increasing their focus
on climate change in their own processes and in their engagement with companies and governments.
So now we really know why BBC staffers are so fanatical about 'climate change'. It's naked self-interest. In 2008, there were 18,736 contributors to the BBC pension fund;
every man jack of them benefits from climate alarmism. (Biased BBC)
Could global warming actually be good for humanity? Certainly not, at least if we're to believe the endless warnings of floods, droughts, and pestilences to which we are
told climate change will inevitably give rise. But a closer look at the science tells a more complex story than unmitigated disaster. It also tell us something about the extent
to which science has been manipulated to fit the preconceptions of warming alarmists.
According to a 2004 paper by British geographer and climatologist Nigel Arnell, global warming would likely reduce the world's total number of people living in
"water-stressed watersheds"—that is, areas with less than 1,000 cubic meters of water resources per capita, per year—even though many regions would see increased
water shortages. Using multiple models, Mr. Arnell predicted that if temperatures rise, between 867 million and 4.5 billion people around the world could see increased
"water stress" by 2085. But Mr. Arnell also found that "water stress" could decrease for between 1.7 billion and 6 billion people. Taking the average of the
two ranges, that means that with global warming, nearly 2.7 billion people could see greater water shortages—but 3.85 billion could see fewer of them.
Mr. Arnell's paper, funded by the U.K. government, was duly cited in the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's supposedly authoritative 2007 assessment report. But
the IPCC uses Mr. Arnell's research to give the opposite impression, by a form of single-entry book-keeping. While it dutifully tallies the numbers of people he predicts will
be left with less water access, it largely ignores the greater number likely to see more water courtesy of climate change. (WSJ)
‘We cannot continue to ignore the clean energy challenge and stand still while other countries move forward in the emerging industries of the 21st century,” declared
President Barack Obama in his U.S. budget message yesterday. So does that mean he’s concerned about falling behind Dalton McGuinty’s Ontario, which recently announced a
multi-billion dollar wind and solar power agreement with Korean giant Samsung whose main effect will be to cost jobs and raise electricity prices? Possibly. But if President
Obama really wants to imitate such craziness, does that make the Harper government even wackier for committing to follow in U.S. policy footsteps, a plan outlined again
yesterday by Environment Minister Jim Prentice?
No. The Conservatives have committed to do whatever the U.S. does when it comes to cutting carbon dioxide emissions, but their main priority is to avoid destructive trade
sanctions. They are also aware that President Obama has a major fight on his hands in pursuing what increasingly appears to be an expensive and pointless policy. Copenhagen was
a flop. Climategate still hovers. The IPCC is increasingly becoming a laughing stock, and the science of man-made climate change is disintegrating. While political inertia
continues to edge policy towards the economic precipice, the Harper government is hoping it will grind to a halt before taking Western nations over. (National Post)
BEIJING - China backs a climate change accord struck at a contentious summit late last year and wants a binding global agreement from talks culminating in Mexico later this
year, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has said.
The Chinese leader endorsed the "Copenhagen Accord" in letters on January 29 to the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Danish Lars Lokke Rasmussen,
whose country hosted the rancorous summit that produced the controversial, last-minute document on fighting global warming, the official Chinese Xinhua news agency reported on
Monday. (Reuters)
China wants to be paid to say they'll reduce CO2 emissions (no peeking now, you'll have to take their word for it). There's a surprise.
THE Intergenerational Report has panned Tony Abbott's proposed direct action approach to climate change, saying a market-based mechanism such as the federal government's
emissions trading scheme is the only way to go.
The report says that without an overall cap on carbon emissions such as that contained in the government's emissions trading scheme, coal-fired electricity generation, the
nation's largest source of carbon pollution, will grow strongly in the decades ahead while the development of alternative energy sources will flatline.
The report, released yesterday by the Treasurer, Wayne Swan, also forecasts that anybody still alive in 90 years will be $17,000 a year worse off in today's dollars if climate
change is allowed to go unmitigated.
The report estimates that by 2100, gross domestic product will fall by 8 per cent. (Sydney Morning Herald)
What a crock of BS. To begin with we have no problem with increasing carbon dioxide emissions and coal-fried is the way for Australia to go (we have
centuries of supply). Moreover, we have no reason to believe people will be worse off with business as usual but absolute certainty they will by rationing energy and
exporting industry.
The Copenhagen farce exposed. Just a few dozen of the world’s nations have met the January 31 deadline set in Copenhagen to say how much they’ll cut their total
emissions.
The answer from China (the world’s biggest emitter) and India (soon to be the second biggest) are: won’t
cut.
The answers from most of the developed world is: er, that depends … especially on what the US
does.
And the US Administration talks, but will Congress now act?
And which country, like a shag on a rock, boldly promises to slash emissions hard, regardless? Which will be made to pay for this futile gesture, which will lower world
temperatures by zero?
We should be ashamed to be so suicidally gullible. (Andrew Bolt)
TONY Abbott has changed the atmosphere of the politics of climate change.
In just two months, a combination of the new Liberal leader's opposition to an emissions trading scheme, a rejuvenation of the party base and growing dissatisfaction with
Kevin Rudd's performance has put the Coalition back into contention. Of course, the Opposition Leader is the underdog and the Liberals are still likely to lose the next
election, but the opposition has fight and the government appears uncertain.
Abbott's dumping of the ETS last December, combined with the Copenhagen climate change "fiasco", has galvanised the opposition and rattled the government.
The Prime Minister and Climate Change Minister Penny Wong appear unsure what to do about the fate of the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme, which they introduce to
parliament today, and the politics of climate change as more questions are asked about the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports.
Rudd even took the extraordinary step yesterday of telling Labor MPs meeting in Canberra that "Labor could lose the election", drawing a parallel with the
first-term trouble of John Howard in 1998 when the Coalition proposed a GST. This smacks of panic from someone so far in front as preferred prime minister in his first term,
and only reinforces Abbott's arguments about the ETS and tax. (Dennis Shanahan, The Australian)
OPPOSITION Leader Tony Abbott has unveiled his plan to deal with climate change, promising a cheaper, simpler and more effective option than Labor's alternative.
Mr Abbott revealed the coalition's new climate change policy ahead of the government's third attempt to have parliament approve its planned emissions trading scheme, already
twice rejected by the Senate.
"It's a market system, but it's based on rewards, not penalties", Mr Abbott said.
"It's just not the giant money-go-round market system the Government wants to employ."
``Our policy will be simpler, cheaper and more effective than the government's,'' Mr Abbott told reporters in Canberra, adding it would rely on incentives, not penalties.
He committed the coalition to the same carbon reduction targets as the government, but at a much lower cost.
Under the $3.2 billion plan, an emissions reductions fund would be established to provide direct incentives to business and the agricultural sector to cut emissions.
(Courier-Mail)
In the tense run-up to the Copenhagen climate change summit in December, a senior British diplomat warned the Guardian: "We can go into extra time, but we can't afford
a replay." At the end of the chaotic summit, that replay — in Mexico in November — was seen as a good result, given how close the entire show came to collapsing.
But now, just six weeks since the summit reached its dramatic but disappointing conclusion, senior figures around the world do not even believe the rematch is likely to be
played.
Dozens of politicians, diplomats, economists, scientists and campaigners contacted by the Guardian agreed that while a global, legally binding treaty remains by far the best
way to prevent global warming wreaking havoc on our civilisation, the chances of that treaty being achieved in 2010 are almost nil. (The Guardian)
Rudd is spooked - not so much by any likely election defeat, but by growing public cyncism to his signature issue and “the great moral challenge of our generation”:
Mr Rudd’s personal standing has continued to fall, with his satisfaction rating dropping two points to 50 per cent last weekend - a decline of nine percentage points
since the start of November; dissatisfaction jumped four points to 38 per cent, his highest level as Prime Minister.
From this year we’ll be making him even crosser, I suspect.
After all, in 1999 he published a paper claiming that global warming would so heat
the oceans that the mass bleaching of the reef in 1998 (from which the reef in fact has recovered almost entirely) would occur every two years from 2010 - and every year from
2020. Here’s Figure 11 from that paper which he gives to demonstrate:
If the reef doesn’t bleach severely this year, it had better next - or Ove will be hearing more from us about false alarms and the Profits of Doom-saying.
Professor Hoegh-Guldberg responds in comments below, and yet again demonstrates a paranoid suspicion that I’m so evil that I must be censoring his mail, being too scared
to let you see it.
Ove, I repeat: I have run every single scrap you’ve sent me, and you should withdraw your false claims here and elsewhere that I have not. (Andrew Bolt)
Never mind predictions of catastrophic bleaching from global warming, cold is the culprit of this story. With ocean heat content now shown
to be dropping slightly since 2005, there is even greater concern.
A dead coral in the Upper Keys shows signs of temperature stress. (Nature Conservancy / January 29, 2010)
January 30, 2010 By Curtis Morgan
Bitter cold this month may have wiped out many of the shallow water corals in the Keys.
Scientists have only begun assessments, with dive teams looking for “bleaching” that is a telltale indicator of temperature stress in sensitive corals, but initial
reports are bleak. The impact could extend from Key Largo through the Dry Tortugas west of Key West, a vast expanse that covers some of the prettiest and healthiest reefs in
North America.
Given the depth and duration of frigid weather, Meaghan Johnson, marine science coordinator for The Nature Conservancy, expected to see losses. But she was stunned by what
she saw when diving a patch reef 2.5 miles off Harry Harris Park in Key Largo.
Star and brain corals, large species that can take hundreds of years to grow, were as white and lifeless as bones, frozen to death. There were also dead sea
turtles, eels and parrotfish littering the bottom. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
The loss of wetlands in the prairie pothole region of central North America due to a warmer and drier climate will negatively affect millions of waterfowl that depend on the
region for food, shelter and raising young, according to research published today in the journal BioScience.
The new research shows that the region appears to be much more sensitive to climate warming and drying than previously thought.
“The impact to the millions of wetlands that attract countless ducks to these breeding grounds in spring makes it difficult to imagine how to maintain today’s level of
waterfowl populations in altered climate conditions,” said Dr. Glenn Guntenspergen, a U.S. Geological Survey researcher and one of the report authors. “Parents may not have
time to raise their young to where they can fly because of wetlands drying up too quickly in the warming climate of the future,” he added.
A new wetland model developed by the authors to understand the impacts of climate change on wetlands in the prairie pothole region projected major reductions in water volume,
shortening of the time water remains in wetlands and changes to wetland vegetation dynamics in this 800,000-square kilometer region in the United States (North and South
Dakota, Montana, Minnesota and Iowa) and Canada. (USGS)
The empty ocean goes infinite hot on a null anomaly
What to make of THIS bizarre anomaly map?
What Have I Done?
I was exploring another example of The Bolivia Effect
where an empty area became quite “hot” when the data were missing (Panama, posting soon) and that led to another couple of changed baselines that led to more ‘interesting
red’ (1980 vs 1951-1980 baseline). I’m doing these examinations with a 250 km ’spread’ as that tells me more about where the thermometers are located. The above graph,
if done instead with a 1200 km spread or smoothing, has the white spread out to sea 1200 km with smaller infinite red blobs in the middles of the oceans. Read
the rest of this entry » (WUWT)
BOULDER—Painting the roofs of buildings white has the potential to significantly cool cities and mitigate some impacts of global warming, a new study indicates. The new
NCAR-led research suggests there may be merit to an idea advanced by U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu that white roofs can be an important tool to help society adjust to
climate change.
But the study team, led by scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), cautions that there are still many hurdles between the concept and actual use of
white roofs to counteract rising temperatures.
"Our research demonstrates that white roofs, at least in theory, can be an effective method for reducing urban heat," says NCAR scientist Keith Oleson, the lead
author of the study. "It remains to be seen if it's actually feasible for cities to paint their roofs white, but the idea certainly warrants further investigation." (UCAR)
How about developing a temperature responsive paint, white when it's hot and black when it's cold. That might actually be useful in temperate regions.
One of the enduring pillars of the climate change issue is that the temperature of the Earth is increasing at an unprecedented rate … we’ve heard it a million times over
the past few decades. However, it is well known that the temperature of the Earth has not increased over the past decade, and the lack of recent warming is now receiving
serious consideration in the leading scientific journals. Two recent articles are of particular interest to us at World Climate Report.
I have posted frequently on the dominate role of regional atmospheric and ocean circulations in determining the weather features that are experienced (e. g see).
There is a new excellent paper which provides yet more evidence of this major climate perspective [thanks to Dallas Staley for alerting us to it!].
“This paper reviews three modes of natural variability that have been identified in the North Atlantic Ocean, namely, the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the
Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and the Atlantic Meridional Mode (AMM). This manuscript focuses on the multidecadal fluctuations of these three modes. A range of
different mechanisms to initiate phase reversals in these modes on multidecadal timescales has been suggested previously. We propose a systematic grouping of these mechanisms
into three types that involve, respectively, (1) the dependency of the Atlantic thermohaline circulation (THC) on salinity, (2) the sensitivity of the THC to changes in ocean
heat transport and (3) the dependency of the NAO to changes in the Atlantic meridional temperature gradient. Some new density data is also provided, demonstrating physical
links between the THC and the AMO.” (Climate Science)
CALGARY, Alberta - The Canadian government will keep supporting development of Alberta's oil sands while it follows the U.S. lead on setting targets for cutting greenhouse
gas emissions, the country's environment minister said on Monday. (Reuters)
RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazil's government has granted an environmental license for the construction of a controversial hydroelectric dam in the heart of the Amazon rainforest,
the Environment Minister said on Monday.
The $17 billion project on the Xingu River in the northern state of Para is to help the fast-growing Latin American country cope with soaring demand for electricity but has
raised concern over its likely impact on the environment and on native Indians. (Reuters)
CHURCHVILLE, VA—As I write, a strong wind is blowing across the Alleghany Mountains onto my house. It’s bringing an “Arctic Clipper” that will drop my temperatures
this weekend to a frigid and unusual 6 degrees F. Why can’t I get some good from this chill wind—with a wind turbine to harvest the “free” energy?
Out in Oregon, General Electric has just announced a big wind project: 338 turbines, rated at 845 MW. GE claims it will power for 235,000 homes, and is applying for the
appropriate federal subsidies.
Will the wind turbines power 235,000 homes? Don’t bet on it. My friend Donald Hertzmark—an energy economist—warns the power deliveries from this wind project are likely
to average only 25 percent of its rated capacity. That would serve only 58,000 homes, not 235,000.
But Hertzmark says even this is too high because the wind is highly variable. The Texas power grid’s experience is to rely on no more than 9 percent of the wind farm’s
rated capacity. That would reduce GE’s real subsidy claim to about 21,000 households.
SAO PAULO - Royal Dutch Shell Plc plans to make the biggest-ever foray into biofuels by an oil major, striking a deal with Brazil's Cosan to create a $21 billion a year
ethanol joint venture.
The venture, which will be the No. 3 fuel distributor in Latin America's largest country, marks Shell's entry into ethanol production and underscores the biofuel's lure as an
alternative to gasoline. It also follows moves by British oil company BP Plc, which in 2008 took a stake in a Brazilian biofuel project and unveiled $1 billion in investments.
(Reuters)
LONDON - Britain is considering extending its public smoking ban to include building entrances as one of a series of measures to cut the number of smokers by half in a
decade, the government said on Monday. (Reuters)
Did you read about the Surgeon General's plan to combat obesity in America?
I didn't think so.
For a major document about a major issue coming from a major figure in the Obama administration, the Surgeon General's Vision for a Healthy and Fit Nation 2010, released last
Thursday, got surprisingly little press coverage. The Washington Post, as of Friday at 2, hadn't written about it. Nor had The New York Times. A Google search yielded some
articles -- but nearly all of them were about First Lady Michelle Obama's participation in the announcement and her concerns about her daughters' BMIs.
I have a hunch that if Surgeon General Regina Benjamin's plan had called for a soda tax or legislation requiring restaurants to post calorie counts or big expensive government
programs to cure obesity, plenty of ink would have been devoted to her report.
But Benjamin's sensible, seemingly heart-felt document doesn't mention such things. Instead, it talks about personal responsibility, about communities working together, about
grassroots efforts. It places the onus for weight loss squarely on the shoulders of individuals. (Washington Post)
(Feb. 1, 2010) — Increasing rates of obese and overweight children in the United States may be contributing to a later onset of puberty in boys, say researchers at the
University of Michigan Health System.
In a new study published in the February issue of the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, researchers show that a higher body mass index during early and
mid-childhood for boys is associated with later onset of puberty. This is one of the first longitudinal studies in the U.S. to examine the association between weight status and
timing of puberty in boys.
"We found that increased body fatness is associated with a later onset of puberty in boys, the opposite of what we have seen in girls, as heavier girls tend to develop
earlier, rather than later. Our study shows that the relationship between body fat and timing of puberty is not the same in boys as it is in girls," says U-M pediatric
endocrinologist Joyce M. Lee, M.D., M.P.H., the study's lead author. (ScienceDaily)
LONDON - Decades of progress in the United States on cutting cholesterol, blood pressure and smoking are being stalled by rising obesity rates, and heart disease will kill
around 400,000 Americans this year, experts said on Monday. (Reuters)
Forests in the northern hemisphere could be growing faster now than they were 200 years ago as a result of climate change, according to a study of trees in eastern America.
The trees appear to have accelerated growth rates due to longer growing seasons and higher concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Scientists have documented the
changes to the growth of 55 plots of mixed hardwood forest over a period of 22 years, and have concluded that they are probably growing faster now than they have done at any
time in the past 225 years – the age of the oldest trees in the study.
Geoffrey Parker, a forest ecologist at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Centre in Edgewater, Maryland, said that the increase in the rate of growth was unexpected and
might be matched to the higher temperatures and longer growing seasons documented in the region. The growth may also be influenced by the significant increase in atmospheric
carbon dioxide, he said. (The Independent)
Not all plantations need to be the biological deserts that have come to characterize large-scale, industrial plantations. According to scientists in a paper out in
February's issue of the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, well-planned plantations can actually alleviate some of the social, economic and ecological burden
currently being placed on natural forests.
In addition, these biologically diverse, multi-purposed plantations can mitigate climate change by sequestering carbon, off-setting deforestation and reducing ecological strain
on natural forests.
"Forest plantations have acquired a bad reputation," says Alain Paquette from the Université du Québec à Montréal, who co-authored the study with colleague
Christian Messier. "But not all plantations are so-called 'biological deserts.' We believe that plantations have a legitimate place in the sound management of forests, and
our aim is to provide some basis for an open discussion and to promote the use of well-conceived plantations." (Ecological Society of America)
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The Florida Association of Special Districts warned today that the new water regulations for Florida proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency would severely weaken the flood protection provided by Florida’s water control and improvement districts, especially in the South Florida region, which was often
inundated by floods before the construction of the region’s complex canal system.
Separate from Florida’s state, county or municipal governments, Florida’s special districts are limited-purpose governmental units that administer the finances and
maintenance of local services or infrastructure, such as South Florida’s canals.
In Florida, there are approximately 94 special water control or improvement districts that manage water resources on more than a million acres of land that are managed for
flood control and water supply. Several of the water control and improvement districts were created in the early 1900s for the purpose of stimulating development throughout
Florida via drainage and flood control, and about 60 of the 94 special districts manage water resources within the South Florida Coastal Plain. The Florida Association of
Special Districts represents 39 of the special districts that provide invaluable flood control and water supply services for urban and agricultural use.
On Jan. 15, the EPA announced strict new water regulations for nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorous – regulations that will apply to Florida but no other state. The
regulations will impose staggering new costs on Florida’s water control and improvement districts, which ultimately will be paid by the Florida farmers, industries, consumers
and taxpayers through assessment increases of as much as 400 percent. (Southeast AgNet)
WASHINGTON - The Obama Administration today proposed a budget of $10 billion for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This budget heeds the president’s call to
streamline and find efficiencies in the agency’s operations while supporting the seven priority areas EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson outlined to guide EPA’s work. (Press
Release)
Blacksburg, Va. –– As researchers around the world hasten to employ nanotechnology to improve production methods for applications that range from manufacturing materials
to creating new pharmaceutical drugs, a separate but equally compelling challenge exists.
History has shown that previous industrial revolutions, such as those involving asbestos and chloroflurocarbons, have had some serious environmental impacts. Might
nanotechnology also pose a risk? (Virginia Tech)
The giant panda has been considered one of the oddest of zoological specimens. Its anatomy suggests it belongs to the carnivorous mammals such as dogs, bears, raccoons, cats
and seals, yet it subsists primarily on a diet of bamboo. Most experts believe that the herbivorous panda is descended from a meat-eating bear that evolved to eat plants –
but this was based largely on conjecture.
Now the hypothesis can be tested in another way by analysing the panda's genes. A huge team of largely Chinese scientists have sequenced something like 94 per cent of the
panda's genome and have concluded, among other things, that its bamboo diet might be more dependent on the bacteria that lives in its gut than on the type of genes it
possesses. (The Independent)
DAVOS, Switzerland - Global climate talks may have to continue into 2011 after failing last month to agree on a Kyoto successor, the U.N.'s climate chief and Denmark's new
climate minister told Reuters on Friday. (Reuters)
A global deal to tackle climate change is all but impossible in 2010, leaving the scale and pace of action to slow global warming in coming decades uncertain, according to
senior figures across the world involved in the negotiations.
"The forces trying to tackle climate change are in disarray, wandering in small groups around the battlefield like a beaten army," said a senior British diplomat. (
The Guardian)
THE International Monetary Fund is planning a $US100 billion ($112 billion) fund to help countries mitigate the effects of climate change, the agency's head said.
"The new growth model will be low carbon," Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the IMF, told political and business leaders meeting at the World Economic
Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos this weekend.
Efforts to deal with climate change could not be blocked "just because we cannot meet the financing needs", he said.
Developing countries do not have the funds for these adaptation measures, and developed countries' ability to pay is also limited as they are now weighed down by debt after
funds were used to deal with the financial crisis.
It was therefore necessary to "think out of the box" on the issue of funding, the IMF chief said. (AFP)
President Obama called on the federal government, the nation’s largest energy consumer, to its increase energy efficiency and to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions 28
percent by 2020. According to the White House if the targets are
met they “would reduce federal energy consumption by the equivalent of 646 trillion BTUs, equal to 205 million barrels of oil, and taking 17 million cars off the road for
one year, according to a statement from the White House press office. That would save $8 billion to $11 billion in energy costs through 2020.”
If the government can save $8-$11 billion of taxpayer’s money, it should be commended for such efforts. There are a few questions to ask.
1.) If the plan is going to save this much money, why isn’t the government already doing it? Maybe they are, as chair of the President’s Council on
Environmental Quality points out in her examples of agency actions. For instance,
“The Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany, GA has signed a 20 year contract to burn methane gas from a nearby landfill, providing 22 percent of its energy needs, enough energy
to power 1,200 homes.” If the taxpayers will save $8-11 billion, that should be the headline of the story – not the cut in greenhouse gas emissions.
The Pentagon will for the first time rank global warming as a destabilising force, adding fuel to conflict and putting US troops at risk around the world, in a major
strategy review to be presented to Congress tomorrow. The quadrennial defence review, prepared by the Pentagon to update Congress on its security vision, will direct military
planners to keep track of the latest climate science, and to factor global warming into their long term strategic planning.
"While climate change alone does not cause conflict, it may act as an accelerant of instability or conflict, placing a burden on civilian institutions and militaries
around the world," said a draft of the review seen by the Guardian.
What about when people are cold? Wasn't that supposed to be the reason for oil wars? Here's a clip from 1975:
It was bad enough last month watching Washington politicians merrily flying off to the U.N. climate change Conference of Parties in Copenhagen (or COP-15 for short),
ostensibly to draft a global warming treaty, when all the players knew that no meaningful pact would result and that the only sure outcome was that much energy would be
squandered.
Now comes the sticker shock. (Debra J. Saunders, Townhall)
It's common practice in politics to market legislation in a way that hides its true intent. The so-called Clean Energy Jobs Act, praised by a Journal Sentinel editorial on
Jan. 17 is one of the most misnamed bills of all time.
In 2007, Gov. Jim Doyle appointed his Global Warming Task Force. He gave the task force the duty of recommending policies to fight global warming in Wisconsin - without
considering cost. The report was published in July 2008 and contained more than 50 recommendations for cutting greenhouse gas emissions. The report was the blueprint for
Assembly Bill 649 and its companion Senate Bill 450, the so-called Clean Energy Jobs Act.
The governor directed the task force to accept "the substantial scientific consensus that exists that climate change is occurring and human activity . . . is a major
contributor to such change." Much of that consensus is based on the findings of the United Nations' International Panel on Climate Change. A number of the prominent member
scientists are now embroiled in "Climategate," a scandal involving e-mails showing the scientists were involved in unethical research techniques.
If the science is settled, why fudge the data? Why didn't the climate alarmists' high-tech computer models predict the recent cooling trend? If they can't even predict 10 years
ahead, should we believe their predictions for the next several decades?
The task force was told by the governor not to consider cost-benefit analysis when developing the recommendations. Not surprisingly, AB 649/SB 450 is all cost, no benefit. (Jim
Ott, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)
There were predictable howls after the Securities and Exchange Commission told publicly held companies they should warn investors of any potential effects from climate
change on their bottom lines. Representative Joe Barton, among the most reliable of the oil, gas and coal industries’ many friends in Congress, complained that the
commission’s time would be better spent on “investor protection” rather than imposing new burdens on corporations and promoting the “social agendas” of environmental
groups.
Investor protection is exactly what the commission had in mind when it decided, by a 3-to-2 party-line vote, to add global warming to the list of material issues — plant
closing, the sale of assets — that companies may have to discuss in their financial filings. (NYT)
Actually we agree investors should be informed of the dangers of climate legislation and idiotic moves by companies to "address" gorebull
warbling.
BEIJING — As a Sunday target date approaches for countries to submit to the United Nations their plans for fighting climate change, China is banding together with other
major developing nations to stress that only the wealthier countries need to make internationally binding commitments.
So while China, the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, might put down in writing its targets for slowing the growth of emissions, it will make clear that those
efforts are voluntary steps it plans to take domestically that should not imply a binding international commitment. (NYT)
The Prime Minister has written a letter to the chair of the Liaison Committee, Dr Alan Williams MP, setting out the way forward on climate change after Copenhagen.
Gordon Brown is to give evidence to the Liaison Committee on 2 February 2010.
PRIME Minister Kevin Rudd, the man who said he would never “knowingly” tell a lie, should begin the new Parliamentary session Tuesday with a few admissions of deceit.
His massively exaggerated claims of catastrophic climate change caused by human activity have been thoroughly rejected by the UK chief scientist, John Beddington. Even
Australia’s chief scientist, Penny Sackett, has been unable to provide any evidence to support her wild December claim that there are about five years to avoid dangerous
climate change damage.
Both scientific chiefs are now calling for absolute openness and rigour in the presentation of climate science evidence. Professor Beddington says scientists should be more
open about the uncertainty of predicting the rate of climate change but has he told his Australian counterpart, Professor Sackett?
This is scientific backdown with a capital “B”. (Piers Akerman)
[1989: the destruction of the Berlin Wall - the section near the Brandenburg Gate]
For over a month now, since the farcical conclusion of the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference, I have been silent, partly through family commitments abroad in the USA, but
also because, in this noisy world, in ‘The Clamour Of The Times’, it is on occasion better to be quiet and contemplative, to observe rather than to comment. And, as an
independent academic, it has been fascinating to witness the classical collapse of a Grand Narrative, in which social and philosophical theories are being played out before our
gaze. It is like watching the Berlin Wall [pictured] being torn down, concrete slab by concrete slab, brick by brick, with cracks appearing and widening daily on every face -
political, economic, and scientific. Likewise, the bloggers have been swift to cover the crumbling edifice with colourful graffiti, sometimes bitter, at others caustic and
witty. (Philip Stott, Clamour of the Times)
I can't recall the wheels coming off the bus of any expert-driven hysteria as fast or as completely as they are now coming off the global-warming scare.
I suppose they must have came off faster from Y2K. At 12:00:01 AM on Jan. 1, 2000, when airliners didn't fall from the sky and power plants didn't shut down spontaneously or
computers didn't freeze up all over the world, the air came out of the Y2K scare instantly. Billions had been spent on preventing that disaster-that-never-was up until midnight
on the final day of 1999, then almost not a penny afterwards.
That is faster than the wheels are coming off the climate-change bus. But AGW -- anthropogenic global warming -- is a very close second.
News of the manipulations, distortions and frauds perpetrated to advance and preserve the environmentalists' cause celebre are so numerous and coming so fast, it's hard to keep
up. (Lorne Gunter, Edmonton Journal)
One of the most disturbing outgrowths of the global warming controversy over the last twenty or so years has been the increased politicization of science. Of course, this is
far from the first time this has occurred, but it may be one of the most important, because we are at a particularly fragile moment in the global economy. Indeed, had it not
been for the release of the Climategate emails and documents in November, the recent Copenhagen conference might have succeeded in reallocating billions, even trillions, of
dollars, possibly leading to a form of global bankruptcy. Less than two months later, with the so-called science now unraveling on an almost daily basis, the whole thing seems
close to insane. How could we have done it?
Well, how could we have done it? (Roger L. Simon, PJM)
For the last 20 years, one IPCC report after another has been responsible for a relentless outpouring of doomsday predictions. The IPCC process, however, by which it arrived
at its alarmist conclusions, has been shown on numerous occasions to lack balance, transparency and due diligence.
The IPCC's work is controlled by a tightly-knit group of individuals who are totally convinced that they are right. As a result, conflicting data and evidence, even if
published in peer-reviewed journals, are regularly ignored, while exaggerated claims, even if contentious or not peer-reviewed, are often highlighted in IPCC reports.
Not surprisingly, the IPCC has lost a lot of credibility in recent years. It is also losing the trust of more and more governments who are no longer following its advice -- as
the Copenhagen summit showed.
Claims by RK Pachauri, chair of the IPCC, that IPCC's erroneous doomsday prediction about the fate of Himalayan glaciers was an isolated, and wholly uncharacteristic mistake,
are completely baseless. (Business Standard)
Why would anyone want to keep the damn thing going?
The unwillingness of scientists at the University of East Anglia to release climate data to people who choose not to believe in climate change was a mistake. Science
advances through openness, through the ability of others to replicate the same findings or demonstrate error in discovery and interpretation. Reluctance to disclose –
revealed last week in the wake of the release of private email exchanges between climate researchers – invites suspicion. The hacked email exchanges were an embarrassment,
and the refusal to disclose data was a bad call, but neither episode casts much doubt upon the science of global warming. The evidence for climate change driven by man-made
discharges of greenhouse gases is now decades old, has been independently confirmed by researchers all over the world, and is – as the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, said
yesterday – overwhelming. (The Guardian)
Given the dogmatic fervor of global warming proponents, and their intolerance of skeptics who dare to question the latest commandment (see: cap-and-trade)
in the green scripture, it is perhaps no coincidence that the environmentalist movement sometimes seems to have more in common with theology than with science. If that is true,
then the logical word to describe those scientists who have challenged environmental hysteria and extremism is “heretics.” In a series of profiles, Front Page’s Rich
Trzupek will spotlight prominent scientists whose “heretical” research, publications, and opinions have helped add a much-needed dose of balance and fact to
environmental debates that for too long have been driven by fear mongering and alarmism. In a field that demands political conformity, they defiantly remain the heretics.
Previous profiles in the series include Steve Milloy, Dr.
Craig Idso, and Dr. Roy Spencer. – The Editors
Lord Christopher Monckton, Third Viscount of Brenchley, is a legend within the global warming skeptic community. The erudite Englishman was an advisor to Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher when climate change theories were in their infancy. In recent years, he has been one of the most eloquent and vocal critics of Al Gore and those who echo
Gore’s alarmist cries.
Thatcher is often identified as the western leader most responsible for promoting the theory of man-made climate change that would explode into full-blown hysteria soon
after she left office. This, Monckton says, is a misleading characterization. He recalled raising the issue with Thatcher as a possible concern, since carbon dioxide is indeed
a greenhouse gas, but after studying the issue with leading scientists, the Prime Minister and Monckton concluded that any potential warming would be insignificant compared to
natural factors. Monckton re-entered the climate-change fray in 2006, writing two pieces in the Sunday Telegraph criticizing global warming alarmism. The articles
caused an immediate stir. (Front Page)
I admit I remember Thatcher's role somewhat differently, although I was certainly no insider. In fact my memories are more inclined to this.
Nonetheless Brenchley is doing an excellent job of making amends now.
LORD Christopher Monckton, imperious and articulate, won yesterday's climate change debate in straight sets.
Forget facts and fictions, numbers and statistics, this British high priest of climate change sceptics is a polished performer, even against the most committed of scientists.
Aided by Adelaide's Professor Ian Plimer, Lord Monckton cruised to victory before a partisan crowd of suits and ties, movers and shakers. (Courier-Mail)
British climate change sceptic Lord Christopher Monckton brings his message to Australia. Photo: Ryan Osland
Controversial climate change sceptic Lord Christopher Monckton stoked the fire of the global warming debate at a Brisbane luncheon yesterday.
Hundreds of sceptics gathered at the Brisbane Hilton to hear Lord Monckton, one of the world's most influential climate change deniers, personally present his case that nothing
needs to be done to stop global warming.
The audience, who paid $130 each to hear the controversial Briton, clearly backed his view, with vigorous applause each time he spoke. (Sydney Morning Herald)
BRITISH climate change sceptic Christopher Monckton told a Brisbane audience yesterday that acting because of the risk of climate change could be riskier than doing nothing.
Lord Monckton dismissed the "risk management" argument about climate change -- which broadly runs that, even if the science is not definitively proved, then taking
actions to reduce the risk is sensible management -- by claiming that these actions often had unintended consequences.
He said that one such action was growing crops for biofuels instead of food, which was leading to widespread starvation in Third World countries. (The Australian)
Continuing
with the Pachauri-Hasnain "great glacier show", to which we introduced our avid readers yesterday,
already we have seen significant developments which are set to make this a best selling saga.
In that first piece, we revealed that, to investigate fears of retreating glaciers in the Himalayas, raised largely by Syed Hasnain, the British government in 2001 funded a
major field study code-named "Sagarmatha". We now
learn that the sponsoring department, the Department For International Development (DFID), paid a cool (if you will forgive the use of that word) £315,277 of taxpayers'
money for the work.
As we recall, that study, which reported in June 2004, found that the threat, that all of the region's glaciers may soon disappear, "would seem unfounded" and that
"the catastrophic water shortages forecast by some experts are unlikely to happen for many decades, if at all." However, despite that, Syed Hasnain, continued to
claim that the glaciers were shortly to disappear. (Richard North, EU Referendum)
The chairman of the leading climate change watchdog was informed that claims about melting Himalayan glaciers were false before the Copenhagen summit, The Times has
learnt.
Rajendra Pachauri was told that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment that the glaciers would disappear by 2035 was wrong, but he waited two months to
correct it. He failed to act despite learning that the claim had been refuted by several leading glaciologists.
The IPCC’s report underpinned the proposals at Copenhagen for drastic cuts in global emissions. (The Times)
The United Nations' expert panel on climate change based claims about ice disappearing from the world's mountain tops on a student's dissertation and an article in a
mountaineering magazine.
The revelation will cause fresh embarrassment for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which had to issue a humiliating apology earlier this month over
inaccurate statements about global warming.
The IPCC's remit is to provide an authoritative assessment of scientific evidence on climate change. (TDT)
Are the world and human society in general ready and willing to take action on critical issues that require a major change in the manner in which we produce and consume
goods and services? (R. K. Pachauri, The Hindu)
Rajendra Pachauri, who has faced criticism as chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change following allegations of inaccurate statements in panel reports,
suffered a fresh blow last night when he failed to get the backing of the British government. (Damian Carrington, The Guardian)
While covering the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, I took a morning away from the main venue to attend a forum of "climate skeptics".
The speakers presented political, economic, and scientific analyses to counter the series of assessments by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
A few of the skeptics went so far as to suggest that the current international drive to tackle global warming would eventually lead the world into some kind of "energy
tyranny". One even showed a video clip of how "energy police" would invade private homes in the American suburbs, unplugging and removing the owners' microwave
ovens, television sets, and other appliances.
I left the forum before the morning session ended. I felt that most of the speakers were too emotional and politically charged to be considered objective.
But I was impressed by the presentation of Dr Fred Singer, an atmospheric physicist and founding director of the US Weather Satellite Service, who challenged the IPCC findings
with his research data. (Li Xing, China Daily)
The findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) are often held up as representing “the consensus of scientists”—a pretty grandiose and
presumptuous claim. And one that in recent days, weeks, and months, has been unraveling. So too, therefore, must all of the secondary assessments that are based on the IPCC
findings—the most notable of which is the EPA’s Endangerment Finding—that “greenhouse
gases taken in combination endanger both the public health and the public welfare of current and future generations.”
Recent events have shown, rather embarrassingly, that the IPCC is not “the” consensus of scientists, but rather the opinions of a few scientists (in some cases as few as
one) in various subject areas whose consensus among themselves is then kludged together by the designers of the IPCC final product who a priori know what they want the
ultimate outcome to be (that greenhouse gases are leading to dangerous climate change and need to be restricted). So clearly you can see why the EPA (who has a similar
objective) would decide to rely on the IPCC findings rather than have to conduct an independent assessment of the science with the same predetermined outcome. Why go through
the extra effort to arrive at the same conclusion?
The EPA’s official justification for its reliance on the IPCC’s findings is that it has reviewed the IPCC’s “procedures” and found them to be exemplary.
Below is a look at some things, recently revealed, that the IPCC “procedures” have produced. These recent revelations indicate that the “procedures” are not
infallible and that highly publicized IPCC results are either wrong or unjustified—which has the knock-on effect of rendering the IPCC an unreliable source of information.
Unreliable doesn’t mean wrong in all cases, mind you, just that it is hard to know where and when errors are present, and as such, the justification that “the IPCC says
so” is no longer sufficient (or acceptable). [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
A highly sophisticated hacking operation that led to the leaking of hundreds of emails from the Climatic Research Unit in East Anglia was probably carried out by a foreign
intelligence agency, according to the Government's former chief scientist. Sir David King, who was Tony Blair's chief scientific adviser for seven years until 2007, said that
the hacking and selective leaking of the unit's emails, going back 13 years, bore all the hallmarks of a coordinated intelligence operation – especially given their release
just before the Copenhagen climate conference in December. (The Independent)
Do you suppose they believe a word of this crap? The shame of it is they might actually get away with the really big lie, again, at least in some quarters.
Professor Phil Jones, director of the University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit.
Norwich's flagship university was at the centre of a new row today after it emerged it broke the law by refusing to hand over its raw data for public scrutiny in the climate
change row over stolen emails.
The reputation of the University of East Anglia's world renowned climatic research unit (CRU)was shaken to the core last year after emails posted on the internet from
researchers including its director Prof Phil Jones appeared to suggest ways of avoiding freedom of information requests together with a “trick” to explain away an apparent
fall in global temperatures.
Police including a team from Scotland yard were called in to investigate amid speculation that the leaks were part of a smear campaign by climate change sceptics to discredit
the UEA in the run up the Copenhagen summit last year.
Other theories were that the leaks were the work of a disgruntled insider angry at the way the university was handling FOI requests.
The row has reverberated around the world and it emerged today the Norwich university breached the Freedom of Information Act by refusing to comply with requests for data
concerning claims by its scientists that man-made emissions were causing global warming. (David Bale, Norwich Evening News)
Interesting choice of pictures... makes it look like a local version of U.S. District Attorneys'-favored theater, the perp walk.
Christopher Booker has a second article in the Sunday Telegraph today in which he examines the ICO's claim that his hands are tied in the matter of criminal prosecutions at
UEA because of the six months' time bar prescribed by the Magistrates Act. This story has generated considerable outrage in recent days, and some have suggested that more
serious charges could be brought under different statutes altogether.
Booker makes two very interesting observations. First up he reckons that the six month for charges heard in magistrates' courts runs from when the offence was discovered
rather than when it was committed. This is an opinion that has been aired elsewhere, and opinion seems to be divided on whether it is correct or not.
Intriguingly though, Booker also notes that charges of conspiring to defy the law could be brought under the Criminal Law Act 1977, where no time bar applies. Perhaps we
haven't heard the last of this after all. (Bishop Hill)
There is something very odd indeed about the statement by the Information Commission on its investigation into "Climategate", the leak of emails from East Anglia's
Climatic Research Unit. Gordon Smith, the deputy commissioner, confirms that the university's refusal to answer legitimate inquiries made in 2007 and 2008 was an offence under
S.77 of the Information Act. But he goes on to claim that the Commission is powerless to bring charges, thanks to a loophole in the law – "because the legislation
requires action within six months of the offence taking place".
Careful examination of the Act, however, shows that it says nothing whatever about a time limit. The Commission appears to be trying to confuse this with a provision of the
Magistrates Act, that charges for an offence cannot be brought more than six months after it has been drawn to the authorities' attention – not after it was committed. In
this case, the Commission only became aware of the offence two months ago when the emails were leaked – showing that the small group of British and American scientists at the
top of the IPCC were discussing with each other and with the university ways to break the law, not least by destroying evidence, an offence in itself.
The Commission is thus impaled on a hook of its own devising. By admitting that serious offences were committed, it is now legally obliged to bring charges. And if these were
brought under the 1977 Criminal Law Act, alleging that the offences amounted to a conspiracy to defy the law, there is no time limit anyway.
The real mystery therefore is how the Commission came to misread the very Act which brought it into being. Undoubtedly a successful prosecution involving such world-ranking
scientists would be extraordinarily embarrassing, not just to the Government but to the entire global warming cause. So what has persuaded the Commission not to do its duty? (TDT)
Yesterday the London
Times broke the latest news on the fate of disgraced British climatologist Phil Jones, of the University of East Anglia (UEA). Jones breached the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) by refusing to comply with requests for data concerning claims by its scientists that man-made emissions were causing global warming. The Times reports that the UK
Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) decided that the UEA failed in its duties under the Act but said that it
could not prosecute those involved because the complaint was made too late.
What the Times and the rest of the media are overlooking is that the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), not the ICO, is responsible for announcing the results of the police
investigation into the Climategate scandal. The ICO is merely a non-departmental public body which reports directly to Parliament, sponsored by the Ministry of Justice and
deals solely with data protection, FOIA regulations, privacy, electronic communications regulations and environmental regulations.
What is not being intelligently reported is that Jones is still liable as lead conspirator in the UK’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and may face prosecution under the United
Kingdom Fraud Act (2006). If convicted of the offense of fraud by either false representation, failing to disclose information or fraud by abuse of his position, he stands
liable to a maximum penalty of ten years imprisonment.
In this article I shall demonstrate that the fuss over the FOIA infringement, although in itself succeeding in achieving no conviction, does demonstrate that the ICO has
acted improperly and may have prejudiced the outcome of any prosecution Jones may face for far more serious offenses for false representation (section 2) and failing to
disclose information (section 3) under the Fraud Act (2006).
I strongly urge interested readers to study the article shown here, written by Norman Baird,
for a fuller explanation of the scope of the Fraud Act (2006) and the implications in the Professor Jones scandal. (Climategate.com)
The latest development in the saga of the climate change e-mails has put freedom of information (FOI) back on the front pages - and focused new attention on one of the FOI
Act's problems, the issue of enforcement. (Martin Rosenbaum, BBC)
Joseph D'Aleo and Anthony Watts release a 110-page report on the terrible state of
surface temperature data — and on how NOAA and NASA are as guilty as CRU.
Recent revelations from the Climategate emails, originating from the Climatic Research Unit
at the University of East Anglia, showed how all the data centers — most notably NOAA and NASA — conspired in the manipulation of global temperature records to suggest that
temperatures in the 20th century rose faster than they actually did.
This has inspired climate researchers worldwide to take a hard look at the data proffered, by comparing it to the original data and to other data sources. An in-depth
report, co-authored by myself and Anthony Watts for the Science and Public Policy Institute (SPPI),
compiles some of the initial alarming findings with case studies included from scientists around the world. (Joseph D'Aleo, PJM)
Remember the spectacular two and a half meter wide ClimateGate Timeline from 4 weeks ago? We got hundreds of emails from all around the
world in response. Some people made giant printed versions and sent us photos, while others requested printed copies. Mohib Ebrahim originally created this project for his own
edification, but then decided to release it. When a first draft was published last December, many readers had excellent suggestions for improving it. So behind the
scenes, Mohib and four more volunteers went to work. Thanks especially to Curt for revising and editing the entire timeline (as he’d done with the introduction), and to Tom,
Stuart and Gene for help proofreading. It’s really been a monumental task and now, finally, for all those waiting for the chance to print and learn, here is the official
edition. All pictures and links have been updated.
Click to see a larger version (but download the full version below to read it all).
Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe represented Al Gore in the disputed 2000 Supreme Court case against George W. Bush but that didn't stop him from attacking one of the
favorite tactics of the anti-global warming crowd: Lawsuits. In an article posted today by the conservative Washington Legal Foundation, Tribe argues that federal judges have
committed grave error by allowing global-warming suits to proceed instead of leaving the issue of limiting carbon emissions to Congress. (Daniel Fisher, Forbes)
The Booker column is
up, with the headline: "Amazongate: new evidence of the IPCC's failures". This is the start of the final phase of the IPCC's meltdown.
Actually, the Amazon story only occupies one paragraph of the column, with the newspaper reacting to the building publicity by hyping it up in the headline. Booker actually
addresses the wide-ranging failures of the IPCC, including a reference to Montford (of Bishop Hill fame) and
his brilliant book The
Hockey Stick Illusion. Buy it.
Booker concludes, of the IPCC that: "Bereft of scientific or moral authority, the most expensive show the world has ever seen may soon be nearing its end."
However, the BBC's Roger Harrabin is already swinging into damage-limitation mode
on "Amazongate", quoting "Euro-sceptic blogger Richard North".
The hapless Harrabin is driven to play down the importance of this latest development, claiming that the inclusion of the WWF reference "is a blunder perhaps, but maybe of
a different kind, because there is indeed plenty of published science warning about drought in the Amazon." (Richard North, EU Referendum)
"It
can be revealed," write Richard Gray, science correspondent and Rebecca Lefort, in The
Sunday Telegraph that the IPCC report made use of 16 non-peer reviewed WWF reports.
The strap line reads: "The United Nations' expert panel on climate change based claims about ice disappearing from the world's mountain tops on a student's dissertation
and an article in a mountaineering magazine," all of which looks good stuff. But it goes downhill fast. The intrepid pair go on to write:
One claim, which stated that coral reefs near mangrove forests contained up to 25 times more fish numbers than those without mangroves nearby, quoted a feature article on the
WWF website. In fact the data contained within the WWF article originated from a paper published in 2004 in the respected journal Nature.
Then we get this:
In another example a WWF paper on forest fires was used to illustrate the impact of reduced rainfall in the Amazon rainforest, but the data was from another Nature
paper published in 1999.
... which is followed by this:
When The Sunday Telegraph contacted the lead scientists behind the two papers in Nature, they expressed surprise that their research was not cited directly
but said the IPCC had accurately represented their work.
Whaaaaaaaaaaa? What kind of hackwittery is this? Are they barking mad or just stupid? Or what? There we have "Amazongate" breaking out into the MSM, with Booker in
the same newspaper writing:
This WWF report, it turned out, was co-authored by Andy Rowell, an anti-smoking and food safety campaigner who has worked for WWF and Greenpeace, and contributed pieces to
Britain's two most committed environmentalist newspapers. Rowell and his co-author claimed their findings were based on an article in Nature. But the focus of that piece, it
emerges, was not global warming at all but the effects of logging.
These children have missed the point completely. In this post and then this,
we show that the assertions made by the WWF paper are not in any way supported by the Nature paper and actively misrepresent its findings. (Richard North, EU
Referendum)
He is the climate change chief whose research body produced a report warning that the glaciers in the Himalayas might melt by 2035 and earned a Nobel Prize for his work –
so you might expect Dr Rajendra Pachauri to be doing everything he can to reduce his own carbon footprint.
But as controversy continued to simmer last week over the bogus ‘Glaciergate’ claims in a report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – which he heads
– Dr Pachauri showed no apparent inclination to cut global warming in his own back yard.
On Friday, for the one-mile journey from home to his Delhi office, Dr Pachauri could have walked, or cycled, or used the eco-friendly electric car provided for him, known in
the UK as G-Wiz.
But instead, he had his personal chauffeur collect him from his £4.5million home – in a 1.8-litre Toyota Corolla. (Daily Mail)
Rajendra Pachauri has had other things on his mind, which may help explain why he’s allowed the IPCC under his leadership to become mired in allegations of fraud,
exaggeration, deceit and cherry-picking.
You see, Pachauri has been thinking a lot about sex, and has even written a lot about it in his new steamy novel:
In breathless prose that risks making Dr Pachauri, who will be 70 this year, a laughing stock among the serious, high-minded scientists and world leaders with whom he
mixes,
he details sexual encounter after sexual encounter.
The book, which makes reference to the Kama Sutra, starts promisingly enough as it tells the story of a climate expert with a lament for the denuded mountain slopes of
Nainital, in northern India, where deforestation by the timber mafia and politicians has “endangered the fragile ecosystem”.
But talk of “denuding” is a clue of what is to come.
By page 16, Sanjay is ready for his first liaison with May in a hotel room in Nainital.
All eyes are on the IPCC. Although some of it is ugly, and some sceptics – in our view, at least – are making less dignified arguments than they ought to be, this has
been a long time coming. The IPCC, by virtue of the argument that ‘climate change is the most important issue facing mankind’, has become perhaps the ‘most important
political institution’, at least by implication. For a while, the putative ‘crisis’ that we face has allowed the IPCC to avoid scrutiny. After all, who could argue with
an institution that was established to ’save the planet’? It seems that some of this invincibility has worn off, perhaps because there were simply too many hoping that some
of its Nobel-prize-winning-planet-saving-credentials would rub off on them. (Climate Resistance)
Climate secretary Ed Miliband warns against listening to 'siren voices', in an interview with the Observer
The climate secretary, Ed Miliband, last night warned of the danger of a public backlash against the science of global warming in the face of continuing claims that experts
have manipulated data.
The perceived failure of global talks on combating climate change in Copenhagen
last month has also been blamed for undermining public support. But in the government's first high-level recognition of the growing pressure on public opinion, Miliband
declared a "battle" against the "siren voices" who denied global warming was real or caused by humans, or that there was a need to cut carbon emissions to
tackle it. (The Guardian)
Britain has officially expressed its concern to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) about lax scientific procedures used by the body which supplies the
world with the facts about global warming.
Evidence has emerged the IPCC made exaggerated claims in its last report in 2007 about the melting of Himalayan glaciers by 2035, the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, and
increased frequency of violent storms. The panel also used research that had not been peer-reviewed. That has prompted the British Government to communicate formally its
disquiet to the IPCC and its chairman, Dr Rajendra Pachauri.
The controversial Indian engineer, who has no background in climate science, has been "urged" by the Government to ensure the IPCC's procedures are rigourous, and to
explain publicly what the IPCC is doing to guarantee that this is the case. Dr Pachauri, who enjoys a lavish lifestyle in Delhi funded by his own research institute, is not
considered to have mounted an effective defence of climate-change science in the face of the allegations. ( The Independent)
LORD STERN’S report on climate change, which underpins government policy, has come under fire from a disaster analyst who says the research he contributed was misused.
Robert Muir-Wood, head of research at Risk Management Solutions, a US-based consultancy, said the Stern report misquoted his work to suggest a firm link between global warming
and the frequency and severity of disasters such as floods and hurricanes.
The Stern report, citing Muir-Wood, said: “New analysis based on insurance industry data has shown that weather-related catastrophe losses have increased by 2% each year
since the 1970s over and above changes in wealth, inflation and population growth/movement.
“If this trend continued or intensified with rising global temperatures, losses from extreme weather could reach 0.5%-1% of world GDP by the middle of the century.”
Muir-Wood said his research showed no such thing and accused Stern of “going far beyond what was an acceptable extrapolation of the evidence”.
The criticism is among the strongest made of the Stern report, which, since its publication in 2006, has influenced policy, including green taxes. (Sunday Times)
We are being warned and exhorted that, unless serious measures are taken to reverse our contributions to greenhouse gases, humans have put the planet on an unsustainable
course for potential crises up to extinction. The irony is that, on the news, there is little agreement on what's caused massive shifts in temperatures over the past
millennium. (Ed Wallace, Sci-Tech Today)
Biogeographer Professor Philip Stott on the collapse of the global warming scare:
It
is like watching the Berlin Wall being torn down, concrete slab by concrete slab, brick by brick, with cracks appearing and widening daily on every face - political,
economic, and scientific. Likewise, the bloggers have been swift to cover the crumbling edifice with colourful graffiti, sometimes bitter, at others caustic and witty…
And, as ever, capitalism has read the runes, with carbon-trading posts quietly being shed, ‘Green’ jobs sidelined, and even big insurance companies starting to hedge
their own bets against the future of the Global Warming Grand Narrative. These rats are leaving the sinking ship far faster than any politician, many of whom are going to be
abandoned, left, still clinging to the masts, as the Good Ship ‘Global Warming’ founders on titanic icebergs in the raging oceans of doubt and delusion.
And what can one say about ‘the science’? ‘The ‘science’ is already paying dearly for its abuse of freedom of information, for unacceptable cronyism, for
unwonted arrogance, and for the disgraceful misuse of data at every level, from temperature measurements to glaciers to the Amazon rain forest. What is worse, the usurping of
the scientific method, and of justified scientific scepticism, by political policies and political propaganda could well damage science sensu lato - never mind just climate
science - in the public eye for decades.
Stott says it’s no surprise that the IPCC’s faked scares about India feature strongly in the growing scandal. He quotes Dr. Robert
Bradnock, a world authority on the sub-continent and founder-editor of the Ashgate Studies in Development Geography:
I know that many
of the claims about the impact of ‘global warming’ in Bangladesh, for example, are completely unfounded. There is no evidence that flooding has increased at all in
recent years. Drought and excessive rainfall are the nature of the monsoon system. Agricultural production, far from being decimated by worsening floods over the last twenty
years, has nearly doubled. In the early 1990s, Houghton published a map of the purported effects of sea-level rise on Bangladesh. Coming from a Fellow of the Royal Society,
former Head of the Met Office and Chair of the IPCC, this was widely accepted, and frequently reproduced. Yet, it shows no understanding of the complex processes that form
the Bengal delta, and it is seriously misleading. Moreover, despite the repeated claims of the World Wide Fund, Greenpeace, and, sadly, Christian Aid, the melting of the
Himalayan glaciers is of completely marginal significance to the farmers of the plains in China, India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. One could go on!
It was presented as fact. The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, led by India’s very own RK Pachauri, even announced a consensus on it. The world was
heating up and humans were to blame. A pack of lies, it turns out.
If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn’t. And contrarywise, what is, it
wouldn’t be. And what it wouldn’t be, it would. You see? —Alice in Wonderland
The climate change fraud that is now unravelling is unprecedented in its deceit, unmatched in scope—and for the liberal elite, akin to 9 on the Richter scale. Never have
so few fooled so many for so long, ever.
The entire world was being asked to change the way it lives on the basis of pure hyperbole. Propriety, probity and transparency were routinely sacrificed.
The truth is: the world is not heating up in any significant way. Neither are the Himalayan glaciers going to melt as claimed by 2035. Nor is there any link at all between
natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and global warming. All that was pure nonsense, or if you like, ‘no-science’!
The climate change mafia, led by Dr Rajendra K Pachauri, chairperson of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), almost pulled off the heist of the century through
fraudulent data and suppression of procedure. All the while, they were cornering millions of dollars in research grants that heaped one convenient untruth upon another. And as
if the money wasn’t enough, the Nobel Committee decided they should have the coveted Peace Prize. (Ninad D. Sheth, Open)
There are gaping holes in the armour of Al Gore’s Nobel Prize-winning global warming advocacy.
The wrong ’un: Al Gore’s ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ brought global acceptance to the exaggerated fears of global warming; ‘Apocalypse? No!’ is Lord Monckton’s
rebuttal
On 11 October 2007, a day before the Nobel Committee awarded the Peace Prize to former US Vice-President Al Gore, the London High Court ruled that there were at least nine
‘errors’ in Gore’s documentary An Inconvenient Truth, and that the film could not be shown to UK schoolchildren without a ‘guidance note’ that these statements in the
film do not follow ‘mainstream scientific consensus’. (Open)
As
far as I know, no Canadian university has ever had a formal debate on climate change
``Climate change is natural. Spending time and money on the issue is largely a waste,” posited Steve Paikin, host of TV Ontario’s The Agenda, to his live studio
audience at the University of Toronto’s Munk Centre for International Studies Thursday evening. Paikin’s statement to the students came in the middle of an hour-long debate
on climate change in which I participated, along with four other panelists.
The statement, the first of three that Paikin posed to the university students, came from an earlier Leger public opinion poll, but unlike the results that Leger found (16%
agreed with the statement), not a single student among the 80 in attendance raised a hand in agreement.
Invited to a tea party debate on climate change, AGW supporters opt out of participating — and quite rudely.
When the idea came up for a debate on global warming, it seemed like a great idea to our tea party group. We had just finished presenting a very successful health care forum
in our small town in northern Wisconsin and were looking for the next event to put on the calendar.
Many members said we should just call it a forum, as we would never be able to get any scientists who believe that global warming is a crisis to come to the table. But
thinking I would know how to do what no one else has been able to do, I assured them a debate would be held.
That was eight weeks ago. I gave up after many, many emails and too much time spent behind the computer. (Kimberly Jo Simac, PJM)
Exposed gravel and sediment are increasingly rolling downhill into rivers, increasing the threat of flooding in the national park complex and Puget Sound communities.
"There is significant evidence that things are changing dramatically at Mt. Rainier," environmental consultant Tim Abbe said. "We need to start planning for
it now."
Similar dynamics are playing out at all of the region's major glaciated peaks, according to research hydrologist Gordon Grant of the U.S. Forest Service. Climate experts blame
global warming, triggered by emissions from industries and cars, for much of the ongoing retreat of glaciers worldwide. North Cascades National Park has lost half of its ice
area in the last century. Mt. Rainier's glaciers have shrunk by more than a quarter. (Los Angeles Times)
We don't expect much from Left-coast, Left-wing hacks but even Seattle & LA Times journos should at least be able to manage Wikipedia, shouldn't they?
In the past, Rainier has had large debris avalanches, and has also produced enormous lahars (volcanic mudflows) due to the large amount of glacial ice present. Its
lahars have reached all the way to Puget Sound. Around 5,000 years ago, a large chunk of the volcano slid away and that debris avalanche helped to produce the massive Osceola
Mudflow, which went all the way to the site of present-day Tacoma and south Seattle.[12] This massive avalanche of rock and ice removed the top 1,600 feet (500 m) of Rainier,
bringing its height down to around 14,100 feet (4,300 m). About 530 to 550 years ago, the Electron Mudflow occurred, although this was not as large-scale as the Osceola
Mudflow.
Lahars from Rainier pose the most risk to life and property, as many communities lie atop older lahar deposits. Not only is there much ice atop the volcano, the volcano is
also slowly being weakened by hydrothermal activity.
Is it really so hard for them to figure out things happen for reasons other than gorebull warbling? h/t DennisA
Remember how I said that we would be witness to scientists abandoning global warming orthodoxy in an attempt to regain lost credibility?
That the global warming dogma -- that the question of global warming was "settled science" and that carbon dioxide emissions from human activity was dramatically
warming the planet -- would be challenged with new research, research that would not be suppressed?
The National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) recently updated its 4th quarter and annual 2009 Ocean Heat Content (OHC) data. The data that was presented in conjunction with
the Levitus et al (2009) Paper now covers the period of 1955 to 2009. There have been changes
that some might find significant.
This post presents:
1. A brief look at the revisions (corrections) to the data in 2007 and 2008 OHC data
2. A comparison of the NODC OHC data for the period of 2003 to 2009 versus the GISS projection
REVISIONS (Corrections) TO THE 2007 AND 2008 NODC OHC DATA
Figure 1 is a gif animation of two Ocean Heat Content graphs posted on the NODC GLOBAL OCEAN HEAT CONTENT
webpage. It shows the differences between the current (January 2010) version and one that appears to include data through June or September 2009. So this is an “Official”
correction (not more incompletely updated data posted on the NODC website discussed in NODC’s
CORRECTION TO OHC (0-700m) DATA, which required me to make corrections to a handful of posts). I have found nothing in the NODC OHC web pages that discuss these new
corrections. Due to the years involved, is it safe to assume these are more corrections for ARGO biases? As of this writing, I have not gone through the individual ocean basins
to determine if the corrections were to one ocean basin, a group of basins, or if they’re global; I’ll put aside the multipart post I’ve been working on for the past few
weeks and try to take a look over the next few days.
Climatologists have puzzled over why global average temperatures have stayed roughly flat in the past decade, despite a long-term warming trend. New research suggests that
lower levels of water vapor in the stratosphere may partly explain the anomaly. (WSJ)
Lack of warming is an "anomaly" now? What a crock! It would and could only be an anomaly if we had every reason to expect warming
when in fact we have none.
A
new report in Science underscores what many scientists have been saying for years, it's water vapor, not CO2, that has been driving global
temperature changes in recent decades. Stratospheric water vapor concentrations decreased by about 10% after the year 2000, slowing the rate of global surface temperature
increase over the past 10 years. It also seems likely that water vapor in the stratosphere increased between 1980 and 2000, causing surface temperatures to warm by an extra 30%
during the 1990s. These findings show that stratospheric water vapor represents an important driver of decadal global surface climate change, yet the IPCC crowd continues to
focus on CO2.
The new report, “Contributions of Stratospheric Water
Vapor to Decadal Changes in the Rate of Global Warming,” by Susan Solomon et al. states that from 2000 to 2009 diminished water vapor levels in the upper
atmosphere depressed global warming by about 25% compared to that which would have occurred due only to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. More limited data suggest
that stratospheric water vapor probably increased between 1980 and 2000, which would have enhanced the decadal rate of surface warming during the 1990s by about 30% compared to
estimates neglecting this change.
The water vapor content of the atmosphere is highly variable, ranging from ~0 to 4%. Approximately 99% is contained in the troposphere but it is also present
at higher altitudes. Increased stratospheric water vapor acts to cool the stratosphere but it warms the underlying troposphere. Unsurprisingly, the reverse is true for
stratospheric water vapor decreases, the stratosphere warms but temperatures near the Earth's surface cool. Previous studies have suggested that stratospheric water vapor may
contribute significantly to climate change, the question is by how much. Limited data are available prior to the mid-1990s, making the identification of systematic changes in
atmospheric water vapor difficult. Because of calibration issues and limited spatial coverage the magnitude of the radiative effects are also hard to quantify.
Global mean atmospheric water vapor. Image NASA.
Water vapor gets into the atmosphere from a number of sources. For instance, water vapor is consistently the most common volcanic gas, accounting for more
than 60% of total emissions during a surface eruption. But it is water evaporating from the surface of the oceans that provides most of the water vapor in Earth's atmosphere.
Tropospheric water vapor increases in close association with warming and this represents a major climate feedback. The condensation of water vapor into liquid or ice creates
for clouds, rain, snow, and other forms of precipitation.
Most of the phenomena that we experience as weather is caused by water vapor. Less obviously, the latent heat of vaporization is one of the most important
terms in the atmospheric energy budget on both local and global scales. The heat energy absorbed by liquid H2O as it turns into water vapor is later
released into the atmosphere whenever condensation occurs. For example, latent heat release in atmospheric convection is directly responsible for powering destructive storms
such as tropical cyclones and severe thunderstorms.
The feedback loop caused by evaporation is simulated in global climate models. In sharp contrast, current global models are limited in their representations
of key processes that control the distribution and variability of water within the stratosphere. There is deep convection that affects the temperatures at which air enters the
stratosphere, which results in drying. According to the research article: “Current global climate models simulate lower stratospheric temperature trends poorly and even
up-to-date stratospheric chemistry-climate models do not consistently reproduce tropical tropopause minimum temperatures or recently observed changes in stratospheric water
vapor.”
Layers of the atmosphere. Image UCAR.
The tropopause is the boundary between the troposphere, the lowest portion of the atmosphere, and the stratosphere, the second major atmospheric layer. Going
upward from the surface, it is the point where air ceases to cool with height. More formally, it is the region of the atmosphere where the lapse rate—the rate at which
temperature decreases with height—changes from positive to negative. In the stratosphere the warmer layers are higher up and cooler layers farther down. This is the reverse
of the troposphere, which is cooler higher up and warmer farther down. How water vapor gets from the lower atmosphere into the stratosphere has been poorly understood. The Science
article goes on to state that, in the real world, the contributions of changes in stratospheric water vapor to global climate change may be a source of unforced decadal
variability, or they may be a feedback coupled to climate change.
The research assumed that between 1980 and the 1996–2000 period water vapor had increased uniformly by 1 ppmv at all latitudes and altitudes above the
tropopause. A total globally averaged radiative forcing of +0.24 W m–2 was obtained for this assumed 1 ppmv increase. By comparison, the radiative forcing increase due to the
growth of carbon dioxide was estimated at about +0.36 W m–2 from 1980–1996. “The comparison of these radiative forcings,” the author's state, “suggests that the
decadal changes in stratospheric water vapor have the potential to affect recent climate.”
Observed changes in stratospheric water vapor. Solomon et al./Science.
The authors conclude the paper by saying: “This work highlights the importance of stratospheric water vapor for decadal rates of warming based directly
upon observations, illuminating the need for further observations and a closer examination of the representation of stratospheric water vapor changes in climate models aimed at
interpreting decadal changes and for future projections.” In other words, we need to improve our theoretical knowledge, gather better data, and make more changes to those
inaccurate climate models.
Once again the limitations of our understanding of the mechanisms that control Earth's climate are revealed. Here is a plausible explanation as to why the
period from 1980 to 1999 was one of noticeable warming, and why since 2000 things have leveled off or even cooled down a bit. Because the mechanisms that link water vapor to
temperature regulation are complex and not well understood the climate change clique concentrated on CO2—and it has become obvious that treating CO2
as a form of planetary thermostat is simply not a viable explanation. It is no wonder that the IPCC's carbon dioxide centric climate models didn't get recent temperature swings
right. To steal a phrase from American politics, “It's the water vapor, stupid!”
Be safe, enjoy the interglacial and stay skeptical. (Doug L. Hoffman, The Resilient Earth)
The GCMs, and very likely all mathematical models of the transient behavior of the Earth’s Climate Systems, use approximations to the complete fundamental equations of
physical phenomena and processes. This statement should not be taken to be a condemnation of ‘models of’ physical phenomena and processes in contrast to ‘use
of’ the complete fundamental equations for all the physical phenomena and processes. The latter equations are seldom used in complex real-world applications.
I will focus on the mass and energy equations and associated phenomena and processes. Mass and energy are always strictly conserved, and this characteristic must be critically
preserved through the formulation of the continuous equations, the discrete approximations, the numerical solution methods applied to the latter, and the temporal and spatial
resolution employed at application time. At each step in this sequence the conservation of mass and energy assured in the previous steps can be un-done if extremely
careful analysis is not carried out.
Here’s my question.
The changes in energy content and its distribution among the Earth’s systems expected to occur due to all the impacts by humans are relatively small; less than 10
W/m^2. This compares with the incident energy at the TOA of about 1370 W/m^2, and the few hundred W/m^2 of interest at the Earth’s surface.
Are the model equations for mass and energy conservation, including the all-important parameterizations, sufficiently precise to accurately capture to a sufficient
degree of fidelity to the real-world the effects of this small change.
As an example, the expected changes represent less than 1%, more like 0.4%, of the incident energy at the TOA. At the Earth’s surface, the changes represent maybe 1.5%
of the base-level energy flux. The changes in the total energy content ( mass * specific energy ) relative to the content at the base conditions, will be vanishingly small.
I strongly suspect that the Climate Science Community is relying heavily on the fact that at extremely long-range time scales, the radiative-equilibrium concept will
obtain and that at this new state the effects of the very small changes will be plainly evident.
I also strongly suspect that the fidelity of the model equations, at all the steps mentioned above, will never be of sufficient fidelity to the real world to
‘predict’ the effects of such small changes over short time scales.
Thank you for your attention to this question and associated issues.
Dan
Here is my answer to this excellent question!
The climate models work hard to assure the conservation of the global average mass and kinetic energy. For example, the sum over the globe of
the surface pressures at each grid point must be unchanged in order to assure mass conservation. In the context of mesoscale models I discuss these conservation
requirements in Chapter 12 of
However, the conservation of mass and energy conservation on the global scale is a necessary condition for skillful simulations but it is not a sufficient
condition for skillful multi-decadal climate predictions.
In my Chapter 12, I present a set of evaluation requirements which includes the comparison of the model predictions with the observations. In the context of
forecasting the effect on climate metrics due to relatively small changes of radiative heating from human climate forcings, the only metric that (arguably) has shown any
skill with respect to observations is the global average surface temperature and the upper ocean heat content multi-decadal linear trends, but even here, there has been
disagreement in recent years (e.g. see and see).
There is no regional skill on this time scale (e.g. see).
Thus, there remains quite a bit of effort to demonstrate that the multi-decadal global climate models are skillful forecast tools.I
discuss the three types of uses of models in my post
The mult-decadal climate models are effective tools to explore climate processes [ Process studies]. They are
not, however, skillful tools for multi-decadal climate prediction [Forecasting].
Thanks again Dan Hughes for the opportunity to present your viewpoint. (Climate Science)
One of the most ridiculous claims recently related to Menne et al 2010 and my surfacestations project was a claim made by DeSmogBlog (and Huffington Post who
carried the story also) is that the “Urban Heat Island Myth is Dead“.
To clarify for these folks: Elvis is dead, UHI is not.
For disbelievers, let’s look at a few cases showing UHI to be alive and well.
CASE 1: I’ve measured it myself, in the city of Reno for example:
The UHI signature of Reno, NV – Click for larger image
Read the story of how I created this graph here The procedure and raw data
is there if you want to check my work.
I chose Reno for two reasons. It was close to me, and it is the centerpiece of a NOAA training manual on how to site weather stations to avoid UHI effects.
Al-QAEDA chief Osama bin Laden blamed industrial nations for global warming and urged a boycott of the US dollar to end "slavery."
The message, in an audiotape attributed to the terrorist leader, was aired by Arab broadcaster Al Jazeera today.
"All industrial nations, mainly the big ones, are responsible for the crisis of global warming," the message went on.
"We should stop using the dollar and get rid of it ... I know that there would be huge repercussions for that, but this would be the only way to free humankind from
slavery ... to America and its companies."
The tape's authenticity could not immediately be confirmed. (AFP)
Aha! So, if you support and promote gorebull warbling you are working for Al-Qaeda! Likewise if you fail to actively support a strong dollar policy!
Actually I don't get America's money policy: you have next to no interest rate and so who would invest in America when you can't get a return? Australia's policy interest
rate is 3.75% and inflation 2.1% while the U.S. has a rate of what, 0.25% and a government spending like drunken sailors... Don't see why it would take a suggestion from
Al-Qaeda to get people off the greenback. Just my 2¢.
Regardless, some recognize that Al-Qaeda now seeks to use green misanthropists as a weapon of convenience:
Al-Qaida: Global warming fanatics have an unwelcome new ally: Osama bin Laden. Unlike enviro-leftists, the terror master recognizes that the green agenda can cripple the
U.S. economy.
In the Obama worldview, fighting climate change will "finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy in America." In the Osama worldview, it will "bring
the wheels of the American economy" to a halt.
The president spoke those words to Congress last week during his State of the Union message; the head of al-Qaida was delivering his latest rant for broadcast to his followers.
The president and the Democrats running Congress fail to see the dangers that environmentalist extremism poses to the U.S. But bin Laden has concluded it is a powerful weapon
that can destroy us. (IBD)
DAVOS, Switzerland - Emissions trading should not be in the firing line of new banking regulations, said Stephen Green, group chairman of HSBC on Friday. (Reuters)
NEW YORK --The biggest U.S. nuclear-power generator joined the federal government's flagship initiative to clean up coal-fired electricity generation in the face of climate
change, signing onto a project other utilities have abandoned.
Chicago-based Exelon Corp. said Saturday it intends to join the FutureGen Alliance, a U.S. government-backed project to capture and store greenhouse-gas emissions from a
coal-fired power plant planned for Mattoon, Ill. The company's participation could serve as a shot in the arm for a project that's already collapsed once before and suffered
the defections of key corporate members even after being rejuvenated under the Obama administration last year.
Exelon has moved away from coal-fired generation in recent years, but the company sees the large role the fuel plays in producing electricity in the U.S. and says it wants to
support efforts to cut emissions. Comprehensive federal legislation to fight climate change is stalled in the Senate, but Exelon's heavy reliance on nearly emissions-free
nuclear power leaves it poised to thrive if nationwide rules to curb emissions are put in place, making it more expensive to emit carbon dioxide.
"It is critical that we explore the most promising technologies for reducing--and even eliminating--harmful emissions at coal-fired power plants," John Rowe, chairman
and chief executive of Exelon, said in a statement. (WSJ)
INDIANAPOLIS — Legislation that would allow companies to take private land in Indiana to build pipelines carrying carbon dioxide is advancing in the Statehouse as part of
a wider push supporters say is needed to prepare the state for greenhouse gas caps. (Associated Press)
WASHINGTON - Virginia's two U.S. senators on Wednesday urged the Obama administration to carry out a previous plan to lease almost 3 million acres (1.2 million hectares) in
federal waters off the state's coastline to oil and natural gas companies. (Reuters)
WASHINGTON – Naturally occurring methane hydrate may represent an enormous source of methane, the main component of natural gas, and could ultimately augment conventional
natural gas supplies, says a new congressionally mandated report from the National Research Council. Although a number of challenges require attention before commercial
production can be realized, no technical challenges have been identified as insurmountable. Moreover, the U.S. Department of Energy's Methane Hydrate Research and Development
Program has made considerable progress in the past five years toward understanding and developing methane hydrate as a possible energy resource. (National Academy of Sciences)
President Obama, who called for a "new generation" of nuclear power plants in his State of the Union address Wednesday, is quickly moving forward. He created a
panel Friday to recommend ways to dispose of used nuclear fuel and is expected Monday to propose tripling loan guarantees for new plant construction.
Obama's pitch to expand U.S. nuclear power is seen by some members of Congress and analysts as an effort to win GOP support for his legislation to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, passed by the House of Representatives last year but pending in the Senate. (Greenhouse)
The Government is drawing up plans for a wholesale reform of Britain’s energy markets that could wind back the clock on 12 years of deregulation.
In an interview with The Times, Ed Miliband, the Energy and Climate Change Secretary, said that Britain’s existing, highly liberalised market regime, introduced under Labour
in 1998, was failing to deliver the investment needed to cut UK carbon emissions by more than a third by 2020. (The Times)
The New York Times dutifully featured this week two media events primed to gin up public—and Congressional—support for industrial wind technology.
The first was a “study“ by
the Department of Energy and authored primarily by David Corbus of the National Renewable Energy Lab. It claims that, for a startup cost of around $100 billion public dollars,
“wind could displace coal and natural gas for 20 to 30 percent of the electricity used in the eastern two-thirds of the United States by 2024.” Corbus acknowledged that
such an enterprise would require substantial grid modification but said the $100 billion was “really, really small compared to other costs,” which the Times failed
to identify.
A few days later, the paper of record ballyhooed the annual
report of the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), which touted the growth of wind last year and projected that the country would soon get 2 percent of its
electricity from wind energy. The report fretted about the American wind gap with Europe, which AWEA alleged gets 5 percent of its electricity from wind, compared to only
about 1 percent in the USA, while stating “Denmark has essentially achieved that goal already, and sometimes produces more wind power than it can use.”
AWEA’s stalking horse for this PR event, energy consultant Tim Stephure, said, “By 2020 wind’s installed capacity could be five times higher than it is today, reaching
about 180,000 megawatts.”
To achieve this goal, from its present base of 35,000 wind turbines and an installed capacity of about 35,000 MW, the industry must build, in each of the next ten
years, an installed capacity of 14,500 MW. This is pure speculation and, more accurately, nonsense.
Moreover, just to reach 2 percent of the nation’s electricity with existing wind capacity, current projects must produce at a capacity factor of 58 percent,
their theoretical maximum, versus the current national average capacity factor of 28 percent.
Denmark’s Wind Indulgence
What about Denmark? As Danish engineer Hugh Sharman has noted, his country’s wind extravagance is made possible by a relatively huge Scandinavian
“sink” in which the Danes dump their considerable excess wind. And if that sink did not have hydro as its principal source of power, Denmark would be awash
in both carbon dioxide emissions and wind turbine output, which could severely disrupt its grid and cause stultifying brownouts or blackouts.
The Global Wind Energy Council [yet another wind advocacy group working in (mis)informational cahoots with AWEA] maintains
that for 2008, wind will satisfy “about 4.2% of EU demand in an average wind year,” saving “about 100 tons of CO2 each year.”
This is poppycock. The capacity factor for installed European wind is about 20 percent. Consequently, the 24 GW of installed German wind, for example, is only producing an
annual average of 5 GW to service that country’s demand. Touting the installed capacity of wind projects, without referencing their actual anemic performance, is yet another
example of how half-truths mask unpleasant reality. And the thermal cost of wind integration in that country has likely increased CO2 emissions in the production of
electricity, and throughout Europe. As in this country, none of the Brobdingnagian production tax credits for European limited liability wind companies are indexed to measured
system-wide reductions in CO2 emissions.
NREL’s latest bluster for wind can be unmasked by means of an analogy. Would you espouse that ambulances be operated by drunks 20 percent of the time?
Wind behaves just like a very drunk driver, never able to walk a straight line. Integrating either wind energy on the grid or drunk drivers on the highway has enormous
consequences for public safety, reliability, cost, security, and productivity. Not to mention quality—and length—of life. [Read
more →] (MasterResource)
JUST one energy drink can cause "serious heart conditions", a world-first South Australian study has found.
The report has prompted Australian Medical Association state president Dr Andrew Lavender to warn people to limit their consumption of energy drinks to one a day until further
urgent research into long-term consumption of the drinks is complete.
The study by the University of Adelaide, Royal Adelaide Hospital and Cardiovascular Research Centre were published during the week in the prestigious American Journal of
Medicine.
It found "common energy drinks do trigger significant changes, including a rise in blood pressure, increased stickiness of blood and decreased blood vessel function".
(Sunday Mail)
Scientists have long noticed that some of the same triggers for heart disease -- high blood pressure, obesity, diabetes -- seem to increase the risk of dementia, too. But
for years, they thought that link was with "vascular dementia," memory problems usually linked to small strokes, and not the scarier classic Alzheimer's disease.
If the cardiologist's warnings don't scare you, consider this: Controlling blood pressure just might be the best protection yet known against dementia.
In a flurry of new research, scientists scanned people's brains to show hypertension fuels a kind of scarring linked to later development of Alzheimer's disease and other
dementias. Those scars can start building up in middle age, decades before memory problems will appear. ( Lauran Neergaard, Sci-Tech Today)
Forgive us for wondering if Joe Biden had a hand in writing the FDA's recent pronouncement on bisphenol A (BPA), because it sounds strangely similar to his gaffe during the
swine flu scare that travelling on airplanes was completely safe, though he wouldn't recommend it for his family.
Like airline travel, BPA is everywhere in our lives. It's found primarily in such hard plastics as baby bottles and the interior lining of canned goods, but it is also
sometimes present in CDs, dental fillings, store receipts, kitchen appliances, newspaper ink and Blackberries. It's there to help maintain the structure of objects and provides
a protective coating for wires and cans. Without BPA, people would be exposed to more harmful metals and substances.
Nonetheless, BPA has suddenly become ground zero in the endless enviro war against chemicals.
A preview of the BPA battle is available for viewing in Canada. In their book "Slow Death by Rubber Duck," Canadian activists Rick Smith and Bruce Lourie chronicle
how they used the media to terrify soccer moms who then petitioned the government to ban BPA.
In 2007, the environmental activists organized a "baby rally" where they equipped mothers and toddlers with signs reading "Don't Pollute Me." In response to
the public outcry, confused and panicked retailers tossed plastic baby bottles and other BPA-containing products from their shelves. When the head of Health Canada's
investigation of BPA Mark Richardson let slip in a speech to a medical group in Arizona that "exposures [to BPA] are so low as to be totally inconsequential, in my
view," antichemical crusaders pressed the government to investigate Mr. Richardson's bias. He was abruptly reassigned.
In its January update the FDA notes that BPA does not pose a risk at low levels of human exposure. Yet it goes on to recommend ways to limit exposure. Antichemical crusaders
are likely to drive years of opposition through that crack of suspicion.
Most of those calling for stricter regulation of BPA cite a 2008 report by the National Toxicology Program, which said the agency "has some concern for effects on the
brain, behavior, and prostate glands in fetuses, infants, and children" based on low-dose, laboratory animal studies.
Yes, but keep reading. Ignored by the critics are the report's other 320 pages, which mostly exonerate BPA, including the caveat that "'low' dose findings in laboratory
animals have proven to be controversial for a variety of reasons, including concern for insufficient replication by independent investigators, questions on the suitability of
various experimental approaches, relevance of the specific animal model used for evaluating potential human risks and incomplete understanding or agreement on the potential
adverse nature of reported effects." That's all.
Still, a common complaint is that BPA is an endocrine disruptor that binds to estrogen receptors, potentially leading to a host of hormonal and sexual changes in men. But the
National Toxicology study specifically notes "there is currently no evidence that estrogen receptor signaling plays an essential role in male-typical brain and behavioral
sexual differentiation" in humans.
To appease BPA's critics, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences has invested $30 million in further research on BPA's health effects into nearly any
hypothetical link you can think of: behavior, obesity, diabetes, reproductive disorders, asthma, heart disease, trans-generational effects and cancer of the prostate, breast
and uterus.
This is a giant fishing expedition. The NTP, FDA, EPA and European Food Safety Authorities, among other government agencies, all have declared BPA harmless in low doses, with
insufficient research to corroborate links to any of these health problems.
Environmentalists hope that if researchers run more tests, they'll come up with more links. Statistically, the more studies and tests that are run, the more likely that
positive—and false positive—results will turn up. Thus, they ask for tests unto eternity.
Because of the public anxiety the publicity has generated over BPA, it's disconcerting that the FDA plans to seek "further public comment and external input on the science
surrounding BPA" in advance of a reassessment. That means the FDA reassessment will be subject to as much political pressure as activists can produce.
If the FDA wants to further investigate BPA for health effects, then the agency should make sure that it evaluates real science. In the BPA war, that isn't easy. But that's
what a public made uneasy by scare stories deserves. (Wall Street Journal)
GENEVA - The H1N1 flu is still spreading in North Africa, parts of eastern and southeastern Europe and areas of Asia, but is generally declining, the World Health
Organisation (WHO) said on Friday.
The pandemic virus is still the predominant influenza virus circulating worldwide, posing an increased risk to pregnant women and people with underlying medical conditions such
as asthma, it said.
"Activity in general is decreasing," WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl told a news briefing. (Reuters)
SYDNEY - Should airlines charge overweight passengers more if they need an extra seat? Yes, according to more than three-quarters of travellers in a poll.
A survey by travel website Skyscanner ( www.skyscanner.net ) found that 76 percent of people believe airlines should charge a
"fat tax."
Only 22 percent of the 550 people questioned disapproved of introducing extra payments for overweight passengers. (Reuters Life!)
We are already charged by volume and mass ( tried checking extra luggage lately? ), so why not by volume and mass of passenger?
We are all getting fatter. We know this because the Government tells us all the time, in every report, health warning and advertising campaign it issues.
For the past 30 years we've been told to eat less and exercise more, to cut back on calories and on saturated fat and, on the whole, we're doing it.
Our calorific intake between the years 1974 and 2004 decreased by 20 per cent. We are eating about 20 per cent more fruit and vegetables than in the Seventies.
We are doing approximately 25 per cent more exercise than we were in 1997.
But are our waist lines shrinking? No. In fact, a quick glance around most High Streets would suggest the opposite is happening - with even young girls displaying 'muffin
tops'.
This 'spare tyre' of abdominal fat is an accurate indicator of future health problems, such as Type 2 diabetes.
So what is really behind this obesity epidemic? I'll tell you.
We're following Government advice on how and what to eat, but that advice is so wrong it is actually making us fatter.
The endless message of 'eat less, do more' has never been proven using proper clinical trials.
And we've only started to get really fat since governments started promoting the current low-fat health messages, back in the early Nineties.
I'm a lawyer by training and I became convinced that the rise in obesity must be partly due to bad guidance. So I set out to look at the research studies on which government
advice is based. ( Hannah Sutter, Daily Mail)
While it is true that dietary advice and the vilification of fat has been truly atrocious it is not true to say there is no relationship between calories
consumed and expended.
CHICAGO — Paris Woods is hardly a poster child for the obesity epidemic. Lining up dripping wet with kids on her swim team, she's a blend of girlish chunkiness and womanly
curves.
In street clothes — roomy pink sweats or skimpy tank tops revealing broad, brown swimmers' shoulders — the teen blends in with her friends, a fresh-faced, robust-looking
All-American girl.
Overweight parents who simply feed their children too much at a young age are to largely blame for Britain’s childhood obesity crisis, a report will warn this week. (TDT)
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA), the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH), and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) completed a special registration
review of the corn herbicide atrazine for the state of Minnesota.
According to the MDA, “The review finds that atrazine regulations protect human health and the environment in Minnesota.”
“Minnesota's independent and exhaustive evaluation determined that atrazine use, as currently managed and regulated, is not harmful to humans or aquatic life and that it is
rarely detected in Minnesota's public water systems,” said Tim Pastoor, Ph.D., principal scientist at Syngenta Crop Protection. “Minnesota’s findings affirm what 6,000
scientific studies and 50 years of experience have told us. When the science does the talking, atrazine is found safe to use.” (Environmental Protection)
Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder and philanthropist, is to make the largest ever single charitable donation with a pledge of $10 billion (£6 billion) for vaccine work over
the next decade.
Mr Gates said that he hoped the coming ten years would be the “decade of the vaccine” to reduce dramatically child mortality in the world’s poorest countries. It is
calculated that his pledge could save more than 8 million lives.
Announcing the commitment, which far outstrips even the enormous previous donations by his own foundation, Mr Gates called for increased investment by governments and the
private sector to help to research, develop and deliver vaccines.
“We must make this the decade of vaccines,” Mr Gates said. “Vaccines already save and improve millions of lives in developing countries. Innovation will make it possible
to save more children than ever before.” (The Times)
Aid agencies are well resourced and quick to act, but not enough of them appear to be using their power to tackle the long term problems posed by climate change
Aid agencies are first on the scene of many of the world's trouble spots, and often play a huge role in helping communities get back on their feet.
But many of these areas, notably West Africa and South-East Asia, are also on the front line of climate change, more vulnerable than most to climatic extremes.
So when the aid agency boats, planes and trucks pull up at a disaster zone, shouldn't their staff also have a responsibility to think about the impact of climate change on the
adaptations they hope to put in place?
Climate change silence
Unfortunately, there seem to be plenty of examples of aid agencies undertaking humanitarian work which does not take climate impacts into account. (The Ecologist)
Why should aid agencies waste time, effort and resources on the phantom menace.
A spate of volcanic activity may have triggered environmental changes that led to widespread destruction of life in the oceans, according to a new report.
Oxygen disappeared from much of the seas nearly 100 million years ago, wiping out one third of ocean life. Sulphur from volcanoes could have been the cause. Today’s oceans
may face a similar threat because of the warming of the seas and use of fertiliser. (The Times)
Recently we have seen claims against nitrogen fertilizer on the grounds of greenhouse gas emission and eutrophication, now you see them setting up another
assault on phosphates. You see them go after pesticides and irrigation, enhanced plant breeding and any form of yield enhancement, despite the fact these very enhancements
are most protective of wildlands and wildlife habitat (something the whackos pretend to want, although they really just hate people).
Instead of making exaggerated claims about species becoming extinct, NGOs could make progress on issues like deforestation by collaborating more closely with companies,
claims a new report
The continued expansion of palm oil plantations means orangutans are just a few years from extinction, if you accept the predictions of various environmental groups, including
Friends of the Earth.
One group, the Rainforest Action Network (RAN), has gone further in claiming, 'orangutans are predicted to become extinct as early as 2011.'
Neither claim is likely to be true and may in fact be evidence of 'blackwashing', a term used to describe environmental scaremongering and propaganda.
A report published recently in the journal of tropical biology and conservation analysed the publicity tactics used by both NGOs and palm oil companies on the issue of tropical
deforestation.
It is openly critical of groups, including FOE and RAN, for making, 'exaggerated claims in their campaigns...misleading and unverified accusations of avoidable environmental
degradation by corporations.'
It says there are 50,000 orangutans in 54 wild populations scattered across Sumatra and Borneo. And that at least 38 of those populations exceed 250 individuals, the level
needed to maintain a viable breeding population. (The Ecologist)
The bigger question is why anyone would ever take the word of people so demented as to use every means they can, fair or foul, to inhibit human development
and wellbeing. By definition they are the very last source to take on trust.
CHICAGO - U.S. farmers grew record-large corn and soy crops in 2009 but production in 2010 could be even bigger, aided by an El Nino weather pattern that is typically a boon
to the Midwest but less so for growers in Australia and southeast Asia, a forecaster said on Thursday. (Reuters)