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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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A Round Up of Climate Related Articles from Luke Walker

October 12, 2007 By Luke Walker

Study finds global warming affecting bird migration

Climate change may not be noticeable to all humans yet, but the behaviour of birds suggests the seasons have already changed.

A researcher at the weather bureau has found that some spring migrating birds are arriving many days earlier than they used to.

Short-term targets key to tackling climate change: report

A new report says a 30 per cent reduction in greenhouse emissions by 2020 is an achievable target for Australia.

Turnbull hints at ratifying new climate change agreement

Federal Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull has signalled Australia may ratify the next international climate change deal that comes into effect when the Kyoto Protocol expires.

World energy revolution needed for climate: U.S.

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) – U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Monday the world needs a revolution on energy that transcends oil, gas and coal to prevent problems from climate change.

“Ultimately, we must develop and bring to market new energy technologies that transcend the current system of fossil fuels, carbon emissions and economic activity. Put simply, the world needs a technological revolution,” Rice told delegates at a special U.N. conference on climate change.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Plasma TV’s – Another Victim of Global Warming Hysteria

October 12, 2007 By Paul

Thanks to Luke Walker for links to the following articles:

Government to ban plasma TVs?

Your new TV may soon be a consumer relic

Plans to ban plasma TV’s

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

The CSIRO 2007 Climate Report: an Assertion-Laden Sales Brochure for the Global Warming Industry – A Critique by John McLean

October 12, 2007 By Paul

The CSIRO 2007 Climate Report: an assertion-laden sales brochure by John McLean, October 2007

The report, “Climate change in Australia”, by the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology was released on 2
October 2007 and predicted a dire climatic future. The contents of the report have been widely accepted by politicians, the media and the public with hardly a murmur.

That’s a rather disturbing acceptance of a document that is loaded with vested interests, ignores various
temperature factors, unjustifiably minimises influence of a major climate force and lacks substantiation for
its most important claims.

In short it is little more than a sales brochure for the unproven claim that man-made emissions of carbon
dioxide are the cause of climate changes.

1. It contains a prior assumption that carbon dioxide has caused warming

From the very start of chapter one the report makes it clear that greenhouse gases will be the key focus, and
of course prime suspect, if such can be said of kangaroo courts.

In that chapter we are being softened up for a barrage of assertions and sure enough chapter 3 presents those
assertions by claiming that almost every climate variation in Australia over the last 50 years was caused by
anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide.

The CSIRO presents no evidence for this claim and the weight of its argument is based only on the repetition
of words. Readers are clearly expected to accept this at face value but a wide reading of relevant literature
shows plenty of reason to question it.

Delve a little deeper and the CSIRO report is largely based on the report of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC). Explore the IPCC’s claims and the evidence there is also remarkably weak. First
we have an assumption that temperature data is accurate and that a loose but delayed correlation between the
increases in temperature and carbon dioxide is somehow evidence that carbon dioxide drives temperature.
Second is the assumption that climate models are accurate, which is difficult to believe when even the IPCC
admits that many climate factors are poorly understood.

In other words this CSIRO climate report is focused exclusively on an already-questionable premise and
provides no justification for doing so or evidence to support the premise.

Conclusion

If the 2007 CSIRO climate report makes any claims to be an impartial, thorough and accurate assessment of
the recent and future Australian climate then it does so under false pretences.

It is overwhelmingly biased towards greenhouse gases being the major cause of climate change since 1950
and yet produces absolutely no evidence for this assertion. Some natural forces are ignored and another that
is first highlighted as being linked to historical climate variations is subsequently dismissed as being minor
or irrelevant.

There is only one notion that matters to this report – that man-made emissions of carbon dioxide have a
major impact on climate. Come hell or high water, this report tries to ram that unproven notion into its
readers at every turn. Create climate models based on that assumption, never verify their accuracy and then
wave a consensus of results as if it was proof, that’s the process behind this report.

The report is, by and large, nothing more than a marketing document, one written by people with vested
interests, never subjected to any independent review and gravely biased towards a particular claim.

We would never accept without independent and impartial review an evaluation of a drug written by it’s own
researchers or an invitation to invest in shares that was written only by a company’s sales department so why
should we accept this CSIRO report without similar review?

It is an exceptionally sad reflection on Australian politicians, news media and the public that the report has
been so readily accepted as credible and the predictions treated as near-certainties

Read the full critique here.

The CSIRO report can be downloaded from here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Eat Kangaroos to Help Save the Planet – Greenpeace

October 11, 2007 By Paul

Yes, another ‘brainwave’ from Greenpeace reported in the Herald Sun:

Greenpeace urges kangaroo consumption to fight global warming

MORE kangaroos should be slaughtered and eaten to help save the world from global warming, environmental activists say.

The controversial call to cut down on beef and serve more of the national symbol on our dinner plates follows a report on curbing greenhouse gas emissions damaging the planet.

Greenpeace energy campaigner Mark Wakeham urged Aussies to substitute some red meat for roo to help reduce land clearing and the release of methane gas.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

The Ogre-faced or Net-casting Spider

October 10, 2007 By neil

Dienopsis subrufa.jpg

Introducing another inhabitant of the Daintree rainforest, the Ogre-faced or Net-casting Spider Deinopsis subrufa is cryptically discrete in shades of brown and grey, but once detected is recognizable by its enormous posterior median eyes and 40mm long body.

According to a website examining eyes, female net-casting spiders of Australia have the largest eyes of any spider. They also have an amazing ability to capture photons (particles of light), as many as 2000 times the number absorbed by human eyes.

Perhaps their most distinguishing feature is the peculiar deployment of silk to capture prey. Using comb-like structures on the tibia of their hind legs, they construct a rectangular net from a woolen-looking, bluish-tinted silk with a 400 to 600% stretch capacity. They hold the corners of this highly elasticised net with their four front legs and then wait for prey. When prey is detected, the spider propels itself forward with blistering speed, stretching the net over and around the prey. Once captured, the prey is then secured further with silk fed from the spider’s spinnerets with the hind legs.

Spiders concern participants on nocturnal tours in the Daintree more than any other creature. Some people are completely immobilised by their fear of these fascinating animals. This is not the case with renowned artist Louise Bourgeois, who has created a nine-metre high spider as an ode to her mother, which now resides on the banks of the River Thames overlooking central London.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Plants and Animals

Dolphins in the Anti-terror War: A Note from Ann Novek

October 10, 2007 By jennifer

The US Navy used dolphins in the Gulf War. Dolphins were used to help protect the United States’ 7th Fleet during the Vietnam War. Dolphins have been used by NATO to detect mines and shells in the Baltic Sea and off Norway.

The Russians also have a program with marine mammals:

“Marine mammals can be used to protect strategic installations and in anti-terror operations, Academician Gennady Matishov, the director of the Murmansk Marine Biology Institute, told Interfax.

“In our opinion, the use of marine mammals is a very promising aspect of programs to enhance the protection of coastal installation from terror attacks and in monitoring the underwater situation. Marine animals possess a unique ability to locate underwater biological and technical objects in the environment of natural and artificial noises, and in conditions of complex seabed features,” he said

Read more here: http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/0/28.html?menu=1&id_issue=11728546

But the practice is opposed by the Cetacean Society who wrote with respect to the use of dolphins by NATO in 2001:

“The dolphins will locate with echolocation a small fraction of an estimated 80,000 mines and other munitions, and attach marker buoys for retrieval… The U.S. Navy is proud to show what the dolphins can do… [but] the Cetacean Soceity thinks it is immoral exploitation, similar to experimenting with unwitting servicemen exposed to deadly diseases. It makes us wonder sadly what we don’t hear about.”

Other animals have been used in wars. For example, 8 million horses died during WWII.

Is it justified to use animals in warfare?

Ann Novek
Sweden

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Plants and Animals

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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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