Category: Climate chaos

The atmosphere is to the earth as a layer of varnish is to a desktop globe. It is thin, fragile and essential for preserving the items on the surface.150 years of burning fossil fuel have overloaded the atmosphere to the point where the earth is ill. It now has a fever. Read the detailed article, Soothing Gaia’s Fever for an evocative account of that analogy. The items listed here detail progress on coordinating 6.5 billion people in the most critical project undertaken by humanity. 

EU must ‘step-in’ to save Copehagen from disaster

admin /17 November, 2009

EU must ‘step-in’ to save Copenhagen from disaster

Ecologist

16th November, 2009

Postponing an agreement on cutting emissions will delay key decisions on providing funding to less industrialised countries for adaption and mitigation, including tackling deforestation

Plans to delay a legally binding agreement on tackling climate change until next year have been heavily criticised by environmental campaigners.

The US has supported proposals put forward by Denmark, which is due to host the climate summit next month in Copenhagen, for a political agreement on greenhouse gas emissions and a deadline for agreeing a legally-binding one in the future.

Greenpeace said any delay would hit vulnerable countries hardest and called on EU leaders to continue to push for an agreement at Copenhagen climate summit next month.

‘When Obama started downplaying the Copenhagen outcomes, did he check with the world’s most vulnerable countries as to whether their survival was now negotiable,’ asked Greenpeace International Climate Policy Advisor, Kaisa Kosonen.

‘That’s certainly not the message we have heard – climate change impacts are already affecting millions across the developing world and they need action now. This is not about time but rather the absence of political will from industrialised countries, which are refusing to take their fair share of the global efforts, and instead continue to postpone important decisions into eternity.

‘EU leaders, including Merkel, Sarkozy and Brown, must immediately step in and publicly oppose this back down from a legally binding climate agreement in Copenhagen,’ said Kosonen.

Report assesses climate risks of sea level rise for Australia

admin /15 November, 2009

Report assesses climate risks of sea level rise for Australia

A new report published by the Australian Government – Climate Change Risks to Australia’s Coasts povides a risk assessment of climate change and rising sea level to Austrlian coastal communities. The report shows between 157,000 to 247,600 existing residential buildings will be at risk from sea inundation by 2100, under a sea-level rise scenario of 1.1 metres.

Related: Impacts of rising sea level a wake up call on climate change | Report

 

The report notes that “85 per cent of the population now live in the coastal region and it is of immense economic, social and environmental importance to the nation. All Australian state capital cities are located within the coastal zone, it is the conduit for our exports and imports, and much of the nation’s commercial activities occur in coastal areas. Large numbers of Australians enjoy the recreational benefi ts the coast provides and it is home to a vast array of treasured environmental values that underpin essential ecosystem services.”

Farmers win changes to carbon scheme

admin /15 November, 2009

Farmers win changes to carbon scheme

Posted 4 hours 44 minutes ago
Updated 1 hour 24 minutes ago

The Federal Government has agreed to exempt farmers from an emissions cap in its carbon trading scheme, in a backflip aimed at winning the support of the Opposition.

It has agreed to exclude agriculture from the costs of the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS) to try to get the legislation passed in the next fortnight.

A terrifying vision of a world devastated by climate change

admin /13 November, 2009

A terrifying vision of a world devastated by climate change

In Gabura global warming is a bleak reality as villagers face rising sea levels, failed crops and devastating cyclone

Oxfam Interactive story : Gabura: From Daily Life to Disaster

A Bangladeshi woman rests in the rain in Shayamnagar as cattle graze. Photograph: Abir Abdullah/EPA/Oxfam

What would your world look like if it were devastated by climate change? In the small, impoverished community of Gabura in Bangladesh, the concept of global warming, often only words on a screen or in a newspaper to us, is an all too bleak reality. The inhabitants face danger from rising sea levels, devastation of crops and the increased likelihood of devastating cyclones.

Antarctic iceberg found floating near Macquarie Island

admin /13 November, 2009

Antarctic iceberg found floating near Macquarie island Australian biologist spots ‘huge floating island of ice’ halfway between New Zealand and Antarctica   Mark Tran guardian.co.uk, Thursday 12 November 2009 13.59 GMT Article history A large iceberg spotted off Macquarie Island. Photograph: Murray Potter/AP Dean Miller, an Australian fur seal biologist, was the first person to Continue Reading →

New Zealand was a friend to Middle Earth, but it’s no friend of the earth

admin /12 November, 2009

New Zealand was a friend to Middle Earth, but it’s no friend of the earth

Lord of the Rings country trades on its natural beauty, but emissions have risen 22% since it signed up to Kyoto

Milford Sound in New Zealand

Milford Sound in New Zealand. Photograph: José Fuste Raga/zefa/Corbis

As the world prepares for the Copenhagen climate negotiations next month, it is worth checking out the greenwash that has followed the promises made 12 years ago when the Kyoto protocol was signed.

 

A surprising number of countries have succeeded in raising their emissions from 1990 levels despite signing up to reduce them. They include a bundle of countries in the European Union, which collectively agreed to let some nations increase their emissions while others (mainly Britain and Germany) cut theirs. Step forward Spain, Portugal, Ireland and Greece — all with emissions up by more than a quarter.