• 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 March 2006

Selling an On Farm Environmental Service

March 7, 2006 By jennifer

Australian farmers could soon be selling their environmental management services to the public, such as fencing riparian zones, according to Farm Online.

I am not sure how fencing a riparian zone could be seen as selling an environmental service to the public? Do they mean the public will pay to have the riparian area fenced?

Apparently Agriculture Minister Peter McGauran is finalizing a new system for “stewardship payments” to farmers.

The federal government’s Agriculture and Food Policy Reference Group recently released a report titled Creating Our Future:Agriculture and Food Policy for the Next Generation that recommended government support a new market based program for the delivery of environmental services including a system that:

1. Operates nationally, but be administered at a regional or sub-regional level to target areas of higher conservation value

2. Allow a range of purchasers to participate (such as philanthropic conservation groups or private companies), although governments will be the main purchasers through, for example, a successor program to the NHT and NAP

3. Be equitable and allow landholders to bid competitively for funding on a basis that reflects the marginal value of maintaining land in its current use and the direct cost of conservation measures (such as fencing and maintenance of the area being conserved)

4. Have clear objectives and targets, with funding decisions based on an assessment of the environmental benefit relative to the price tendered

5. Be efficient to run with low transaction costs.

According to a CSIRO “news flash” on 8th August last year, auction-based systems are the most cost effective mechanism for distributing funds to private landholders to improve water quality and biodiversity on private land. This recommendation was based on a trial conducted by CSIRO and the Onkaparinga Catchment Water.

The more tradition method is by ‘devolved grant’ schemes.

Pressure for a new mechanism follows recognition that the state-based vegetation management laws are costing farmers a lot of money.

The financial cost was the focus of a paper delivered at this year’s ABARE Outlook conference in Canberra. The study by Lisa Elliston reported that native vegetation legislation in central and western New South Wales alone would cost the economy A$1.1 billion in today’s terms over a 15 year period.

And just yesterday, according to ABC Online, the Queensland government released its new draft guidelines for the assessment of tree clearing applications for thinning and weed control.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Food & Farming

IPCC ‘Scientists’ Exaggerated, and Then Exaggerated Some More

March 4, 2006 By jennifer

I am concerned about increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels from the burning of fossil fuels. And I am concerned by the many reports in the media about how increasing carbon dioxide levels will drive global warming and that this will harm the environment. Some reports go as far as to suggest that global warming will result in the end of civilization as we know it.

The United Nations is so concerned that it has established the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCC is recognized as a group of scientists from around the world, working to better understand the potential impact of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels on climate and also to the extent possible, to predict future climate.

Obviously central to the work of this group will be predicting future levels of carbon dioxide – because it is assumed that climate will change depending on the atmospheric carbon dioxide level.

Future levels of carbon dioxide will depend on how much fossil fuel we burn, which in turn will depend on how much energy we use – particularly in developing countries with very large populations like India.

Economists, and others interested in the global economy, will also be predicting how much energy different economies are likely to use – because energy use powers economic development.

Large businesses that rely on energy, and most do, will be interested to know what sources of energy might be available in 10, 20 and 50 years time. They won’t want to be investing now in technologies that may be obsolete in a few years time because we have, for example, run out of oil or because, for example, solar energy becomes much more affordable.

So there should be lots of information available to the IPCC group from which to estimate future atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide.

But in the following comment Ian Castles argues that most experts would consider the IPCC’s more alarming predictions to be exaggerated, and that the Panel has failed to consider possibilities that would result in much slower growth in carbon dioxide concentrations.

Ian also criticises climate scientists for putting out media releases that present a more alarming outlook than their own worst scenarios can generate.

It seems that the IPCC and its supporters just have to preach doom and gloom – not what you would expect from a group of scientists.

Ian Castles was responding to a comment and blog post from Phil Done when he wrote:

“Phil,

My objection is not to the paper in Nature or to the efforts of the Oxford team to estimate climate sensitivity. If they’d labelled the co-operative exercise climatesensitivity.net and reported accordingly I would have had no concerns. But their press statement of 27 January 2005 represents the 11 deg. C as a PREDICTION of the increase in actual future temperatures which could occur with a doubling of pre-industrial CO2 concentrations, which according to them is EXPECTED around the middle of this century unless deep cuts are made in greenhouse gas emissions (EMPHASIS added).

This is nonsense.

Projected increases in fossil fuel CO2 emissions between 2000 and 2050 for the six illustrative SRES scenarios for which information is presented in the TAR are: A1B, 132%; A1T, 78%; A1FI, 235%; A2, 139%; B1, 70%; and B2, 63%. Yet for the reference cases only one of these six scenarios (A1FI) projects a doubling of CO2 concentrations from the pre-industrial level of around 280 ppm by 2050: see the details in Appendix II of the IPCC Working Group Contribution to the Third
Assessment Report at http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/531.htm.

If the IPCCs models show CO2 concentrations still below twice the pre-industrial levels in 2050 after growth in fossil fuel CO2 emissions of up to 140% in the first half of the 21st century, why do these scientists claim that deep cuts must be made in order to achieve such an outcome? If they knew what the IPCC findings were, they have misrepresented those findings in their press statement. If they didn’t know, they were remarkably poorly informed for people who are holding themselves out as experts on the prospective change in the world’s climate.

In an earlier posting you asked me whether the range of CO2 emissions is fully covered by the IPCC scenarios. No it’s not. So far as the short-run is concerned, I’ve drawn attention to Warwick McKibbins observation that the IPCC modellers have a methodological approach which effectively means that increases in assumed growth rates dont make any difference to emissions. Its a pity the framers of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change hadnt realised this. They agreed that developing countries ought not to be subject to emissions targets, because of their legitimate desire to increase energy use and raise the living standards of their people. But if emissions arent affected by the rate of growth of output, why would there be any conflict between the need to avoid dangerous anthropogenic climate change and the need of poor countries to develop?

Whether its because of the high growth rates assumed in most of the SRES scenarios or for some other reason, the growth in CO2 emissions of developing countries in these scenarios is much higher in coming decades than in most other projections. Between 2000 and 2030, this growth exceeds 170% for all but one of the six illustrative scenarios (the B2 scenario, for which the growth is almost 100%). In four of the six scenarios developed by the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) and the World Energy Council (WEC), and published in 1998 as Global energy perspectives, the growth in CO2 emissions of developing countries was lower than in any of these scenarios. What happened between 1998 and 2000 to raise prospective emissions, other than the interest of developing countries in seeing high rates of growth written into the scenarios produced for the IPCC?

So far as the long-run is concerned, all IPCC emissions scenarios disregard entirely what the SRES Team described as ‘factors that may be relevant but are as essentially unknown to us as jet airplanes were to Thomas Malthus or 3-D seismic techniques in oil exploration were to John D Rockefeller.’

They ignore the implications for emissions of technologies that are not yet demonstrated to function on a prototype scale (SRES, Box 4-9, p. 216).

The SRES authors recognise that by 2100 we could have hydrogen-powered fuel cell cars that could generate electricity when parked, dispensing entirely the need for centralized power plants and utilities’ (SRES, p. 217) – but none of the emissions projections seem consistent with such a possibility.

Even the lowest of the SRES projections assumes that fossil fuel CO2 emissions in the second half of the century will on average be comparable with 1990 levels. Why? Chakravorty et al (1997) found that if the price of solar energy maintained its recent rate of decrease there would be a massive substitution of fossil fuels by solar energy, beginning in the 2030s and ending in the 2060s, with 98.5% of all coal reserves never being used because solar power had become cheaper (quoted in Lomborg, The Skeptical Environmentalist, p. 286).

In that case, fossil CO2 emissions in the closing decades of the century could be nil.

This is not to say that such a development is probable. But its canvassed in a paper published in a leading peer reviewed journal (Journal of Political Economy, 105(6): 1, 201-34), so it’s part of the range that should have been (but isn’t) covered by the IPCC scenarios.

There is no reference to Chakravorty et al in the IPCC reports.

With respect to ABARE, the Chairman of the IPCC, Dr Pachauri, said in his Note on Emissions Scenarios for use by the IPCC (submitted to the IPCC plenary meeting in Delhi in November 2003) that he was in contact with relevant groups, such as the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) concerning possible [focused meetings and workshops on emissions scenarios] that are likely to be held in 2004. Hom Pant and Brian Fisher of ABARE subsequently (February 2004) presented a paper to a Stanford Energy Modeling Forum (EMF) workshop in which they said that The use of MER by IPCC remains valid and the critique by Castles and Henderson cannot be sustained. Later in 2004 Brian Fisher was selected by the IPCC as Coordinating Lead Author of the Chapter that is to review the criticisms of the SRES.

The EMF paper was published by ABARE, but so far as I know it has not been peer-reviewed. Barrie Pittock cites the assessment of Castles and Henderson in the Pant & Fisher paper in the Notes to his book (to which Rajendra Pachauri has contributed a laudatory Foreword), but he does not mention the contrary views that have been expressed by (among others) Professors William Nordhaus of Yale, Partha Dasgupta of Cambridge, Colin Robinson of Surrey, Warwick McKibbin of the ANU and Peter Dixon of Monash.

In 1995 the Australian learned Academies, led by the Academy of the Technological Sciences and Engineering, said in a joint study that Australia is fortunate in having developed a range of economic modelling approaches that enjoy high respect in the international discipline of climate change economics (Climate Change Science: Current Understanding and Uncertainties, p. 80). Three modelling approaches were identified in the joint Academies study: those associated with Warwick McKibbin at ANU, Alan Powell and Peter Dixon at Monash, and Brian Fisher at ABARE.

In the past year or two, the principals of two of those groups (Warwick McKibbin and Peter Dixon) have given support to the Castles & Henderson criticisms of the IPCC in papers (co-authored with other experts) which have been presented at conferences and subsequently published in the literature. The principal of the third group (Brian Fisher) has said that our critique cannot be sustained, in a co-authored conference paper which has been published by the agency of which he is Director.

It is not only because of my personal interest in the matter that I have the view that it is an unhealthy state of affairs that the IPCC, upon which governments rely for objective advice, has selected two Coordinating Lead Authors of the AR4 Chapter that is to review criticisms of the SRES – the Coordinating Lead Author of the SRES, and an Australian economist who had publicly criticised the C&H critique, and who was the Head of one of only two agencies whom the IPCC Chairman had identified as having been in contact with, on the subject of a meeting on emissions scenarios.

Finally, I haven’t said that economists were shut out of the IPCC. I’ve noted that, notwithstanding my advice that national accounts statisticians were keen to assist the IPCC, none was selected for the writing teams or consulted as an expert. And I’ve quoted Ross McKitrick’s statement that the IPCC ‘appears to have little or no working relationship with the mainstream academic economics community.’

If anything, that judgment appears to me to be confirmed by the IPCC’s selection of an Australian government economist rather than an Australian academic economist for the AR4 writing team.

Ian Castles.

A couple of days ago I was sent a link to a piece written a few years ago by Joseph Kellard that perhaps put this sorry saga in some context.

Kellard was commenting on Professor Paul Ehrlich being awarded the MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant based on a career of exaggerated, apocalyptic predictions that never came true.

Kellard concluded that this happened because of a reversion in our culture to various forms of supernaturalism:

“Our culture is increasingly dispensing with objective reality and reason … environmentalism is a pseudo-science that must therefore engender faith… environmentalist doomsayers are a logical outgrowth of religious apocalyptics, and their believers are just another sect of mystics.”

Does this go some way to answering the question Phil Done poses at the end of his guest post on BOINC?

He did ask, is BOINCing a new western ideology?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Hottest Town: Hottest Year: 1924

March 4, 2006 By jennifer

“I haven’t heard any claims beating this in this supposed summer of all summers”, was the message in an email from a reader of this blog and this link that includes:

“There are a small number of towns in Australia whose names have such a potency and such a power of association that they automatically conjure up images. The name ‘Marble Bar’ is synonymous with mining, isolation and, most importantly, heat.

It is known as ‘the hottest town in Australia’ a fact which is still recorded by the Guinness Book of Records. For 161 consecutive days to 20 April 1924 the temperature in the town never dropped below 100F (37.8C). This record still stands after nearly seventy years.

And they wouldn’t have had airconditioning back in 1924.

As the newcomer to hell said to the devil “Don’t try scaring me with hellfire – I’m from Marble Bar”.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

On Putting Out Bushfires

March 3, 2006 By jennifer

“Part of bushfire fighting culture is that you control lightning strikes by 10 o’clock the next morning or you are in trouble. We have done that over the years and we have done it successfully. We had not lost them before. But nobody seemed to want to put these out. I do not know why. I keep asking myself why, in the middle of January, in the middle of a drought and with the highest fuel loads ever, nobody seemed to want to put those fires out. It is just sickening.”

Val Jeffrey was referring to the January 2003 fires that went on to burn 3 million hectares of south eastern Australia including much of Kosciousko National Park.

According to two new blog posts at HenryThornton.com,

“This summers’ fire season is not yet over but we hope not to see a major fire in the [Victorian] Otways.

The Victorian Government must urgently learn the lessons from 2003 that have not been learnt in the Grampians and Brisbane Ranges, and must apply improved practices to the management of the Otways and other parks in Victoria.”

Read more,

http://www.henrythornton.com/article.asp?article_id=3893
and

http://www.henrythornton.com/article.asp?article_id=3892.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Bushfires

SA Premier Pledges 60% Cut in Emissions

March 3, 2006 By jennifer

South Australian Premier Mike Rann might be listening to the once-banned Solar Shop advertisements in which Tim Flannery says climate change is the greatest threat facing humanity.

According to ABC Online, just today he has pledged a whopping 60 percent cut in greenhouse gas emissions if his government is re-elected on March 18.

He will even introduce new laws to make sure the target is achieved by 2050.

The policy was apparently announced at a wind farm this morning and includes $250,000 to set up a climate change research centre at the University of Adelaide and the installation of mini wind turbines on government buildings in the city.

So 2050 is how many elections away? How old will Mike Rann be in 2050?

(Sorry Joe, but one for Ender.)

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

How Green was My Subsidy?

March 3, 2006 By jennifer

The European Union spends about A$5.6 billion a year on schemes aimed at encouraging less-intensive farming in order to increase biodiversity, improve water quality etcetera on farm. But it has delivered very little tangible environmental benefit according to a recent news feature in Nature by John Whitfield titled ‘How green was my subsidy’.

One of the problems according to the feature article is that “most of Europe’s agi-environmental schemes have very vague goals.”

And sometimes research results indicate that wildlife is not adverse to a bit of farming. For example, one of the first scientific audits of an agri-environment scheme, showed that in Holland a project intended to help ground-nesting meadow birds by delaying the mowing of fields was having no effect – in this region some birds actually seemed to prefer intensively farmed fields.

David Kleijn, an ecologist from Wageningen University in Holland, has spearheaded the research effort to document the benefits in a rigorous way.

This work has concluded that:

“Plants showed the most widespread benefits, with higher diversity on scheme fields in
every country except the Netherlands. Bees benefited in Germany and Switzerland, grasshoppers and crickets in Britain, and spiders in Spain. In cases where the biodiversity went up, nearly all the beneficiaries were common species; only one scheme – a Spanish programme aimed at making arable fields bird-friendly by leaving winter stubble – showed a positive effect on endangered species, one of which was the thekla lark (Galerida theklae).”

The Nature news feature article really emphasis the extent to which Europeans like to mix their nature and farming with the conclusion:

“Such schemes may not be the best way to promote the preservation of endangered species. … Europe might do better to allow some areas to revert to a state close to wilderness while others are intensively farmed, and then to manage the whole system so as to maximize leisure, flood protection, and water quality.

… biodiversity benefits would accrue even if not particularly targeted. But Europeans like farmland landscapes, and will probably continue to try and convince themselves that there are practical ways to keep areas that are rich in wildlife and pleasing to the eye, which also produce cheap food and don

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Food & Farming

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • 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.

March 2006
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Feb   Apr »

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