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  • Back-to-back La Niñas cooled globe and influenced extreme weather in 2011

    ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News


    Back-to-back La Niñas cooled globe and influenced extreme weather in 2011

    Posted: 10 Jul 2012 08:11 AM PDT

    Worldwide, 2011 was the coolest year on record since 2008, yet temperatures remained above the 30 year average, according to the 2011 State of the Climate report released by NOAA. The peer-reviewed report was compiled by 378 scientists from 48 countries around the world. It provides a detailed update on global climate indicators, notable weather events and other data collected by environmental monitoring stations and instruments on land, sea, ice and sky.
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  • Climate Code Red Great Ocean Road assets at risk from sea level rise

    climate code red


    Climate News

    Posted: 15 Jul 2012 01:08 AM PDT

    Week ending 15 July 2012

    PICKS OF THE WEEK

    The bush is dying, yet still we deny it
    http://www.canberratimes.com.au/opinion/editorial/the-bush-is-dying-yet-still-we-deny-it-20120712-21z1p.html
    Canberra Times Editorial, July 13, 2012
    Australian politicos’ focus on Whyalla earlier this month – will or won’t the carbon tax wipe it ”off the map”? – summed up just how low the national climate change debate has sunk

    Must-See Videos: ABC Interviews Climatologist Michael Mann
    http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/07/12/513131/must-see-videos-abc-interviews-climatologist-michael-mann/
    Joe Romm, Climate Progress, July 12, 2012
    ABC’s Bill Blakemore has a 5-part interview of the most vindicated climate scientist in America, Michael Mann. All 5 videos are posted below with links to their transcripts.


    Scientists attribute extreme weather to man-made climate change
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jul/10/extreme-weather-manmade-climate-change
    Fiona Harvey, Guardian, 10 July 2012 
    Researchers have for the first time attributed recent floods, droughts and heatwaves, to human-induced climate change
    AND
    How global warming is driving our weather wild.
    http://climateemergencynews.blogspot.com.au/2012/07/how-global-warming-is-driving-our.html
    New Scientist, 9 July 2012
    Climate scientists have long warned that global warming will lead to more heatwaves, droughts and floods. Yet some of these recent extremes, such as the summer in March, are way beyond the predictions of our climate models. 

    NOAA releases comprehensive 2011 State of the Climate report
    http://earthsky.org/earth/noaa-releases-comprehensive-2011-state-of-the-climate-report
    Matt Daniel, Earth Sky, 12 July 2012                                                        
    Major cooling factor globally in 2011 was La Nina. At the same time, the report identified “human fingerprints” in more than two dozen climate indicators.
    REPORT
    2011 State of the Climate report
    http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2012/20120710_stateoftheclimatereport.html
    AS
    Continental U.S. breaks heat record in first half of 2012
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/09/us-climate-usa-heat-idUSBRE86811Q20120709

    The World’s Most Visited Newspaper Website Continues to Regurgitate Nonsense from Climate Change ‘Sceptics’
    http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/bob-ward/the-worlds-most-visited-n_b_1667338.html
    Bob Ward, Huffington Post, 11 July 2012
    The website of the Daily Mail, one of the UK’s most popular daily newspapers, has proved once again that some parts of the Press are apparently oblivious to the scrutiny they are receiving from the Leveson Inquiry into their culture and practices following the phone hacking scandal.

    Sea Level Rise: It Could Be Worse than We Think
    http://www.climatecentral.org/news/sea-level-rise-it-could-be-worse-than-we-think
    Michael D. Lemonick, Climate Central, July 12, 2012
    A new analysis released Thursday in the journal Science implies that the seas could rise dramatically higher over the next few centuries than scientists previously thought — somewhere between 18-to-29 feet above current levels, rather than the 13-to-20 feet they were talking about just a few years ago

    ENERGY AND INNOVATION

    How big utilities propose to kill solar PV
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/how-big-utilities-propose-to-kill-solar-pv-81496
    Giles Parkinson, Renew Economy, 9 July 2012
    A couple of nasty figures have been produced in recent weeks that will give energy companies – retailers, generators and distributors – cause to reflect on how they will manage to satisfy their shareholders’ insatiable appetite for increased profits in coming years.

    Climate risks heat up as world switches on to air conditioning
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jul/10/climate-heat-world-air-conditioning
    Stan Cox, Yale Environment 360, 10 July 2012
    The US has long used more energy for air conditioning than all other nations combined – but that’s about to change

    A history of solar – an essential timeline
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/a-history-of-solar-an-essential-timeline-38898
    Giles Parkinson, Renew Economy, 5 July 2012
    Solar power has undoubtedly come in leaps and bounds from nothing more than a laughable, sci-fi concept to a viable energy source. This terrific Timeline below shows some of the most momentous occasions in the history of solar power, right back to the discovery of the photovoltaic effect in 1839.

    Collapse in coal demand claims a US Patriot
    http://www.crikey.com.au/2012/07/11/collapse-in-coal-demand-claims-a-us-patriot/
    Glenn Dyer, Crikey, 11 July 2012
    America’s natural gas boom has claimed its biggest victim so far with Patriot Coal — one of the country’s biggest miners of thermal and coking coal — collapsing with assets of $US3.5 billion. St. Louis-based Patriot filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganisation on Monday, US time. The collapse shows the pressures building in the huge US coal industry from changes being wrought by the shale gas boom.

    How a community solar scheme is turning sunshine into dollars
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/how-a-community-solar-scheme-is-turning-sunshine-into-dollars-53342
    Kelly Vaughn, Rocky Mountain Institute, 11 July 2012
    Years ago, a Basalt native Paul Spencer set out to build an off-grid home not far from RMI’s Snowmass office. Through the process of designing and building his house, he developed a passion for real estate, and became well versed in renewable energy technologies. He began looking into the option of a green development in the Roaring Fork Valley: super-efficient homes powered by renewable energy.

    The World Bank’s Chance to Clean Up Its Coal Act
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-brune/the-world-banks-chance-to_b_1651963.html
    Michael Brune and Andrew S Kanter, Huffington Post, 5 July 2012
    Coal kills. Don’t take it from us; that’s what International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde told a Washington, D.C., audience recently, noting that coal pollution is responsible for 70,000 premature deaths each year in India alone. Shockingly, that is only the tip of the iceberg.

    China finding ways to cut back on coal
    http://www.theage.com.au/business/china-finding-ways-to-cut-back-on-coal-20120711-21w91.html
    Peter Cai, Philip Wen, The Age, 12 July 2012
    CHINA’S hunger for Australian coal is likely to wane as it moves to a more energy-efficient economy, says Australia’s leading climate change and China expert

    POLITICS AND POLICY

    L.A. braces for hellish heat waves while world leaders diddle
    http://grist.org/cities/l-a-braces-for-hellish-heat-waves-while-world-leaders-diddle/
    Greg Hanscom, Grist, 12 July 2012
    Two summers ago, the National Weather Service’s thermometer in downtown Los Angeles cracked 113 degrees F for the first time ever. Then it broke, leaving weather geeks to wonder if the city’s record high was actually even hotter than their tools were able to handle

    Promoting pro-environmental action in climate change deniers
    http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nclimate1532.html
    Paul G. Bain et al, Nature Climate Change, 04 July 2012
    A sizeable (and growing) proportion of the public in Western democracies deny the existence of anthropogenic climate change1, 2. It is commonly assumed that convincing deniers that climate change is real is necessary for them to act pro-environmentally
    RESEARCH PAPERE
    http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/vaop/ncurrent/pdf/nclimate1532.pdf

    Why it would be a mistake to drop the price floor
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/why-it-would-be-mistake-drop-price-floor
    Tristan Edis,Climate Spectator, 11 July 2012
    As discussed yesterday in Climate Spectator and on Friday, the media has been rife with conjecture and opinion about the government dropping the three-year fixed price period and the subsequent floor for the carbon price.

    Temperatures climbing, weather more unstable, a majority says in poll
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/post-stanford-poll-finds-more-americans-believe-climate-change-is-happening/2012/07/12/gJQAh92wgW_story.html
    Juliet Eilperin and Peyton M. Craighill, Washington Post, July 13, 2012
    Most Americans say they believe temperatures around the world are going up and that weather patterns have become more unstable in the past few years, according to a new poll from The Washington Post and Stanford University.

    Vote ‪Climate‬ website and analysis for Melbourne by-election on 21 July.
    http://www.stateelection.net.au
    Our climate is getting hotter and more extreme. Victoria needs clean, renewable energy to replace our dirty coal-fired power stations such as Hazelwood. But Ted Baillieu’s government is doing the opposite, trashing solar and wind programmes and supporting new coal power stations and exports.

    Heatwave in the US turns climate sceptics
    http://www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/heatwave-in-the-us-turns-climate-sceptics-20120709-21rtp.html
    Ben Cubby, SMH, July 10, 2012
    THE tide of opinion is turning against climate change sceptics in North America, according to the head of the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    Lake Macquarie’s sea level notations locked in
    http://www.lakesmail.com.au/news/local/news/environment/lake-macquaries-sea-level-notations-locked-in/2620791.aspx
    David Quick, Lakes Mail, 12 July 2012
    Unlike Gosford City Council, Lake Macquarie City Council is legally unable to remove controversial sea level rise notations from its s149 (2) certificates, even if it wanted to.

    Donna Laframboise and The Delinquent Think Tank
    http://www.readfearn.com/2012/07/laframbois
    DeSmogBlog.
    Canadian blogger and climate science sceptic Donna Laframboise has flown off for a tour of Australia to tell anyone willing to listen that the world’s foremost body on climate change, the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, is something resembling a shambling mess

    Terry McCrann’s outdated carbon tax attack
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/terry-mccranns-outdated-carbon-tax-attack
    Tristan Edis,Climate Spectator, 12 July 2012
    Terry McCrann, business writer for the Herald Sun and the Daily Telegraph, is like a lot of those railing against the carbon tax who fail to realise that their knowledge and training is desperately out of date.

    SCIENCE AND IMPACTS

    Two key reports highlight man’s influence on climate
    http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/two-key-reports-highlight-mans-influence-on-climate-28341
    Andrew Freedman, Renew Economy, 11 July 2012
    The influence of manmade global warming on the climate system continues to grow, with human fingerprints identified in more than two dozen climate “indicators” examined by an international research team — from air temperatures to ocean acidity — for a comprehensive annual “State of the Climate” report released Tuesday.

    Scientists warn reefs at danger due to global warming
    http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2012/s3542103.htm
    ABC PM, 9 July 2012
    A new report has found that more than 85 per cent of coral reefs in the waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands and East Timor are threatened by local human activities.

    Rate of Climate Change’s ‘Evil Twin’ Has Scientists Worried
    http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/07/09
    Common Dreams, July 9, 2012 
    Ocean acidification is moving at a rate faster than scientists had expected
    RESEARCH
    Rising Acidity Brings an Ocean of Trouble
    http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2012/07/rising-acidity-brings-an-ocean-o.html

    Is sea level risk rising?
    http://www.climatespectator.com.au/commentary/sea-level-risk-rising
    Michael D Lemonick, Climate Central, 13 July 2012
    A new analysis released Thursday in the journal Science implies that the seas could rise dramatically higher over the next few centuries than scientists previously thought – somewhere between 18-to-29 feet above current levels, rather than the 13-to-20 feet they were talking about just a few years ago
    AND
    Great Ocean Road assets at risk from sea level rise
    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-07-10/great-ocean-road-assets-at-risk-from-sea-level-rise/4120888
    ABC News, July 10, 2012 
    A study reveals more than $150 million of public and privately-owned assets on the Great Ocean Road are at risk of erosion and sea level rise

    2012 Heat Wave is Historic, if not Unprecedented
    http://www.climatecentral.org/blogs/was-the-heat-wave-an-unprecedented-event/
    Andrew Freedman, Climate Central, July 8th, 2012
    Now that the heat wave has finally subsided, we can begin to take stock of how unusual it really was. There is no question that it was extraordinary in its intensity and geographical scope for so early in the summer season. But was it unprecedented in American history?

    Climate Change May Lead to Fewer but More Violent Thunderstorms
    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/07/120710133009.htm
    ScienceDaily, July 10, 2012
    Researchers are working to identify exactly how a changing climate will impact specific elements of weather, such as clouds, rainfall, and lightning. A Tel Aviv University researcher has predicted that for every one degree Celsius of warming, there will be approximately a 10 percent increase in lightning activity.

  • Japan floods force massive evacuation

    Japan floods force massive evacuation

    Island of Kyushu soaked by downpour for 3 days

    Posted: Jul 14, 2012 1:10 PM ET

    Last Updated: Jul 14, 2012 6:48 PM ET

    At least 20 have died in collapsed buildings or mudslides due to torrential rains in the  Fukuoka prefecture of southwestern Japane.At least 20 have died in collapsed buildings or mudslides due to torrential rains in the Fukuoka prefecture of southwestern Japane. (Kyodo/Reuters)
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    Heavy rains in Japan have triggered the evacuation of a southwestern region, affecting a quarter of a million people.

    At least 22 people have died in the deluge, which began three days ago, according to Japanese broadcaster NHK.

    Japan’s meterological agency is warning of torrential rains this weekend due to a warm mass from the south. In fact, more than 800 millimeters has fallen on a section of Kumamoto Prefecture since Wednesday.

    Evaucation orders have been issued for more than 250,000 people in the Japanese island of Kyushu, as rains pounded the region Saturday.

    Hiroaki Aoki, an official from Fukuoka prefecture, told AFP news agency there have been more than 181 landslides in Fukuoka prefecture, where shelters have been set up in schools and public buildings.

    Most of the fatalities so far have occurred around the city of Aso on the island, where 19 people have died in house collapses and landslides.

    The Japan Meteorological Agency said the city has been soaked with more than 75 centimetres of rain fall in 72 hours.

    Fukuoka prefecture, Japan  Google MapFukuoka prefecture, Japan Google Map

  • NSW Labor vote down Greens deal

    NSW Labor vote down Greens deal

    Updated: 15:56, Saturday July 14, 2012

    NSW Labor vote down Greens deal

    Delegates at NSW Labor’s annual conference have overwhelmingly voted to deny the Greens automatic preferences at elections despite a passionate defence by Left faction stalwarts John Faulkner and Anthony Albanese.

    The motion was carried on the voices, and reaffirmed that Labor would continue to put One Nation and other ‘racist right’ parties last.

    When it came to the Greens, a clear majority of the party’s 850 delegates, including the Left, supported a resolution that ‘NSW Labor should not provide the Greens Party with automatic preferential treatment in any future preference negotiations’.

  • LABOR NSW VOTES TO END GREENS DEAL

    LABOR NSW VOTES TO END GREENS DEAL

    AAPJuly 14, 2012, 10:48 am

     

    NSW Labor general secretary Sam Dastyari has declared the free ride should be over in any preference deal with the Greens, sparking a fierce rebuttal from the party’s Left.

    Mr Dastyari moved his motion in Sydney Town Hall as NSW Greens senator Lee Rhiannon held a media event outside the doors of Labor’s annual state conference.

    As 850 delegates looked on, Mr Dastyari declared: “From today the free ride is over.

    “Delegates, it’s time to redefine our relationship with the Greens party.

    “Today, at this conference we’ll be proposing that the Labor party not provide the Greens Party with automatic preferential treatment.

    “The Greens political party are not our friends, they are not our allies, they are our political rivals,” Mr Dastyari said.

    But assistant secretary John Graham, from the party’s Left, said the NSW Right’s proposal would do more to alienate Greens voters.

    “The NSW Right used to say behind closed doors, we’re having this debate now so let’s have it all out, you can move to the centre, lose a few seats to the Greens, outsource the Left of the party, that was wrong,” Mr Graham said.

    “I welcome the recognition that this is a serious threat, but these Greens voters we’re trying to persuade, imagine them, full of hope, desperately many of them wanting Labor to be just a bit better.

    “Are we really going to win them back by talking about backroom preference arrangements?”

    Mr Graham described Mr Dastyari and Australian Workers’ Union chief Paul Howes, a right-wing ally of the state secretary, as “human headlines”.

    NSW Labor senator Doug Cameron, from the party’s hard Left faction, said while he disagreed with the Greens’ stance on the Rudd government’s emissions trading scheme and refugee policy, Labor should not attack their left-wing values.

    “I say that we should not attack any party that takes progressive positions,” Senator Cameron, a former head of the Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union, told delegates from the conference floor.

    “The type of positions that the Greens take on the IMF and the WTO; my union the AMWU wrote those policies and they plagiarised them so why should we attack them on decent policy?”

     

    AAPJuly 14, 2012, 10:48 am

     

    NSW Labor general secretary Sam Dastyari has declared the free ride should be over in any preference deal with the Greens, sparking a fierce rebuttal from the party’s Left.

    Mr Dastyari moved his motion in Sydney Town Hall as NSW Greens senator Lee Rhiannon held a media event outside the doors of Labor’s annual state conference.

    As 850 delegates looked on, Mr Dastyari declared: “From today the free ride is over.

    “Delegates, it’s time to redefine our relationship with the Greens party.

    “Today, at this conference we’ll be proposing that the Labor party not provide the Greens Party with automatic preferential treatment.

    “The Greens political party are not our friends, they are not our allies, they are our political rivals,” Mr Dastyari said.

    But assistant secretary John Graham, from the party’s Left, said the NSW Right’s proposal would do more to alienate Greens voters.

    “The NSW Right used to say behind closed doors, we’re having this debate now so let’s have it all out, you can move to the centre, lose a few seats to the Greens, outsource the Left of the party, that was wrong,” Mr Graham said.

    “I welcome the recognition that this is a serious threat, but these Greens voters we’re trying to persuade, imagine them, full of hope, desperately many of them wanting Labor to be just a bit better.

    “Are we really going to win them back by talking about backroom preference arrangements?”

    Mr Graham described Mr Dastyari and Australian Workers’ Union chief Paul Howes, a right-wing ally of the state secretary, as “human headlines”.

    NSW Labor senator Doug Cameron, from the party’s hard Left faction, said while he disagreed with the Greens’ stance on the Rudd government’s emissions trading scheme and refugee policy, Labor should not attack their left-wing values.

    “I say that we should not attack any party that takes progressive positions,” Senator Cameron, a former head of the Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union, told delegates from the conference floor.

    “The type of positions that the Greens take on the IMF and the WTO; my union the AMWU wrote those policies and they plagiarised them so why should we attack them on decent policy?”

     

  • Drought leads to declaration of natural disaster in 26 US states

    MORE SEVERE GLOBAL WEATHER EVENTS. CLIMATE CHANGE ???

    Drought leads to declaration of natural disaster in 26 US states

    Decision means farmers who have lost crops in more than 1,000 counties are eligible for assistance from government

    Drought in Texas

    A tractor ploughs a corn field near Hondo, Texas. Natural disaster has been declared in many areas across the southern United States. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

    America declared a natural disaster in more than 1,000 drought-stricken counties in 26 states on Thursday.

    It was the largest declaration of a national disaster and was intended to speed relief to about a third of the country’s farmers and ranchers who are suffering in drought conditions.

     

    The declaration from the US department of agriculture includes most of the south-west, which has been scorched by wildfires, parts of the midwestern corn belt, and the south-east.

     

    It was intended to free up funds for farmers whose crops have withered in extreme heatwave conditions linked by scientists to climate change.

     

    According to the US drought monitor, 56% of the country is experiencing drought conditions – the most expansive drought in more than a decade.

    The agriculture secretary, Tom Vilsack, said the funds were intended to help farmers and ranchers across the country who have lost crops to extreme heat or wildfires.

     

    The declaration will make affected ranchers and farmers eligible for low-interest loans and speed processing of disaster claims.

     

    “Agriculture remains a bright spot in our nation’s economy,” Vilsack said. “We need to be cognisant of the fact that drought and weather conditions have severely impacted on farmers around the country.”

     

    The declaration covers counties in California, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Nebraska, Wyoming, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, Indiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida, Delaware and Hawaii. It does not include Iowa, the country’s biggest corn producer.

     

    The first six months of this year were the warmest on record, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. Twenty-eight states east of the Rockies set temperature records.

     

    Those record-breaking temperatures deepened drought conditions across much of the American west, triggering an early and violent season of wildfires in Utah, Idaho, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico.

     

    The heat also destroyed expectations of a bumper corn crop. American farmers planted more than 96m acres of corn this year, the most in 75 years.

     

    The early spring got the crop off to a good start but , after June’s extreme heat, only 40% of the crop was in good condition, according to USDA figures.

     

    From the midwest to the mid-Atlantic, meanwhile, there were triple digit temperatures, breaking hundreds of heat records. On Thursday, St Louis confirmed 18 deaths due to extreme heat conditions.

     

    “The recent heat and dryness is catching up with us on a national scale,” Michael Hayes, director of the national drought mitigation centre said in a statement.