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  • Input of iron linked to biological productivity in ancient Pacific Ocean

    ScienceDaily: Oceanography News


    Input of iron linked to biological productivity in ancient Pacific Ocean

    Posted: 13 Mar 2012 11:04 AM PDT

    Scientists have found compelling evidence from marine sediment that supports the theory that iron in the Earth’s oceans has a direct impact on biological productivity, potentially affecting the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and, in turn, atmospheric temperature.
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  • Risks to coastal settlements, infrastructure and ecosystems

    These figures may be understated. Dr James Hansen believes Sea Level Rise will be much higher if the Greenland ice sheet melts.

    Risks to coastal settlements, infrastructure and ecosystems

    Results of coastal erosion in Wamberal, Central Coast NSW in 1978. Photo Credit: Gosford City CouncilSince 1788, settlements have been built along Australia’s coast with the expectation that sea levels would remain relatively stable. In addition to significant settlement of low-lying areas, most of our buildings and infrastructure has been designed and built to standards that don’t take into account the changing climate.

    In late 2009, the Australian Government completed a national assessment of the climate change risks to Australia’s coast. The assessment identified the climate change risks to coastal settlements, infrastructure, industries and ecosystems; it found that up to 247,000 residential buildings in Australia, with an estimated replacement value of $63 billion (2008 values), may be at risk from rising sea levels by 2100.

    In coastal areas and in waterways connected to the ocean, erosion and inundation may be key impacts from rising sea levels. Saltwater intrusion into groundwater and freshwater bodies could also have a significant impact on ecosystems (such as Kakadu wetlands) and on potable water availability.

    In the next few decades, areas of the Australian coastal zone with existing risks are expected to experience an intensification and expansion of these risks.

    Towards the end of this century it is possible that all of Australia’s coastal regions will experience systematic impacts from rising sea levels and eroding shorelines.

    Many of the risks from climate change can be managed if we plan ahead. Communities and decision-makers will need early access to information and data to help understand the potential impacts and manage the risks.

    The Australian Government, through the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, has developed a number of products to communicate the risks of sea level rise and to help facilitate access to elevation data. Further information is below.

    Communicating sea level rise risks — spatial maps illustrating the potential effects of sea level rise on key urban regions of the Australian coast for the period around 2100. Areas covered are:

    • Sydney, NSW
    • Hunter and Central Coast, NSW
    • Adelaide, SA
    • Melbourne, VIC
    • South East Queensland (including Brisbane and the Gold Coast), QLD
    • Perth to south of Mandurah, WA

    Elevation data and modelling — a web portal that helps to discover and access elevation data and derived products.

    Landform and stability mapping — mapping tool that provides information on coastal landform types (geomorphology) covering the entire Australian coast. The tool can be interrogated to identify soft areas of the coast that may be vulnerable to accelerated erosion due to rising sea levels.

    Read more about preparing our coasts for climate change

    Find out more about the risks to settlements, infrastructure and ecosystems

    If you have questions about coastal climate change please contact: coastal.adaptation@climatechange.gov.au

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    • Link to the Geoscience Australia website  (new window)
  • Rising Sea Levels a Growing Risk to Coastal US., Study says

    Alert Name: CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS
    March 14, 2012 Compiled: 1:03 AM

    By JUSTIN GILLIS (NYT)

    Flooding that was once exceedingly rare could become an every-few-years occurrence, new research shows.

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  • More disaster zones declared in NSW

    More disaster zones declared in NSW

    Updated: 07:36, Wednesday March 14, 2012

    More disaster zones declared in NSW

    As Hay Shire, in NSW’s southwest, braces for fresh flooding, four more natural disaster zones have been declared across the state.

    Four more natural disaster zones were declared on Tuesday, bringing the total to 53 out of NSW’s 152 local government areas.

    The latest areas to be declared were Bombala, Murray Shire, Central Darling and Hay Shire.

    Residents of Hay, in southwest NSW, were on evacuation alert on Tuesday night as the Murrumbidgee River crept towards a nine-metre flood peak – equal to heights not seen since 1974.

    ‘Although the rain has eased and flood waters are starting to recede, it will be a long time before these communities will be back to normal,’ NSW Emergency Services Minister Mike Gallacher said in a statement.

    The State Emergency Service warned Hay Shire residents, particularly those in low-lying areas, to prepare to flee their homes.

    ‘Given that this region has not seen a flood of this magnitude for nearly 40 years, floodwaters will behave differently,’ SES Murrumbidgee regional controller James McTavish said in a statement.

    ‘It is extremely important for residents to heed the warnings issued by the NSW SES and other emergency service agencies.’

    Elsewhere, residents in Wagga Wagga and Forbes – which have borne the brunt of NSW’s flooding – continued their mop-up on Tuesday.

    NSW Health issued a warning about mosquito-borne infections such as Ross River Virus and Barmah Forest virus.

    ‘These infections can cause symptoms including tiredness, rash, fever, and sore and swollen joints,’ director of health protection Dr Jeremy McAnulty said.

    Ninety-four cases of Ross River virus and 56 cases of Barmah Forest virus were diagnosed in January and February.

    Meanwhile, the NSW government has confirmed it will not be pursuing a flood levy to help rebuild flooded communities.

    NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay last week called on the federal government to impose a levy, as it did in 2011 after the Queensland floods.

    But Treasurer Mike Baird said cabinet had decided the state was not in the position to do the same.

    ‘We discussed this in cabinet yesterday and it’s very clear that we don’t think the state needs another tax at this point in time,’ Mr Baird told ABC Radio.


  • Atmospheric CO2 hit 800.000- year high: CSIRO

    Atmospheric CO2 levels hit 800,000-year high: CSIRO

    Updated March 14, 2012 09:32:28

    Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are now higher than at any time in the last 800,000 years, while the last decade in Australia was the warmest on record, CSIRO scientists say.

    The findings are released in the CSIRO’s annual State of the Climate report, which has been released today.

    The report says Australia’s annual-average daily maximum temperatures have increased by 0.75 degrees Celsius since 1910.

    Australian temperatures are forecast to rise by between 1C and 5C by 2070 “when compared with the climate of recent decades.”

    But CSIRO says 2010 and 2011 were the coolest years recorded since 2001, because of two consecutive La Nina events.

    Dr Karl Breganza from the Bureau of Meteorology says that while 2010 and 2011 were slightly cooler due to high rainfall, temperatures are still increasing.

    “Australia tends to be cooler during periods where you have intense rainfall. But despite that, the last decade was still the warmest decade that we’ve recorded in Australia,” he said.

    “We’ve actually started to see an increase in the amount of stations, weather stations that are recording their monthly maximum temperatures.

    “So the highest temperatures on record are occurring with greater frequency and over greater areas of Australia.”

    Interactive

    See how sea levels are changing near you with ABC Environment’s interactive tool, based on CSIRO data.

     

    CSIRO senior research scientist Dr Paul Fraser says the amount of carbon in the atmosphere has reached 390 parts per million.

    “We find no evidence going back 800,000 years of CO2 levels above 300 parts per million,” he said.

    Dr Breganza says the pace of climate change is alarming.

    “In the geological history of earth, global changes of this magnitude happen very rarely,” he said.

    The report says the projected increases in temperature will lead to floods, droughts, and extreme cyclones.

    And it says global sea levels continued to rise, with the CSIRO putting them at 210 millimetres higher than they were in 1880.

    Dr Braganza hopes the report will convince people the climate is warming and that the pace of change is worrying.

    “Global changes of this magnitude happen very rarely. They happen when asteroids strike, they happen when there’s planetary volcanic activity,” he said.

    “They’re happening now because we’re digging up fossil fuels and basically burning them all. And we’re doing that very, very rapidly.

    “And that transition system has a lot of unknowns in it, a lot of nasty surprises.”

    Topics:climate-change, greenhouse-gas, air-pollution, science-and-technology, environment, australia

    First posted March 14, 2012 07:13:27

  • Tears and a lift home for Clover- Lord Mayor accused of using council car on MP business

    Tears and a lift home for Clover – Lord Mayor accused of using council car on MP business

    3
    Clover Moore

    Tears for fears … Lord Mayor Clover Moore / Pic: Brad Hunter Source: The Daily Telegraph

    BICYCLE-mad Lord Mayor Clover Moore has been using a council car and driver to take her to parliament – in what appears to be a bending of council rules.

    Ms Moore came close to tears yesterday as she said she would be forced to resign from parliament after 24 years because Premier Barry O’Farrell wants to ban councillors from being MPs.

    But a classic conflict in Ms Moore’s two jobs can be revealed, with Ms Moore’s driver regularly taking her – or her bags – to and from parliament on sitting days in a black council Prius.

    Yesterday the driver picked her up from a coffee shop, took her to a press conference at the Botanic Gardens and then drove her to parliament.

    Bully Barry – Moore would give up her state seat if push came to shove

    A spokesman for Ms Moore said she was not breaching council rules and her “daily program while parliament was sitting routinely included appointments related to her duties at the City of Sydney.

    “The Lord Mayor takes action on City of Sydney issues in parliament, and with the Premier and ministers at parliament house.”

    As Ms Moore fought back tears saying she would be forced to resign as MP for Sydney – causing a by-election – so she could run in lord mayoral elections in September, it emerged the four Christian Democrat and Shooters MPs, who include the affected Shoalhaven Mayor and CDP MP Paul Green, may yet block Mr O’Farrell’s proposals.

    While neither party would declare their hands yesterday, Ms Moore was seen leaving the Shooters MPs’ offices after lobbying them to block the bill.

    “If I am unable to continue to represent the people in the state seat of Sydney after the local government elections it will not be out of any desire of mine, it’ll be because I will be forced out,” Ms Moore said..

    “I feel that there’s a bullying attack from the premier.”

    The move affects 29 MPs – many of them on Mr O’Farrell’s side of politics.

    Mr O’Farrell yesterday said the move was about bringing NSW into line with other states and cutting conflicts of interest, and he was backed by affected Coalition MPs.

    The Nationals MP for Bathurst and councillor Paul Toole said he had decided not to contest this year’s local government election.

    The Liberal Granville MP and Parramatta councillor Tony Issa said: “If you want to do one job correctly, you need to step down and let somebody into council who has plenty of time to do it.”

    But independent MP and Lake Macquarie Mayor Greg Piper said the laws seemed aimed at Ms Moore.

    Parramatta Lord Mayor Lorraine Wearne, an independent, welcomed the change, saying the demands of a lord mayoralty were so great she wouldn’t have the time to be a member of parliament.

    “Being an MP at a state level, you are party to state planning and development issues – but as a lord mayor you might have a different view. I don’t think I could cope,” Ms Wearne said.

     

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