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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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jennifer

Feeling Cold & Confused in a Warming World

May 24, 2006 By jennifer

It was all over local radio here in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, this morning … that it was the coldest May morning ever, with temperatures down to -2C. That’s cold for subtropical Brisbane.

As I sat shivering in my little wooden house with no central heating or insulation, I was trying to reconcile this one off measurement and the colour of my hands, with new information on the Bureau of Meterology (BOM) website that says global warming is real, is here now, and that on average its a whole degree warmer in Australia.

Indeed, according to the Bureau:

“Australia and the globe are experiencing rapid climate change. Since the middle of the 20th century, Australian temperatures have, on average, risen by about 1°C with an increase in the frequency of heatwaves and a decrease in the numbers of frosts and cold days.”

But what is perhaps more interesting than this cold May morning in this world of global warming, is that most of the rest of the world has on average, according to NASA, only warmed by 0.6C over the last 30 years or so. I thought the IPCC models said that it was going to get warmer on average in the northern hemisphere before it got warmer down here?

I’ve just found that comment from Gavin at an earlier thread which I interpreted, along with figure 18, to mean it should, in general, not warm as much here in Australia, as it will in the rest of the world, at least not for the moment:

“The basic mistake is to assume that hemispheric temperatures follow hemispheric forcings proportionately. This is incorrect. The biggest factor is the amount of oceans and the effective mixing depths in the southern oceans. This gives a much larger effective heat capacity in the south and so in any transient case the warming is always delayed in the south. This is actually exactly what climate models show. See http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/notyet/2005_submitted_Hansen_etal_1.pdf
(fig 18 for instance).”

In summary, according to the models from our best scientists it is going to get warmer on average in the northern hemisphere before it gets warmer in the southern hemisphere, but according to the Australian Bureau of Meterology (BOM) its a whole degree on average warmer here in Australia in the southern hemisphere when, on average, its only 0.6C warmer over the whole world.

And I just wish it would warm up a bit, today, here in Brisbane.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Dam the Yangtze, But Not the Mary?

May 24, 2006 By jennifer

The largest dam in the world, The Three Gorge Dam on the Yangtze River in China, was completed, and ahead of schedule, just last week. And last week controversy errupted where I live in south eastern Queensland, Australia, over plans to dam the Mary River.

Interestingly the proposal to dam the Mary was not part of the blueprint for future infrastructure development released by the Queensland state government just last year, click here for the full report.

Right now, I don’t really have an opinion on whether the dam should or shouldn’t be built. But I would like some information about how much water it is going to deliver relative to other options including water recycling and desalination.

But I guess a problem for government scientists making forward projections is global warming. I guess there is an expectation that the dam will fill with water, yet the same Queensland government last year announced in parliament that we are going to have 40 percent less rainfall in 70 years (or was it 70 percent less rainfall in 40 years) as a consequence of global warming. [ Can someone find the link for me to the comments by Minister Stephen Robinson?]

For anyone interested in reading some of the opinion associated with a new dam proposal in Australia, I’ve been sent the following list of links by a reader of this blog:

http://www.qld.greens.org.au/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=243
http://www.savethemaryriver.com/
http://econews.org.au/story1_14.php?PHPSESSID=d0ba0bfd1dfdf5bb290ec2517a234e2a
http://www.themaryvalley.com.au/html/cms/103/traveston-dam-mary-river
http://www.qld.nationals.org.au/news/default.asp?action=article&ID=560

It is also interesting that the Queensland government just last year essentially banned dam building in northern Queensland through its Wild River’s legislation. Yet this is where the big rivers are in this big state. The Mary is really a little stream. Perhaps hardly worth the bother of daming?

—————————
About the Three Gorges Dam, according to Xinhua News:

“The concrete placement of the Dam’s main section was completed 10 months ahead of schedule, which will enable the Dam to start its role in power generation, flood control and shipping improvement in 2008, one year ahead of designated time.

After the cofferdam is demolished on June 6, the dam’s main wall, often compared to the Great Wall in its scale, will formally begin to hold water, protecting 15 million people and 1.5 million hectares of farm land downstream from floodings, which had haunted the Yangtze River valley for thousands of years. Upon the demolition, a new landscape featuring a reservoir with a serene water surface behind the spectacular dam will gradually come into being along with planned rises of the water level.

The Three Gorges, which consist of Qutang, Wuxia and Xiling Gorges, extend for about 200 km on the upper and middle reaches of the Yangtze. They have become a popular world-class tourist destination noted for beautiful natural landscapes and a great number of historical and cultural relics. This section of the Yangtze has a narrow river course which is inconvenient for shipping but boasts abundant hydroelectric resources.

… As China’s longest and the world’s third longest, the Yangtze River, together with the Yellow River, nurtured the Chinese civilization. However, its floodings have since long threatened lives and properties of residents along its valley. The latest deluge happened in 1998, which claimed about 1,000 lives and incurred approximately 100 billion yuan (12.5 billion U.S. dollars) in economic losses.”

On the downside I understand more than a million people were displaced as part of its construction and it was to cost about $27 billion to build.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Water

Calling C02 “Life”: New Advertisements from Climate Change Contrarians

May 19, 2006 By jennifer

The Competitive Enterprise Institute has produced two advertisements promoting carbon dioxide (C02) — that’s right promoting C02 — for American television. To watch the video’s click here.

The key theme is that C02 is life giving and not a pollutant. The fact that we breathe C02 out, and plants breathe C02 in, is repeated.

No reference is made to the elevated levels of C02 in the atmosphere as a consequence of the burning of fossil fuels. Is it on this basis that C02 has been labelled a pollutant? What is the definition of a pollutant? According to my dictionary it is something that “contaminates”.

I think I could mount an argument for both sides of this debate.

Beyond the elevated levels of carbon dioxide are going to change climate argument, it could be argued as long as it comes out of a car exhaust or chimney stack it is unnatural and therefore a pollutant regardless of concentration.

On the C02 is natural, “we call it life” side, I would ask the question what is the “correct” concentration of atmospheric C02?

Is climate change a moral issue, as much as a scientific issue?

Over at Real Climate the response to the videos has been more emotional than analytical, click here for the post. Though they make some good points regarding the second video and what’s happening to the world’s glaciers:

“They only discuss one scientific point which relates to whether ‘glaciers are melting’. Unsurprisingly, they don’t discuss the dramatic evidence of tropical glacier melting, the almost worldwide retreat of other mountain glaciers, the rapid acceleration of fringing glaciers on Greenland or the Antarctic peninsula. Neither do they mention that the preliminary gravity measurements imply that both Antarctica and Greenland appear to be net contributors to sea level rise. No. The only studies that they highlight are ones which demonstrate that in the interior of the ice shelves, there is actually some accumulation of snow (which clearly balances some of the fringing loss). These studies actually confirm climate model predictions that as the poles warm, water vapour there will increase and so, in general, will precipitation. In the extreme environments of the central ice sheets, it will not get warm enough to rain and so snowfall and accumulation are expected to increase.

To be sure, calculating the net balance of the ice sheets is difficult and given the uncertainties of different techniques (altimeters, gravity measurements, interferometers etc.) and the shortness of many of the records, it’s difficult to make very definitive statements about the present day situation. Our sense of the data is that Greenland is probably losing mass – the rapid wasting around the edge is larger than the accumulation in the center, whereas Antarctica in toto is a more difficult call.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

More Oil Equals More Fish

May 18, 2006 By jennifer

The 3,739 oil Platforms in the Gulf of Mexico make for great fishing according to Humberto Fontova writing in Brookes News. He claims that 85 percent of fishing trips from Louisiana offshore are to the platforms, that there is 50 times more marine life around the platforms than in surrounding areas, and he has some harsh words for armchair greenies:

“Environmentalists” wake up in the middle of the night sweating and whimpering about offshore oil platforms only because they’ve never seen what’s under them. This proliferation of marine life around the platforms turned on its head every “expert” opinion of its day. The original plan, mandated by federal environmental “experts” back in the late ‘40s, was to remove the big, ugly, polluting, environmentally hazardous contraptions as soon as they stopped producing. Fine, said the oil companies.

About 15 years ago some wells played out off Louisiana and the oil companies tried to comply. Their ears are still ringing from the clamor fishermen put up. Turns out those platforms are going nowhere, and by popular demand of those with a bigger stake in the marine environment than any “environmentalist.”

Every “environmental” superstition against these structures was turned on its head. Marine life had EXPLODED around these huge artificial reefs. Louisiana produces on third of America’s seafood In fact a study by Louisiana State University shows that 85 percent of Louisiana offshore fishing trips involve fishing around these structures and that there’s 50 times more marine life around an oil production platform than in the surrounding Gulf bottoms. Louisiana produces one-third of America’s commercial fisheries — because of, not in spite of, these platforms.

All of this and not one major oil spill in half a century — not one. As more assurance, today’s drilling technology compares to the one used only 20 years ago about like the Kitty Hawk compares to a jumbo jet. The one that gave us the Santa Barbara Oil Spill in 1969 compares to today’s like a fossil.”

What did happen when Hurricane Katrina struck? Where there no oil spills and accidents then?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Fishing

Kangaroo: Not Yet a “Smallgood”

May 16, 2006 By jennifer

Interestingly, 60-70% of kangaroo meat harvested in Australia, goes to feed cats and dogs.

Of that used for human consumption, 70% is exported, mostly to Russia.

It seems there is little demand in Australia for this low fat, and dare I suggest organic, meat.

There is a program promoting the commercial use of Australian wildlife called FATE (Future of Australia’s Threatened Ecosystems), based at the University of New South Wales.

FATE is about to sponsor a study to better understand the market sectors that consume kangaroo in Australia and what marketing exercises would be most effective in boosting consumption and thus boosting the value of kangaroos as a resource.

Quoting from the FATE website:

“FATE has recently been successful in securing funding through the New Animal Industries program of the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC) for a research project being undertaken in conjunction with UTS School of Marketing to explore consumer choice behaviour in relation to kangaroo meat and develop targeted strategies for boosting market acceptance and consumption. This project has a specific focus on smallgoods and other manufactured meat products, as kangaroo is yet to find a significant place in this market in Australia, despite the fact that some overseas manufacturers have embraced kangaroo as a high-protein, low-fat component of smallgoods.

FATE and UTS will interview meat processors and consumers and conduct discrete choice experiments to determine what factors influence consumer choice around kangaroo meat products.”

I wonder to what extent campaigning by PETA and Voiceless has/will impact on consumer choice?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Plants and Animals

Broken Trust, Broken Carbon Trading, Broken Kyoto?

May 15, 2006 By jennifer

Emissions from the burning of fossil fuels are thought to be responsible for the elevated levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide that are thought to be driving global warming. The Kyoto Protocol has been considered an important first step in reducing emissions with European nations agreeing to cap emissions under a trading scheme.

Here’s how it was explained before the market was launched:

“The Kyoto Protocol established clear targets for reducing the greenhouse gases that are to blame for global warming, and flexible and market-based instruments with which to achieve these objectives.

An effective emissions trading system can be a key tool for dealing with climate change. From January 2005, the European Union hopes to have in place the world’s biggest and most effective emissions trading scheme, covering over 12,000 energy-producing and energy-intensive plants across the EU. The scheme will offer businesses a cost-effective way of both reducing their emissions and covering the bill for action to help prevent climate change.

How does emissions trading work? Basically, each Member State agrees a national allocation plan (NAP) setting out the total amount of CO2 its operators can produce. Each plan should be based on a national commitment to reduce emissions in line with the Kyoto agreement. Companies then have the right to trade their allowances either directly with each other or via a broker, bank or other intermediary. Over time, emissions trading exchanges are expected to develop.

… Of course, the scheme’s effectiveness in cutting greenhouse gas emissions depends on the level of trust participants place in it. “

It seems the British were one of the few honest nations, at least they are not now being accused of underestimating their emissions.

The price of carbon was in free fall some weeks ago when it became apparent that many European nations had overestimated their emissions. At least an initial overestimation, rather than a big saving, is the reason now claimed for the surplus of carbon credits which has resulted in a halving of the price of carbon on the new market in just over two weeks, click here for my previous blog post.

Today was the day the European Union was expected to announce the overall difference between emissions and “emissions” and according to Reuters:

“EU emissions of heat-trapping carbon dioxide in 2005 were 44 million tonnes below a quota of 1.829 billion tonnes under the European Union’s carbon trading scheme …

The figures confirmed a Reuters report on Friday that most EU members undershot their limits for greenhouse gas emissions, suggesting the bloc had been far too generous in handing out permits to pollute.

Top polluter Germany moved swiftly to say it would make retroactive cuts to its 2005 allocation of allowances to emit carbon dioxide after European Union figures showed a 21 million tonne — or four percent — German undershoot.”

British companies say they will sue.

According to The Guardian:

“While CO2 emissions in Germany, the EU’s biggest polluter, fell 25.5m tonnes short of levels allowed under the ETS, Britain’s were 31.3m tonnes above its allowances in 2005, the first full year of its operation. Overall EU emissions were 59.2m tonnes short.

[And I thought someone might consider this good news.]

The five UK companies suing the commission at Europe’s second highest court, the court of first instance (CFI), the Guardian has learned, are RWE npower, Scottish Power, Scottish & Southern Energy, International Power and Drax, owner and operator of Europe’s biggest coal-fired plant in north Yorkshire. They are demanding the reinstatement of 20m tonnes of extra emissions rejected by Brussels. Their action, which has come after the government dropped its own legal proceedings against the commission, is expected to be followed later this year by renewed court action between Britain and Brussels because Whitehall is refusing to meet the June 30 deadline imposed by the ETS for submitting its national allocation plan (NAP) for CO2 permits for the period 2008-2012 and has offered the end of the year instead.

… It is understood that the five want the court to uphold the principle of “the accurate baseline” – or allowing governments that submit provisional estimates of emissions to revise these in the light of fresh evidence. Their group also argues that the commission’s reasons for rejecting the UK’s amended NAP had already been rejected by the court.”

So it seems the success of an artificial trading system is dependent on everyone being more British?

Filed Under: Uncategorized 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.

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