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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Archives for December 2008

Store Carbon as Biochar

December 22, 2008 By Charlotte Ramotswe

One solution to “carbon pollution” is biochar, but according to the Australian government’s policy on emissions trading, the science of biochar is not fully developed – so it can’t be included in any emissions trading scheme. 

According to Environmental Scientist, Professor Syd Shea:

Biochar is a fine-grained, highly porous charcoal that helps soils retain nutrients and water. The carbon in biochar resists degradation and sequesters carbon in soils for hundreds to thousands of years, providing a potentially powerful tool for mitigating anthropogenic climate change. When the biochar is made from agricultural and plantation wastes that would otherwise decompose within a few years, emissions of greenhouse gasses to the atmosphere are avoided and that carbon is permanently stored in the biochar.

The Rainbow Bee Eater team, named after a beautiful bird that lives in the regions where they work, has been working on biochar for several years. They are planning to implement a pilot scale operational biochar trial on a 23 thousand hectare wheat belt farm in Western Australia in 2009.

[Read more…] about Store Carbon as Biochar

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change, Economics

Trading Carbon as a Belief

December 22, 2008 By jennifer

“Australia’s Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, has failed to see through the vested interests that promote anthropogenic global warming (AGW), the theory that human emissions of carbon cause global warming. Though masquerading as “science based”, the promoters of AGW have a medieval outlook and are in fact anti-science. Meanwhile carbon is innocent, and the political class is plunging ahead with making us poorer because they do not understand what science really is or what the real science is.”

This is the message from David Evans, former consultant to the Australian Greenhouse Office, in an opinion piece first published by ABC Unleashed.  It continues:

“The Renaissance began when the absolute authority of the church and ancient texts was overthrown. Science then evolved as our most reliable method for acquiring knowledge, free of superstition and political authority. Suppose you wanted to know whether big cannonballs or small cannonballs fell faster. In medieval times you argued theoretically with what could be gleaned from the Bible, the works of Aristotle, or maybe a Papal announcement. In the Renaissance you ignored the authorities and simply dropped cannon balls from a tower and observed what happened – this was science, where empirical evidence trumps theory.

[Read more…] about Trading Carbon as a Belief

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Ten Worst Man-Made Disasters

December 21, 2008 By Cohenite

We’ve had the ten worst climate research papers, the ten worst blog posts, and now Cohenite has decided on ten of the worst man-made disasters.  I can’t say I agree with all his choices for the list, but we are all entitled to our own opinions.  So, here goes from Cohenite, with a preamble about global warming and western society:

The anthropogenic global warming (AGW) paradigm is that interference with nature will inevitably produce disastrous results.

Danish Statistician Bjorn Lomborg is castigated for even suggesting there has been progress in humanity’s living conditions and the destruction of nature to achieve this, on balance has been worthwhile.

[Read more…] about Ten Worst Man-Made Disasters

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Australia Needs a National Climate Policy

December 19, 2008 By Bob Carter

THE Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change model of dangerous, human-caused climate change has failed. Independent science relevant to supposed human-caused global warming is clear, and can be summarised in four briefpoints.

First, global temperature warmed slightly in the late 20th century and has been cooling since 2002. Neither the warming nor the cooling were of unusual rate or magnitude.

Second, humans have an effect on local climate but, despite the expenditure of more than $US50 billion ($70 billion) looking for it since 1990, no globally summed human effect has ever been measured. Therefore, any human signal must lie buried in the variability of the natural climate system.

Third, we live on a dynamic planet; change occurs in Earth’s geosphere, biosphere, atmosphere and oceans all the time and all over the world. No substantive evidence exists that modern rates of global environmental change (ice volume; sea level) lie outside historic natural bounds.

[Read more…] about Australia Needs a National Climate Policy

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Still Cattle in the Barmah Forest (Part 2)

December 19, 2008 By jennifer

ON December 1, the first day of summer here in Australia, residents of the little town of Barmah in northwestern Victoria, drove cattle into their forest in defiance of a government ban.  The Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE) has threatened legal action, but so far the cattle are still there.  The forest has historically been grazed and the Barmah locals believe this is important to reduce the fire risk. https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/2008/12/cattle-still-in-the-forest/

Yesterday Police turned up to remove the cattle, residents turned up to protest, there was some mediation, some media interviews, and the Police left without any cattle – they couldn’t find them in the large forest.

[Read more…] about Still Cattle in the Barmah Forest (Part 2)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Bushfires, Forestry

Season’s Greetings from Andrew Bolt

December 19, 2008 By jennifer

I bring you Christmas cheer – the top 10 warming predictions to hit the wall this year…  Read more at Andrew Bolt’s blog.

Filed Under: Humour, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

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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

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

Email: jennifermarohasy at gmail.com

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