• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

a forum for the discussion of issues concerning the natural environment

  • Home
  • About
  • Publications
  • Speaker
  • Blog
  • Temperatures
  • Coral Reefs
  • Contact
  • Subscribe

Archives for October 2005

Global Warming for Dummies

October 26, 2005 By jennifer

Several people have emailed me a piece from the Washington post titled World Temperatures Keep Rising With a Hot 2005 by Juliet Eilperin. The piece was published a couple of weeks ago (October 13, 2005) and evidently impressed many. It begins:

New international climate data show that 2005 is on track to be the hottest year on record, continuing a 25-year trend of rising global temperatures.

Climatologists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies calculated the record-breaking global average temperature, which now surpasses 1998’s record by a tenth of a degree Fahrenheit, from readings taken at 7,200 weather stations scattered around the world.

———————-
UPDATE MARCH 17, 2008

The year 2005 did not end up being particularly hot – 1998 is still the hottest year by far. Here is an updated temperature graph from the best available satellite data from January 1990 to February 2008:

UAH_LT_with_IPCC_projections_small 2.jpg
from http://www.weatherquestions.com/Roy-Spencer-on-global-warming.htm

So carbon dioxide levels are increasing, but not temperature? Why? You can read about Roy Spencer’s findings from NASA’s Aqua Satellite at my blog post of March 2008 ‘Global Warming for Dummies (Part 2)’.

And directly from Roy Spencer at www.weatherquestions.com.

[end of update]
——————————–

The piece published October 13, 2005, ends with this graph that doesn’t actually show any temperature data for 2005. Furthermore, it shows that 1998, rather than last year, is the hottest year on record.

temps since 1860.gif

(SOURCE: National Center for Atmospheric Research | *30-year period: 1961-1990)

Anyway, I thought I would do my own quick check this afternoon. I looked up the temperature records at the USA’s National Climatic Centre.

I found some values for the land and sea for 2005 and 1998 and plotted them. This is what the plots look like:

land temps compared.jpg

and

Sea Temp Compared.jpg

Looks to me like it might be anyone’s guess whether 2005 ends up hotter than 1998.

What I am prepared to bet on, is that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels will be higher at the end of this year than they were at the end of 1998, View image (from Wikipedia).

……….
Update: 28th October, 10.40 am, added the ‘source’ reference under the first graph from the link as requested in a comment from David.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Marsh Graziers Don’t Pay for Water

October 25, 2005 By jennifer

According to the Environment Australia website, Macquarie Marsh grazier’s have a saying “Fat ducks mean fat cattle”. Of course all this is dependent on water.

Across Australia there is an expectation that we will all have to pay a bit more for our water, and use water more efficiently.

Interestingly Macquarie Marsh graziers get their water for free as environmental flow.

In contrast the NSW State Water Corporation expects the upstream irrigators to pay for their water and significantly more from next year.

The price of water may increase from $6.6 $8.24 per megalitre to $16.53 $19.49 per megalitre next financial year for the Macquarie Valley.

If the Marsh graziers paid the same as irrigators for their average annual water useage I calcuate they would be up for $2.55 $3.19 million dollars this year and $6.4 $7.55 million dollars next financial year.*

Under current arrangements, however, they pay nothing as the water for the pasture for their cattle is delivered as an environmental flow allocation.

This is on the understanding that “fat cattle equals fat ducks”.

This assumes the graziers are looking after the marshes and the “duck habitat”.

I suggested at my post last Thursday titled Cattle Killing the Macquarie Marshes that there was evidence of severe overgrazing.

Following that post, Ian Mott’s commented that my “single photo of a self selected point in time tells us nothing about sustainability”.

Fair comment. So I am posting a second picture.

I have been given permission to republish a picture from Australian Geographic (volume 77). The photograph was taken in 2002 at the same site as the photograph I showed in the earlier post.

To see photograph taken in 2002,click here.

To see photograph taken in 2005, click here.

Both photographs are of the south western boundary of the North Marsh Nature Reserve. The fence is the line of demarcation between an overgrazed private property and ungrazed nature reserve.

It seems reasonable to conclude that, at least at this site, overgrazing has been occuring for a few years.

It begs the questions, should there be some controls on stocking rates in the marshes and should the graziers get all their water for free?

………….
* My calculation is based on the following: Irrigation water in the Macquarie Valley is currently priced at $6.6 per megalitre ($2.81 general security and $3.79 usage) next year the price may increase to $16.53 ($3.45 general security and $13.08 usage) based on water corporation submissions to IPART Bulk Water Price Review. The average annual inflow to the marshes is 440,169 megalitres. 88% of the marsh area is privately owned and grazed.

Update 26th October 2005, 7.30pm.

* My calculation is based on the following: Irrigation water in the Macquarie Valley is currently priced at $8.24 per megalitre next year the price may increase to $19.49 based on submissions to IPART Bulk Water Price Review. The average annual inflow to the marshes is 440,169 megalitres. 88% of the marsh area is privately owned and grazed. These values relect State Water and DNR charges for general security water. Permanent licences for general security water are being traded at between $1200 and $1500 per megalitre.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

The Environmental Romantics will Change Their Tune

October 25, 2005 By jennifer

Stewart Brand predicts that over the next ten years the mainstream of the environmental movement will reverse its opinion and activism in four major areas: population growth, urbanization, genetically engineered organisms, and nuclear power.

I hope he is right!

Following is the rational in a piece titled ‘Environmental Heresies’ published byTechnologyReview.com:

Reversals of this sort have occurred before. Wildfire went from universal menace in mid-20th century to honored natural force and forestry tool now, from “Only you can prevent forest fires!” to let-burn policies and prescribed fires for understory management. The structure of such reversals reveals a hidden strength in the environmental movement and explains why it is likely to keep on growing in influence from decade to decade and perhaps century to century.

The success of the environmental movement is driven by two powerful forces-romanticism and science-that are often in opposition. The romantics identify with natural systems; the scientists study natural systems. The romantics are moralistic, rebellious against the perceived dominant power, and combative against any who appear to stray from the true path. They hate to admit mistakes or change direction. The scientists are ethicalistic, rebellious against any perceived dominant paradigm, and combative against each other. For them, admitting mistakes is what science is.

There are a great many more environmental romantics than there are scientists. That’s fortunate, since their inspiration means that most people in developed societies see themselves as environmentalists. But it also means that scientific perceptions are always a minority view, easily ignored, suppressed, or demonized if they don’t fit the consensus story line.

Take population growth. For 50 years, the demographers in charge of human population projections for the United Nations released hard numbers that substantiated environmentalists’ greatest fears about indefinite exponential population increase. For a while, those projections proved fairly accurate. However, in the 1990s, the U.N. started taking a closer look at fertility patterns, and in 2002, it adopted a new theory that shocked many demographers: human population is leveling off rapidly, even precipitously, in developed countries, with the rest of the world soon to follow. Most environmentalists still haven’t got the word. Worldwide, birthrates are in free fall. Around one-third of countries now have birthrates below replacement level (2.1 children per woman) and sinking. Nowhere does the downward trend show signs of leveling off. Nations already in a birth dearth crisis include Japan, Italy, Spain, Germany, and Russia -whose population is now in absolute decline and is expected to be 30 percent lower by 2050. On every part of every continent and in every culture (even Mormon), birthrates are headed down. They reach replacement level and keep on dropping. It turns out that population decrease accelerates downward just as fiercely as population increase accelerated upward, for the same reason. Any variation from the 2.1 rate compounds over time.

That’s great news for environmentalists (or it will be when finally noticed), but they need to recognize what caused the turnaround. The world population growth rate actually peaked at 2 percent way back in 1968, the very year my old teacher Paul Ehrlich published The Population Bomb. The world’s women didn’t suddenly have fewer kids because of his book, though. They had fewer kids because they moved to town.

Cities are population sinks-always have been. Although more children are an asset in the countryside, they’re a liability in the city. A global tipping point in urbanization is what stopped the population explosion. As of this year, 50 percent of the world’s population lives in cities, with 61 percent expected by 2030. In 1800 it was 3 percent; in 1900 it was 14 percent.

The environmentalist aesthetic is to love villages and despise cities. My mind got changed on the subject a few years ago by an Indian acquaintance who told me that in Indian villages the women obeyed their husbands and family elders, pounded grain, and sang. But, the acquaintance explained, when Indian women immigrated to cities, they got jobs, started businesses, and demanded their children be educated. They became more independent, as they became less fundamentalist in their religious beliefs. Urbanization is the most massive and sudden shift of humanity in its history. Environmentalists will be rewarded if they welcome it and get out in front of it. In every single region in the world, including the U.S., small towns and rural areas are emptying out. The trees and wildlife are returning. Now is the time to put in place permanent protection for those rural environments. Meanwhile, the global population of illegal urban squatters-which Robert Neuwirth’s book Shadow Cities already estimates at a billion-is growing fast. Environmentalists could help ensure that the new dominant human habitat is humane and has a reduced footprint of overall environmental impact.

Along with rethinking cities, environmentalists will need to rethink biotechnology. One area of biotech with huge promise and some drawbacks is genetic engineering, so far violently rejected by the environmental movement. That rejection is, I think, a mistake. Why was water fluoridization rejected by the political right and “frankenfood” by the political left? The answer, I suspect, is that fluoridization came from government and genetically modified (GM) crops from corporations. If the origins had been reversed-as they could have been-the positions would be reversed, too.

Ignore the origin and look at the technology on its own terms. (This will be easier with the emergence of “open source” genetic engineering, which could work around restrictive corporate patents.) What is its net effect on the environment? GM crops are more efficient, giving higher yield on less land with less use of pesticides and herbicides. That’s why the Amish, the most technology-suspicious group in America (and the best farmers), have enthusiastically adopted GM crops.

There has yet to be a public debate among environmentalists about genetic engineering. Most of the scare stories that go around (Monarch caterpillars harmed by GM pollen!) have as much substance as urban legends about toxic rat urine on Coke can lids. Solid research is seldom reported widely, partly because no news is not news. A number of leading biologists in the U.S. are also leading environmentalists. I’ve asked them how worried they are about genetically engineered organisms. Their answer is “Not much,” because they know from their own work how robust wild ecologies are in defending against new genes, no matter how exotic. They don’t say so in public because they feel that entering the GM debate would strain relations with allies and would distract from their main focus, which is to research and defend biodiversity.

The best way for doubters to control a questionable new technology is to embrace it, lest it remain wholly in the hands of enthusiasts who think there is nothing questionable about it. I would love to see what a cadre of hard-over environmental scientists could do with genetic engineering. Besides assuring the kind of transparency needed for intelligent regulation, they could direct a powerful new tool at some of the most vexed problems in the field.

For instance, invasive species. Most of the current mass extinctions of native species is caused by habitat loss, a problem whose cure is well known-identify the crucial habitats and preserve, protect, and restore them. The second greatest cause of extinctions is coming from invasive species, where no solution is in sight. Kudzu takes over the American South, brown tree snakes take over Guam (up to 5,000 a square kilometer), zebra mussels and mitten crabs take over the U.S. waterways, fire ants and fiendishly collaborative Argentine ants take over the ground, and not a thing can be done. Volunteers like me get off on yanking up invasive French broom and Cape ivy, but it’s just sand castles against a rising tide. I can’t wait for some engineered organism, probably microbial, that will target bad actors like zebra mussels and eat them, or interrupt their reproductive pathway, and then die out.

Now we come to the most profound environmental problem of all, the one that trumps everything: global climate change. Its effect on natural systems and on civilization will be a universal permanent disaster. It may be slow and relentless-higher temperature, rising oceans, more extreme weather getting progressively worse over a century. Or it may be “abrupt climate change”: an increase of fresh water in the north Atlantic shuts down the Gulf Stream within a decade, and Europe freezes while the rest of the world gets drier and windier. (I was involved in the 2003 Pentagon study on this matter, which spelled out how a climate change like the one 8,200 years ago could occur suddenly.)

Can climate change be slowed and catastrophe avoided? They can to the degree that humanity influences climate dynamics. The primary cause of global climate change is our burning of fossil fuels for energy.

So everything must be done to increase energy efficiency and decarbonize energy production. Kyoto accords, radical conservation in energy transmission and use, wind energy, solar energy, passive solar, hydroelectric energy, biomass, the whole gamut. But add them all up and it’s still only a fraction of enough. Massive carbon “sequestration” (extraction) from the atmosphere, perhaps via biotech, is a widely held hope, but it’s just a hope. The only technology ready to fill the gap and stop the carbon dioxide loading of the atmosphere is nuclear power.

Nuclear certainly has problems-accidents, waste storage, high construction costs, and the possible use of its fuel in weapons. It also has advantages besides the overwhelming one of being atmospherically clean. The industry is mature, with a half-century of experience and ever improved engineering behind it. Problematic early reactors like the ones at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl can be supplanted by new, smaller-scale, meltdown-proof reactors like the ones that use the pebble-bed design. Nuclear power plants are very high yield, with low-cost fuel. Finally, they offer the best avenue to a “hydrogen economy”, combining high energy and high heat in one place for optimal hydrogen generation.

The storage of radioactive waste is a surmountable problem (see “A New Vision for Nuclear Waste”, December 2004). Many reactors now have fields of dry-storage casks nearby. Those casks are transportable. It would be prudent to move them into well-guarded centralized locations. Many nations address the waste storage problem by reprocessing their spent fuel, but that has the side effect of producing material that can be used in weapons. One solution would be a global supplier of reactor fuel, which takes back spent fuel from customers around the world for reprocessing. That’s the kind of idea that can go from “Impractical!” to “Necessary!” in a season, depending on world events.

The environmental movement has a quasi-religious aversion to nuclear energy. The few prominent environmentalists who have spoken out in its favor-Gaia theorist James Lovelock, Greenpeace cofounder Patrick Moore, Friend of the Earth Hugh Montefiore-have been privately anathematized by other environmentalists. Public excoriation, however, would invite public debate, which so far has not been welcome.

Nuclear could go either way. It would take only one more Chernobyl-type event in Russia’s older reactors (all too possible, given the poor state of oversight there) to make the nuclear taboo permanent, to the great detriment of the world’s atmospheric health. Everything depends on getting new and better nuclear technology designed and built.

Years ago, environmentalists hated cars and wanted to ban them. Then physicist Amory Lovins came along, saw that the automobile was the perfect leverage point for large-scale energy conservation, and set about designing and promoting drastically more efficient cars. Gas-electric hybrid vehicles are now on the road, performing public good. The United States, Lovins says, can be the Saudi Arabia of nega-watts: Americans are so wasteful of energy that their conservation efforts can have an enormous effect. Single-handedly, Lovins converted the environmental movement from loathing of the auto industry to fruitful engagement with it.

Someone could do the same with nuclear power plants. Lovins refuses to. The field is open, and the need is great.

Within the environmental movement, scientists are the radical minority leading the way. They are already transforming the perspective on urbanization and population growth. But their radicalism and leadership will have to increase if humanity is to harness green biotech and step up to its responsibilities for the global climate. The romantics are right, after all: we are indivisible from the earth’s natural systems.

End.

The environment movement in Australia is behind the US in its approach to wild fires. But the coronial inquiry into the Canberra fires which restarted on the 17th of this month may change all of that.

I like Brand’s description of scientists. But so many of our celebrity scientists and science managers and science communicators fit his description of environmental romantics.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Philosophy

Food Fashion & Fisheries

October 24, 2005 By jennifer

There is much ‘food for thought’ in the following piece, from ABC Online:

Marine historians picking through 200,000 US restaurant menus since the 1850s, schooner logs and archaeological sites are finding that capricious human tastes have let some species thrive while other stocks have been over-fished for centuries.

Americans scorned lobster until the 1880s while the ancient Romans loved fish so much that their catches depleted the Mediterranean, according to the study that may give clues about how to restore damaged world fish stocks.

“We can only model the future of the oceans based on past evidence,” said Poul Holm, a Danish environmental researcher who is leading a team of about 80 experts in an international project on the History of Marine Animal Populations.

US restaurant menu prices back 150 years, for instance, chart sometimes inexplicable swings in tastes and prices of seafood including swordfish, lobster, abalone, oysters, halibut, haddock and sole.

“Back in the 1860s no one wanted to eat lobster,” said Glenn Jones, a researcher at Texas A&M University at Galveston, who leads the menu project.

Giant lobsters weighing nine kilograms were common in New England.

Read more here ….

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Fishing

Fewer Wars, More Activism

October 24, 2005 By jennifer

A fascinating report titled the Human Security Report was published last week by Oxford University Press. It documents a dramatic decline in the number of wars, genocides and human rights abuse over the past decade. The Report argues that the single most compelling explanation for these changes is found in the unprecedented upsurge of international activism, spearheaded by the UN, which took place in the wake of the Cold War.

The following two graphs have been copied from the report:

wars total.jpg

civil wars.jpg

The 1960s and 1970s also saw the rise of environmental activism and the birth of Greenpeace and WWF with people like Bob Hunter sailing off to war for whales.

As I see it a percentage of the population are natural ‘warriors’. Can environmental activism replace war for this percentage of the population?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: War

Polar Bears on Thin Ice?

October 23, 2005 By jennifer

Yesterday I visited popular theme park Dreamworld at Queensland’s Gold Coast. The visit was to celebrate a 10 year old’s birthday. The highlight for her was the Giant Drop.

We also visited Tiger Island and enjoyed a movie about grizzly and polar bears called ‘The Bears’ shown at the Imax theatre. The photography was spectacular and included grizzly bears catching salmon.

Towards the end of the movie we were told that the survival of polar bears was threatened by global warming. We were told that as a consequence of warmer springs, the ice sheets were thinning earlier than usual at the Arctic and as a consequence the seal hunting season was shorter and bears were losing weight.

Polar bears use sea ice as a platform for hunting ringed seals. Late spring is considered a key hunting period when there are usually lots of fat recently weaned seal pups.

The idea that polar bears are withering away as a consequence of global warming gained prominance following the release of a WWF Report in 2002 titled Polar Bears at Risk. The WWF Report relied on a research paper by Stirling et al titled Long-term trends in the population ecology of polar bears in western Hudson Bay in relation to climate change, Artic, Volume 52, Pages 294-306.

This peer reviewed article concludes:

From 1981 through 1998, the condition of adult male and female polar bears has declined significantly in western Hudson Bay, as have natality and the proportion of yearling cubs caught during the open water period that were independent at the time of capture. Over this same period, the breakup of the sea ice on western Hudson Bay has been occurring earlier. There was a significant positive relationship between the time of breakup and the condition of adult females (i.e., the earlier the breakup, the poorer the condition of the bears). The trend toward earlier breakup was also correlated with rising spring air temperatures over the study area from 1950 to 1990. We suggest that the proximate cause of the decline in physical and reproductive parameters of polar bears in western Hudson Bay over the last 19 years has been a trend toward earlier breakup, which has caused the bears to come ashore in progressively poorer condition. The ultimate factor responsible for the earlier breakup in western Hudson Bay appears to be a long-term warming trend in April-June atmospheric temperatures.

While the western Hudson Bay bears appear to be a bit thinner today than they were 20-odd years ago, there has not been a corresponding decline in population numbers. WWF and others acknowledge that the western Hudson Bay population is stable at about 1,200 polar bears.

There are thought to be about 22,000 polar bears worldwide with about 60 percent in Canada. Most bear populations are thought to be stable or increasing in number. Historically hunting has impacted on population numbers and over-harvesting is still considered the main threat to polar bears.

I recently found this site that includes some photographs and a map of the arctic and where to find polar bears,
http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/arctic-map/ .

While it is important to note that western Hudson Bay bears have been losing weight, and that from 1979 to 1998 the trend has been towards an earlier breakup of ice and thus a loss of ‘feeding platforms’ for the resident bears, the evidence is hardly adequate to conclude global warming will result in the extinction of polar bears.

It is interesting to note that the mean time of freeze-up did not change. Furthermore, in eastern Hudson Bay temperatures have been cooling over the same period that they have been warming in the west and the ice has not been breaking up earlier in spring in the east. The total ice cover for Hudson Bay (east and west) did not decline over the study period. Furthermore a distinction should perhaps be made between global warming and climate change?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Plants and Animals

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 8
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Comments

  • Ian Thomson on Vax-ed as Sick as Unvax-ed, Amongst My Friends
  • Dave Ross on Vax-ed as Sick as Unvax-ed, Amongst My Friends
  • Dave Ross on Vax-ed as Sick as Unvax-ed, Amongst My Friends
  • Alex on Incarceration Nation: Frightened of Ivermectin, and Dihydrogen monoxide
  • Wilhelm Grimm III on Incarceration Nation: Frightened of Ivermectin, and Dihydrogen monoxide

Subscribe For News Updates

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

October 2005
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  
« Sep   Nov »

Archives

Footer

About Me

Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

Subscribe For News Updates

Subscribe Me

Contact Me

To get in touch with Jennifer call 0418873222 or international call +61418873222.

Email: jennifermarohasy at gmail.com

Connect With Me

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2014 - 2018 Jennifer Marohasy. All rights reserved. | Legal

Website by 46digital