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  • US ‘share goal’ to stop Iran getting nuclear bomb

    US ‘share goal’ to stop Iran getting nuclear bomb
    Arab Times Kuwait English Daily
    According to US media, the United States and Israel were behind the Stuxnet computer virus which temporarily crippled Iran’s uranium enrichment at its Natanz plant. The United States is part of a six-nation group which has approved sanctions Along
    See all stories on this topic »
    Peace protest staged by Duluth man, two others sparks political firestorm
    Duluth News Tribune
    Naar-Obed said it’s “cognitive dissonance” that so many would worry about the security at places like Oak Ridge without thinking about why that security is needed — the danger of nuclear materials. “It shows we’re schizophrenic,” she said, that while
    See all stories on this topic »
    A Statement of Solidarity with the people of India
    The International News Magazine
    The US/Indian nuclear partnership has been forced on India through a neocolonial relationship that is demanding the nuclearization of this important strategic ally to the US military industrial machine. We understand that the plight of the Indian
    See all stories on this topic »
    Azerbaijan eyes aiding Israel against Iran
    Reuters
    BAKU (Reuters) – Israel’s “go-it-alone” option to attack Iran’s nuclear sites has set the Middle East on edge and unsettled its main ally at the height of a U.S. presidential election campaign. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu exudes impatience
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • End the flooding misery cycle with a new deal for the north

    These reports are becoming much more frequent

     

    End the flooding misery cycle with a new deal for the north

    Floods have devastated the north of England and Wales again. Build defences and jobs will be saved as well as lives

    Major Flooding Affects Northern England

    With the devastation of a flood scene, such as this street in York last week, ‘comes the spirit of communities determined to get something done’. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

    Flood pictures are miserable and frightening as this week has shown yet again, with more than 400 homes and businesses inundated, most of them in the north of England. But there is another sort of image which the government would do well to consider, especially during a time of relentless recession.

    Flip back through the albums and newsreels to the work of the Tennessee Valley Authority in the US, started in 1933 by President Franklin D Roosevelt as one of his first and biggest responses to the Great Depression. Then Photoshop the grainy pictures of recovering farmland and celebrating small-town communities on to the current backdrop of the swamped Vale of York or evacuated houses in Newcastle.

    This is putting two and two together in a fashion as simple but as justified as the words of the Sunday school chorus from Cliff College in Derbyshire: “The rains came down / And the floods came up.” Every indicator, from the government’s own climate change report to the unprecedented loss of this year’s Great Yorkshire Show in a sea of mud, suggests that the damage will certainly continue and probably worsen. We reporters can copy and paste the sentence “Insurance companies estimate the cost at x million pounds” into our laptops, adjusting only the “x”.

    When you visit a flood scene, you also put two and two together. The stench and heart-wrenching piles of small, familiar possessions, all ruined, are the dominant impression; but with them comes the spirit of communities determined to get something done and impressively knowledgeable about the local causes of flooding: moorland run-off at Hebden Bridge or new housing in the floodplain south of Preston, even a specific, badly maintained pinch in a watercourse at Flimby on the Cumbrian coast north of Workington.

    This community spirit, multiplied 150 times, powers the groups which make up the National Flood Forum. Yet only in July, its chair, Charles Tucker, surveyed the bleak landscape of 294 defence schemes abandoned or delayed by public spending cuts – including one due at Morpeth, which was flooded in 2008 and again this week – and accused the government of “wringing its hands while the waters rise”.

    Wringing out the soaking landscape would make so much more sense: meeting the threat of further flooding with the resource of much-trumpeted localism, and a heaven-sent chance to trial some Keynesian public spending which is tempting politicians as the recession grinds on. Flood defences have an exceptional record in this regard: they are unsuited to private sector involvement, as the Green Investment Bank acknowledges by ruling them out because of the lack of revenue streams – something that helped Roosevelt ward off inevitable cries of “socialism”.

    We don’t have to look back to Keynes or Tennessee to get the point. Hop on London’s Docklands Light Railway down to Woolwich Arsenal and spend a day at the Thames Barrier. This was conceived after the 1953 North Sea floods which cost more than 300 lives in the UK (imagine that happening again), approved in 1965, started building in 1974 and was opened by the Queen 10 years later. It cost nearly £2bn at today’s prices. And everyone loves it, quite apart from its role in protecting the capital.

    Anyone looking for a form of public works which would be popular and involving, the source of many jobs and spread over the English regions with their growing resentment of “London neglect”, need look no further. Vince Cable cast about at the Liberal Democrat conference this week for ways of regaining political ground in the north of England. Here it is.

  • Human Population Growth Impacts

    Human Population Growth Impacts
    HealthNewsDigest.com
    (HealthNewsDigest.com) – Unchecked human population growth could be a recipe for doom for the planet and its inhabitants. And it has reached staggering levels in recent years—the number of people on the planet has doubled from 3.5 billion to seven
    See all stories on this topic »

  • Twenty gas-fired power stations planned for the UK

    Twenty gas-fired power stations planned for the UK

    Campaigners say a new multibillion pound gas strategy will put carbon targets out of reach and deter renewables investment

    International Power Plc's Teeside Gas Power Station

    The new gas strategy, expected to be announced this autumn, would be the biggest construction effort in the power sector for decades. Photograph: Chris Ratcliffe/Getty Images

    Twenty new gas-fired power stations are likely to be built in the UK, amounting to a massive increase in consumption of the fossil fuel, the climate and energy secretary, Ed Davey, has told the Guardian.

    But Davey insisted the expansion – the biggest construction effort in the power sector for decades – would not harm the prospects for investment in renewable energy or in the government’s carbon reduction targets.

    He said: “I strongly support more gas, just as I strongly support more renewable energy. We need a big expansion of renewable energy and of gas if we are to tackle our climate change challenges.”

    Davey is expected to announce a new gas strategy this autumn, which will require the investment of hundreds of billions of pounds in new electricity generation capacity and dictate the shape and construction of the UK’s energy infrastructure for decades to come. But environmental groups and renewable energy investors are concerned that a new “dash for gas” would put carbon targets beyond reach and deter investment in renewables.

    Joss Garman, political director of Greenpeace, said: “Green-lighting a whole fleet of new fossil fuel power stations would cause a huge jump in emissions and blow this autumn’s once-in-a-generation opportunity to replace dirty power stations with clean ones.”

    Davey said the government was planning to add 20GW of electricity generation capacity from gas, between now and 2030. That is about ten times the current capacity for generating renewable energy from offshore windfarms. As of Thursday, when a new offshore windfarm was opened off the north Norfolk coast, the UK had 2GW offshore wind-generating capacity – more than any other country.

    Davey said: “People who see the UK’s energy future as a competition between renewable and gas are misreading the next phase.”

    However, this is in contrast to the arguments put forward by aides to George Osborne, the chancellor, who do see the two in competition – they have insisted that investment in renewable energy was in danger of crowding out investment in gas.

    Each new gas-fired power plant is likely to have a useful life of about 25 years. Davey also supports a target of decarbonising the electricity sector by 2030, so this would imply fitting new gas-fired power stations with technology to capture and store carbon dioxide, either on construction or subsequently. There are no full-scale power stations currently running with CCS technology, which has suffered serious delays.

    Greenpeace’s Garman said investment in renewable energy was the way to cut emissions: “Only days ago Ed Davey and Danny Alexander said they were fully committed to achieving completely carbon-free power in the UK by 2030. Nick Clegg can’t afford to make this another ‘sorry’.”

    Davey attended the opening of the UK’s latest offshore windfarm off the north Norfolk coast on Thursday, a £1.2bn projected called Sheringham Shoal. The major investors in the project are from Norway, emphasising the strong trend for investment in the UK’s energy infrastructure to come mainly from overseas companies.

    Christian Rynning-Tønnesen, chief executive of Statkraft, the Norwegian power utility that has invested in Sheringham Shoal, said the UK’s wind resources and regulatory regime made it the most attractive location in Europe for offshore wind investors.

    The final turbine being installed at Sheringham Shoal offshore windfarm

    The Norwegian company is looking at a huge expansion of offshore wind in the North Sea, along with the German utility RWE and Scottish and Southern Energy. The Dogger Bank could support up to 9GW of offshore windfarms, but this investment is likely to take more than a decade.

    Rynning-Tønnesen said he was seeking new offshore windfarm projects to invest in. But he warned that if there were no suitable opportunities in the UK, the company would take its investment elsewhere. He added that the government’s plans for reforming the electricity market could work, but were still unclear.

  • Southern Ocean warming impact on Antarctic Ice Sheet and global sea level rise

    Southern Ocean warming impact on Antarctic Ice Sheet and global sea level rise
    Bay Area Indymedia
    Climate change is causing the southern ocean to warm and freshen which will melt ice shelves and glacier tongues affecting glacier discharge and producing Antarctic Ice Sheet mass loss and global sea level rise. A new study shows that small temperature
    See all stories on this topic »
    ‘Bubble parade’ planned in Wollaston on Friday to highlight rising sea level
    Wicked Local
    Quincy High School students and teacher Dick Leonard will host a shoreline bubble parade from Wollaston Beach today to draw attention to the effects of sea level rise on the city’s shoreline. The event is from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Students will parade from
    See all stories on this topic »
    High tide for hype on the OBX
    Beaufort Observer
    A newly released report of a study done for the John Locke Foundation by Patrick J. Michael who is the director of the Center for the Study of Science at the Cato Institute cast questions on the accuracy of projections of sea level rise being used by
    See all stories on this topic »
    Ocean Waters Globally Rising, Two-Decades Of Satellite Data Re-Affirms
    Just International
    Scientists have reviewed almost two decades of satellite data to build a new map showing the trend in sea levels. Globally, the oceans are rising, but there have been major regional differences over the period. A major reassessment of 18 years of
    See all stories on this topic »

     

    Web 2 new results for SEA LEVEL RISE
    Sealevel rise mapped from satellite data – Physics Today News Picks
    BBC: As part of the European Space Agency’s Climate Change Initiative, scientists have created a map showing the global annual average sealevel change
    blogs.physicstoday.org/…/sea-level-rise-mapped-from-satellite…
    Impact of warming under accelerating sealevelrise rates – Nature
    We find that the direct impact of warming on soil carbon accumulation rates is more subtle than the impact of warming-driven sea level rise, although the impact
    www.nature.com/nature/journal/v489/…/nature11440_F3.html
  • Venice Lagoon research indicates rapid climate change in coastal regions

    Venice Lagoon research indicates rapid climate change in coastal regions

    Posted: 28 Sep 2012 09:53 AM PDT

    New research has revealed that the sea surface temperature in coastal regions is rising as much as ten times faster than the global average of 0.13 degrees per decade.