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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Paul

European Commission Cut from Reality? PR from Bellamy and Duchamp

April 20, 2008 By Paul

Three cheers ! At last the peddlers of doom have seen the light : bio-fuels do displace food crops and rain forests !
Starving the poor and destroying biodiversity to give us good conscience as we pour cereal-based ethanol into our tanks is not a smart thing to do. Even Greenpeace admitted it, while avoiding to mention they had much to do with that fiasco.

But Eurocrats are not as smart : “there is no question for now of suspending the target fixed for bio-fuels,” said Barbara Helfferich, spokeswoman for EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas (1).
– In other words, they’d rather cause starvation, and destroy rain forests, than admit they goofed.

Their rationale boggles the mind : “you can’t change a political objective without risking a debate on all the other objectives,” which could see the EU climate change and energy package disintegrate, an EU official said (1).
– It is all very clear : allowing a debate on public policy is what the European Commission fears most ; more than starvation in poor countries, more than widespread destruction of biodiversity, and more than economic havoc caused by their cherished “climate change” policy.

Will we, Europeans, tolerate this neo-stalinist behaviour ? It is not just a matter of bureaucratic arrogance : this time it has become obvious that we are dealing with dangerous lunatics.

The Eurocrats have everything to lose if they stick to their smoking guns any longer. A debate is dearly needed on everything they’ve been doing wrong, from bio-fuels to carbon trading, and from climate change hysteria to the destruction of peat and designated areas by expensive and redundant windfarms.

(1) http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080414/sc_afp/euunfarmpovertyenergypoliticsbiofuel_080414143918

European Commission cut from reality ?

Co-signed on April 20th 2008 by :

Professor David Bellamy
and Mark Duchamp

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Energy & Nuclear

Scottish Skiing Enjoys Best Spring Snow in Living Memory

April 20, 2008 By Paul

Rumours of the demise of Scottish skiing are beginning to look greatly exaggerated.

While many Alpine resorts have closed for the season, thousands of skiers are still enjoying perfect conditions in the Highlands.

Scotland’s five resorts have struggled for more than 15 years with the effects of global warming, and several have diversified into summer tourism. The perfect snow cover at CairnGorm this weekend follows the worst season on record last year.

There is even talk of skiing on midsummer’s day, as visitors make the most of the best spring snow conditions anyone can remember.

The Daily Telegraph: ‘Late snow gives Scots resorts a ski lift ‘

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Energetic Particles Help Explain Polar Variations

April 18, 2008 By Paul

In amongst an article that contains yet another straw-man attack on cosmic rays via the BBC, there is something more interesting reported from the European Geosciences Union (EGU) meeting.

In periods of relatively intense particle activity, some areas of the Earth’s surface in both the Arctic and Antarctic are warmer while others become colder, showing differences of up to 2C or 3C compared to the long-term averages.

In periods of unusually low particle activity, the patterns are reversed.

The mechanism appears to be redistributing heat across the polar regions; there is no evidence for any overall warming or cooling, Dr Seppala added, nor that the scale of the effect has changed over time.

“The results were amazing, and I think it’s something significant that we have to take into account,” commented Katje Matthes from the Free University of Berlin, who chaired the EGU session which saw the new data presented.

“I think it’s rather a local effect,” she added, “and I don’t think it has a big impact on global temperatures.”

Read more here:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7352667.stm

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

A Round Up of Climate Studies from This Week’s Science Magazine: Greenland, Corals, and Phytoplankton

April 18, 2008 By Paul

There are several interesting climate related studies in this week’s Science magazine.

Greenland Ice Slipping Away but Not All That Quickly

Almost 6 years ago, a paper in Science warned of an unheralded environmental peril. Melted snow and ice seemed to be reaching the base of the great Greenland ice sheet, lubricating it and accelerating the sheet’s slide toward oblivion in the sea, where it was raising sea level worldwide (12 July 2002, p. 218).

A new study has confirmed that meltwater reaches the ice sheet’s base and does indeed speed the ice’s seaward flow. The good news is that the process is more leisurely than many climate scientists had feared. Glaciologist Richard Alley of Pennsylvania State University in State College says, “It matters, but it’s not huge.” The finding should ease concerns that Greenland ice could raise sea level a disastrous meter or more by the end of the century.

Read more at PHYSORG.com: Lakes of meltwater can crack Greenland’s ice and contribute to faster ice sheet flow

Coral Adaptation in the Face of Climate Change

IN THEIR REVIEW, “CORAL REEFS UNDER RAPID CLIMATE CHANGE and ocean acidification” (14 December 2007, p. 1737), O. Hoegh- Guldberg et al. present future reef scenarios that range from coral-dominated communities to rapidly eroding rubble banks. Notably, none of their scenarios considers the capacity for corals to adapt. The authors dismiss adaptation because “[r]eef-building corals have relatively long generation times and low genetic diversity, making or slow rates of adaptation [relative to rates of change].” We think the possibility of adaptation deserves a second look.

In the absence of longterm demographic studies to detect temporal trends in life history traits, predicting rates of adaptation, and whether they will be exceeded by rates of environmental change, is pure speculation. Indeed, where such data are available for terrestrial organisms they demonstrate that contemporary evolution in response to climate change is possible (7).

There’s another coral story in The Herald Sun: Scientists find corals flourishing on Bikini Atoll

Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World

Ocean acidification in response to rising atmospheric CO2 partial pressures is widely expected to reduce calcification by marine organisms. From the mid-Mesozoic, coccolithophores have been major calcium carbonate producers in the world’s oceans, today accounting for about a third of the total marine CaCO3 production. Here, we present laboratory evidence that calcification and net primary production in the coccolithophore species Emiliania huxleyi are significantly increased by high CO2 partial pressures. Field evidence from the deep ocean is consistent with these laboratory conclusions, indicating that over the past 220 years there has been a 40% increase in average coccolith mass. Our findings show that coccolithophores are already responding and will probably continue to respond to rising atmospheric CO2 partial pressures, which has important implications for biogeochemical modeling of future oceans and climate.

Read more at Dot Earth: Some Plankton Thrive With More CO2

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

UN IPCC AR5 Due in 2014

April 18, 2008 By Paul

According to Nature, the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report will be out by 2014, IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri announced last week in Budapest. The report from the first working group will come out in 2013, however, so that its findings can be incorporated more fully into the reports from the second and third working groups.

Of course, by 2014 we will have passed the Hansen/Blair tipping points and there will be no summer sea ice in the Arctic, according to Al Gore.

The IPCC also released the TECHNICAL PAPER ON CLIMATE CHANGE AND WATER in Budapest, 9th – 10th April.

We can also look forward to a special report on renewable energy by 2010.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

The World’s Oldest Living Tree Found in Sweden

April 17, 2008 By Paul

For 9550 years a Spruce has survived in the mountains on the Swedish landscape, Dalarna, bordering Norway. This means that this tree is the oldest known tree in the world.

About 20 Spruces have been found in the mountain area that are over 8000 years old. They have survived climate changes due to their ability to shrink to bushes in cold weather and standing / growing erect in warmer weather.

Evidence indicates that the Spruce will be THE species that will give us the most information about climate change, said Professor Leif Kullman from Sweden.

Check out the story (if you speak Swedish) and the photo of the old tree.

Let’s hope Michael Mann doesn’t turn it into a Hockey Stick!

Thanks to Ann Novek of Sweden for this very interesting story.

UPDATE

The Daily Telegraph: World’s oldest tree discovered in Sweden

The tree has rewritten the history of the climate in the region, revealing that it was much warmer at that time and the ice had disappeared earlier than thought.

It had been thought that this region was still in the grip of the ice age but the tree shows it was much warmer, even than today.

The summers 9,500 years ago were warmer than today, though there has been a rapid recent rise as a result of climate change that means modern climate is rapidly catching up.

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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