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  • Antarctic Circumpolar Current Carries 20 Percent More Water Than Previous Estimates

    Data is key to validating accuracy of climate models

    Released: 2/26/2014 3:00 PM EST
    Source Newsroom: University of Rhode Island

    Contact Information

    Available for logged-in reporters only

    Citations

    Ocean Sciences Meeting

    Newswise — NARRAGANSETT, R.I. – February 26, 2014 – The Antarctic Circumpolar Current transports water around Antarctica and into the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, transferring heat and energy around the globe. Quantifying how much water it carries is an important step in understanding climate change and validating the accuracy of climate and oceanographic models.

    By analyzing four years of continuous measurements of the current at Drake Passage, the narrowest point in the Southern Ocean, three University of Rhode Island oceanographers have concluded that the current carries 20 percent more water than previous estimates. They also found that the current remains strong all the way to the seafloor.

    “It’s important to understand the dynamics of the current so we can understand the impacts of our changing climate,” said Kathleen Donohue, associate professor at the URI Graduate School of Oceanography. “We want to know how the current will respond to changing conditions, so quantifying the transport gives important guidance to the climate models that are trying to predict the future.”

    Donohue, along with URI Professor Randolph Watts and Marine Research Specialist Karen Tracey, will present the results of this research this week at the biennial Ocean Sciences Meeting in Honolulu. The meeting is sponsored by the American Geophysical Union, The Oceanographic Society, and the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography.

    The Southern Ocean is warming faster than other oceans, and the easterly winds that drive the current have increased significantly in the last 30 years. How the current will respond to these changes is not fully understood. Eddies, or ocean storms, are essential for transferring momentum from the circumpolar winds that drive the current to the sea floor.

    To study the dynamics of the current, Donohue, Watts and Teresa Chereskin of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography deployed 35 current and pressure recording inverted echo sounders, which measure oceanic fronts and currents, across Drake Passage in 2007. They retrieved them in 2011. Another more closely spaced array of instruments was also deployed to map circulation and eddy patterns. The instruments collected higher resolution data over a longer period of time than the only other similar study of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which was conducted in the 1970s.

    Drake Passage is an important site for oceanographic measurements because it is one of the few places around the globe where ocean currents travel through a somewhat narrow passage. Drake Passage is 800 kilometers wide and runs from the southern tip of South America to the northernmost point of Antarctica.

    “We’re never going to be able to measure the whole ocean,” said Watts. “So if we’re going to make accurate predictions of future climate, we’re going to have to accurately measure processes like water transport and heat flux at key locations like the Drake Passage to guide our understanding.”

    The next step for the scientists is to develop a method of monitoring the Antarctic Circumpolar Current using a smaller array of instruments so the measurements can continue well into the future. They also hope to travel to the South Pacific and South Atlantic to make additional measurements of how ocean storms transport heat toward the pole.

  • Announcing: “Stranded Down Under” Tour 350 org

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    Announcing: “Stranded Down Under” Tour

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    Charlie Wood – 350.org Australia charlie@350.org

    6:05 PM (1 hour ago)

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    Dear friend,

    You’re invited to Stranded Down Under – are fossil fuels bankrupting us financially and ecologically? with Oxford University and Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s Ben Caldecott.

    What’s the connection between your bank account, superannuation and fossil fuels?

    As the world acts to cut emissions, Australia plans to invest over AUD 100 billion in new coal projects over the next 15 years. This includes nine mega-mines in Queensland’s Galilee Basin, export ports along the Great Barrier Reef and Whitehaven Coal’s Maules Creek mine in the Leard State Forest.

    Whether we like it or not, these projects and the companies behind them, are receiving loans from our big banks and investment from our super funds.

    But as major economies like China act to reduce their dependence on fossil fuels, these projects will face increasing risks – risks our savings will be forced to foot.

    Come and hear Ben Caldecott, founder of Oxford University’s Stranded Assets Programme and author of the groundbreaking report Stranded Down Under?, sheds light on the ramifications of Australia’s fossil fuel addiction and what we can do to kick Australia’s dirtiest habit.

    Click here to register for your nearest event:

    • Canberra: 18:00-19:30, March 25th, Coombs Lecture Theatre, Fellows Rd, ANU, Introduction by The Australia Institute’s Richard Denniss AND Crawford School Lunchtime Panel, 13:30-14:00, March 25th (details tbc)

    • Sydney: 18:30-20:00, March 27th, Seymour Centre, Cnr Cleveland St & City Rd, Introduction by former Liberal Party Leader, John Hewson and 350.org’s Blair Palese

    • Melbourne: 18:00-19:30, April 1st, Theatre 1, 207 Bouverie St, University of Melbourne, Introduction by Melbourne University’s Professor David Karoly

    • Brisbane: 18:00-19:30, April 3rd, C Block Auditorium CI411, Southbank TAFE, South Brisbane

    Look forward to seeing you there!

    Warm wishes,

    Charlie, Blair, May, Aaron, Simon, Josh and the whole 350.org Australia

  • Climate Code Red

    Neville Gillmore

    To Me
    Feb 26 at 9:38 PM

    This message contains blocked images.

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Climate Code Red <noreply@blogger.com>
    Date: Wed, Feb 26, 2014 at 8:31 PM
    Subject: climate code red
    To: nevilleg729@gmail.com

    climate code red


    Connecting the dots to win on climatePosted: 25 Feb 2014 08:13 PM PST

    by David Spratt

    On 20 March I spoke, together with Adam Bandt MP, at a forum in Melbourne on Global warming, Tony Abbott and the need for climate action.

    The second half of my presentation was on how to turn the tide, looking at the “middle third” in recent polling and Tony Abbott’s and his government’s vulnerability on climate, and what they are desperate to not talk about:

    • More and more intense extreme weather events (exemplified by their silence on the spring 2013 fires, and record January 2014 heat);
    • A public conversation that “connects the dots” between extreme events and climate change, and which gives immediacy to the perception of climate impacts;
    • Constructing a climate narrative about human climate impacts, rather than electricity prices and taxes;
    • Public focus on the responsibility of political leaders to “protect the people” from climate change; and
    • Close attention being paid to the efficacy of their “direct action” climate plan.

    The key task is to sell the product (climate impacts), and not its price (carbon tax), by constructing a narrative about climate impacts that brings the message back to the home, that connects the dots, that poses the choice between increasing harm and threat, or acting to restore climate safety, and the duty of political leaders to protect the people. To do this we need to more thoroughly learn the lessons from the health promotions sector: be honest about the problem and tell it like it is; show a better alternative, the benefits of changing behaviour; and finally demonstrate an efficacious path to move from fear to success. This means making the story about:

    • People in Australia and not distant places;
    • Now and not just the distant future;
    • How family and friends will live in a hotter and more extreme world;
    • How it will affect where we live and how we work; and
    • Health and well-being, about increasing food and water insecurity, and the lives that children and grandchildren will face.

    Some of these ideas were canvassed at greater length in “As Tony Abbott launches all-out war on climate action, what’s the plan?”

    This post is about the first part of my presentation, on connecting climate extremes that are being experienced today to an understanding of what climate change will mean for people in the future.

    A new climate regime

    One starting point is to make it clear that we are moving to a whole new climate that will be a new experience to people wherever in the world they live. Carbon dioxide levels – the principal determinant of changing temperatures – are higher than at any time since modern human evolved, and likely higher than for the last 15 to 20 million years, so we are creating a new climate regime that humans have never experienced.

    Climate change manifests not as a slow, imperceptible and smooth change, but as a series of extreme events that become increasingly frequent till they become the new norm. So these extreme events – record temperatures, longer and more intense heat waves, changing rainfall and drought patterns – are all a preview of what life will be like every day in a few decades time.

    In January, Melbourne set two new extreme heat records:

    • four consecutive days of maximums over 41°C;
    • three days of where the average, 24-hour temperature was over 35°C (basically in the range of 28C-44°C).

    During this extreme heatwave, preliminary estimates are that there were 140 additional heatwave deaths, many of whom we should call victims of climate change. In 2009, the heatwave leading up to Black Saturday claimed twice as many victims (374) as the fires themselves (173), with ambulance calls-outs spiking once temperatures hits 40°C, as this chart of ambulance call-outs at that time shows:

    Courtesy: Prof. Tony McMichael

    In 2013 we experienced hottest day, week, month and year on record in Australia. During the 2012-13 summer high temperature records were set in every state and territory.

    And a new Climate Council report finds that over last 30 years, Melbourne heat-waves are occurring 17 days earlier, have become 1.5°C hotter, and the maximum temperature of the hottest day is 2°C higher, compared to 1950-1980.

    Extreme heat affects workplace productivity. As the next chart shows, for medium-exertion work, when  the temperature increases from 30°C to 34°C (at 20% humidity), productivity halves.  By the time the temperature is around 40°C, productivity approaches zero.

    Courtesy: Prof. Tony McMichael

    The key message to communicate is that we are departing from the climate we have known, and moving to a new climate.

    Points of departure

    A graphic way of demonstrating this is using resources from a paper published in October last year, “The  projected timing of climate departure from recent variability”.

    The associated website includes data for many locations around the globe. Below is one projection for Melbourne. The research tracked average temperatures for each location from 1850 to 2005 (blue line) and established this historical temperature band (grey area).  Then climate models for two emissions scenarios (RCP8.5 which is the high “business-as-usual” emissions scenario the world is current tracking on, in red; and a lower scenario, in yellow) were run to ask the following question: for each scenario, what is the year in which temperatures from that point on will all be higher than the current band. For Melbourne the answer for one climate model (Institut Pierre Simon Laplace Earth System Model CM5A-M) is 2034 (high emissions) and 2047 (medium emissions):

    Melbourne: point of departure from current climate
    Point of departure from 1850-2005 climate
    for major Australia cities for RCP8.5 and RCP4.5
    scenarios

    When all models are taken into account and averaged, the results for Melbourne are 2045 and 2073. To summarise, sometime from 2045 onward in Melbourne, even the coldest years will be hotter than any year up to 2005. So this is a way of showing the points of departure from the current climate regime, and the movement into a whole new higher, hotter regime. A table of climate departure years for major Australia cities is shown at right.

    And here is the Sydney result for the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace Earth System Model CM5A model:

    Sydney: point of departure from current climate

    Devastating impacts

    And it is not just about air temperatures.  Waters around Australia had hottest sea surface temperatures on record in February 2013. In the last four years, we have experienced unprecedented and out-of-season bush fires, a record two years of rain, repeated “1-in-a-100-year” floods, as well as record heat.

    And, of course, it’s not just Australia. One well-studied extreme event is the European/French heatwave of 2003, which killed 70,000 people, resulted in a 30 per cent drop in plant growth and caused $12 billion of crop losses, adding half a billion tonnes of carbon to the atmosphere. As the next image shows, in 35 years time, the 2003 extreme will be the average climate for that region:

    All of which suggests that even one degree of warming is not exactly safe. Yet carbon dioxide levels today are sufficient for one-and-a-half degrees of warming, and without rapid and deep emission cuts two degree will be unavoidable.

    We know quite a bit about a 2°C world from climate history research. Three million years ago in the mid-Pliocene, when greenhouse gas levels similar to today and sufficient for 2°C of warming, sea levels were 20 metres or more higher than today. Yet with a 5-metre rise, Miami would disappear and Central London, Bangkok, Bombay and Shanghai would lose most of their area. Rich food-growing deltas such as Nile, Mekong and Brahmaputra inundated.

    At 2°C warmer, every year in Australia would likely be hotter than the hottest year up to 2005; there would up to a doubling of days over 35°C, and roughly a doubling in extreme fire days. The barrier reef would be lost, Kakadu salinated, Murray Darling water flows down by about a quarter, and seas would be on the way to rising several metres in a nation where 85% of the population lives within 50 Kms of the coast. In Australia, more than $200 billion worth of coastal assets and 700,000 properties are at risk from a sea level rise of just 1.1 metre.

    What more can we do to connect the dots between today’s extreme experiences and tomorrow’s world?

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  • Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Galileo Access to Hansen’s Website and reports back to 2004

    (ACCESS TO WEBSITE)

    Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Galileo (HANSEN) (ACCESS TO WEBSITE)

    Posted in Uncategorized By Neville On February 21, 2014

    Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Galileo

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    James Hansen via mail170.wdc02.mcdlv.net

    5:04 AM (4 hours ago)

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    Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Galileo

    A draft opinion piece, Renewable Energy, Nuclear Power, and Galileo, is available here or on my web site. Criticisms are welcome.

    ~Jim
    21 February 2014

  • Ask Tim Flannery your climate questions

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    Ask Tim Flannery your climate questions

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    Amanda McKenzie – Climate Council via sendgrid.info

    2:49 PM (39 minutes ago)

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    “An opinion is useless, what we need are more facts” – Tim Flannery

    Hi Inga

    We’re coming to the end of another intense summer in Australia with record-breaking temperatures, heatwaves, bushfires and drought. Many people are left wondering if what we’ve seen this summer is normal, or if we’re already experiencing the impacts of climate change.

    It’s an important time to discuss the state of the climate and get clear about the facts. So this Thursday Tim Flannery will be giving you a personal briefing on the latest climate science in a live online Q&A.

    Date: Thursday 27th February
    Time: 6.30pm AEDT
    Where: Online at www.climatecouncil.org.au
    RSVP: on Facebook and submit your question now

    At its heart the Climate Council exists to provide independent information on the state of our climate. This summer we’ve released a series of reports about climate change impacts in Australia – this is your opportunity to get an up to date briefing on our latest findings. Participating in the Q&A is free and open to everyone.

    RSVP to the event on Facebook to submit your questions.

    You can also submit your questions by replying to this email or tweeting @climatecouncil with the hashtag #asktim during the broadcast.

    This is what people said about our last live Q&A with the experts:

    • It’s great to hear a rational discussion of the science and its implications without all of the politics. – Anne
    • I got a lot out of Will Steffen’s simple responses to complex science questions – too often it’s assumed we should all be totally up to speed with what’s happening. – Adam

    We hope you will join us on Thursday evening for what is sure to be a lively and informative Q&A.

    See you there,

    Amanda McKenzie,
    Climate Council CEO

    P.S If you think your friends and networks would be interested in tuning in, head to the Facebook event and hit invite friends to tell them about it. 

     
  • Don’t let them underestimate you.

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    Don’t let them underestimate you.

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    Stephen Campbell steve@antarcticocean.org via cmail1.com

    1:41 PM (1 hour ago)

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    Will you keep fighting to protect Antarctica’s Ocean?

    Antarctic Ocean Alliance

    SHARE THIS EMAIL

    Dear NEVILLE,

    Summer may be coming to an end in Antarctica’s great Southern Ocean, but a new dawn is breaking in the fight to protect these pristine waters.

    Last October we came incredibly close to the creation of two large-scale ocean sanctuaries in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica but were blocked by the Russian and Ukrainian delegations. While this result was extremely disappointing, we know that you are determined to keep fighting to protect these waters. Together, we will persevere. They have underestimated your strength, passion, and drive.

    This year we will build on the successes we had in 2013, bringing worldwide attention to the plight of some of our favourite animals that live in these pristine waters. One of these animals, the penguin, has an international day of celebration, on the 25th April. World Penguin Day is not only a fun opportunity to celebrate our web-footed friends in all their glory, but is also a critical opportunity to spread the word about protecting their home in the Southern Ocean. Stay tuned and get ready for shareable penguin fun coming your way soon…

    Our plans and activities are developing fast, but our most valuable asset and ally is YOU. We need you to stay with us in this year’s critical push to create the world’s largest ocean sanctuaries around Antarctica. So to start off 2014 you can help by:

    1. Sharing our petition with your friends on social media.
    2.  Ask your friends and family to join the campaign by signing up to receive our news or joining us on Facebook, Twitter, VK or Weibo.

    Beyond celebrating World Penguin Day we also have a calendar packed full of events, meetings and activities internationally. In Russia and Ukraine we will hold science seminars and build our presence online through Russian social media site, VK. In China we will continue to work with renowned explorer Wang Jing to spread the word about why Southern Ocean protection is important to the Chinese people. We will also be active in Norway, Japan, Korea, the UK and the EU, as well as in all our supporting countries: USA, Australia, New Zealand, and France.

    Our international work will culminate in October in Australia at the 33rd meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR XXXIII,) when we will – together with you – stand united to get the creation of two large-scale ocean sanctuaries in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica.

    Don’t let them underestimate you. Together we can win this.

    You’ll be hearing from us very soon!

     

    Steve Campbell, Campaign Director