Author: admin

  • PHL 5th most affected country by extreme weather events in 2011 — study

    PHL 5th most affected country by extreme weather events in 2011 — study
    GMA News
    Among over 100 countries being studied, the Philippines was fifth most vulnerable place to extreme weather conditions in 2011, according to the 2013 Global Climate Risk report. The study, commissioned by Germanwatch, identified the countries affected
    See all stories on this topic »

  • Sea-Level Rise ANDREW GLIKSON

    Andrew Glikson
    11:04 AM (1 hour ago)

    to me, JOHN

    According to the Science 2012 paper Ice sheet melt contributes 0.59 ± 0.20 millimeter year−1 to the rate of global sea-level rise.

    The rest is from thermal expansion and Mountain glacier melt – the total being about 3.2+/-0.5 mm/year (see attached report by Rahmstorf et al. 2011)

    From: Neville Gillmore [mailto:nevilleg729@gmail.com]
    Sent: Sunday, December 02, 2012 9:40 AM
    To: Andrew Glikson
    Cc: JOHN JAMES
    Subject: Fwd: Google Alert – SEA LEVEL RISE

    RAHMSTORF 2011 SEA LELVELS_1748-9326_7_4_044035.pdf RAHMSTORF 2011 SEA LELVELS_1748-9326_7_4_044035.pdf
    267K   View Download
  • Keeping Our Heads Above Water

    Researchers finally estimate single figure for global sea level rises
    allvoices
    Global warming has led to rise in sea levels as increased global temperatures have slowly melted away the polar ice caps. While this is commonly known, the exact amount by which sea levels have risen was not until recently, when a new study, for the
    See all stories on this topic »
    Researcher studies sealevel change
    Tasley Eastern Shore News
    WILLIAMSBURG — The effects of storm surge and sealevel rise have become topics of everyday conversation in the month following Hurricane Sandy’s catastrophic landfall along the mid-Atlantic coast. Ongoing research by professor John Brubaker of the
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    New study on rising sea levels likely confirms existence of global warming
    Science Recorder
    A newly released study finds that ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica are disappearing three times faster than they were two decades ago, the latest evidence supporting the existence of global warming. The study was published in the journal Science
    See all stories on this topic »

    Science Recorder
    The Buzz This Week about Rising Sea Levels
    IEEE Spectrum
    “Altogether, Greenland and Antarctica are now losing more than three times as much ice (equivalent to 0.95 mm of sea level rise per year) as they were in the 1990s (equivalent to 0.27 mm of sea level rise per year).” Shepherd’s group finds that
    See all stories on this topic »

    IEEE Spectrum
    Keeping Our Heads Above Water
    Wall Street Journal
    Sea level normally varies from place to place, due to prevailing ocean currents, water temperature, salinity, seafloor topography and the irregularities of gravity. Rising temperatures and meltwater are expanding oceans. Seasonal climate cycles, such
    See all stories on this topic »
    Hurricane Season Draws to Close, Sandy Begs for Action
    Clean Energy News (blog)
    It doesn’t take much of a rise in sea level to affect how much more land gets flooded in a big storm. As Ben Strauss from Climate Central states, “In some places it takes only a few inches of sealevel rise to convert a once in a century storm to a
    See all stories on this topic »
    Ice from Greenland and Antarctica definitely melting into the sea, scientists say
    Catholic Online
    Scientists now say that the ice melting away from Greenland is now melting as much as five times faster as it was in the late 1990s. The study published in “Science” says this is directly responsible for the 20 percent rise in sea level over the past
    See all stories on this topic »

     

    Web 1 new result for SEA LEVEL RISE
    Projected sealevel rise may be underestimated — PIK Research
    11/28/2012 – The rate of sealevel rise in the past decades is greater than projected by the latest assessments of the IPCC, while global temperature increases in
    www.pik-potsdam.de/…/projektionen-zum-meeresspiegelanstie…

     


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  • What next Kev?

    They squeezed in beside Medicin sans frontiere who had grabbed the front spot at the crack of dawn and were already well established when we arrived, as the sun cleared the trees. The sun was high in the sky now, and hot, so most of the locals had done their shopping. We had been talking to tourists since Larissa arrived and sending them off with membership forms to join their local groups.

    Kev came over, shook everyone’s hand – registering names and roles, then focused on Senator Waters and life in Canberra. He wowed us all with tales of Beijing, being in Tien an Min Square on June 3 1989 and life as the Prime Minister. He insisted “Say, Yes!” that someone agree our conversation was off-the-record so he could discuss the Greens frustration with Labor’s environmental policy in a manner that he is bound not to do publicly.

    He then turned his considerable charm on the crowd, beaming bon-homie down the barrel of a dozen cameras with smooth, well-practised schtick.

    What the face-book video confessing his “daggy” status with a Canadian youth, or the arms-around-the-shoulder shots to be sent home by local Indian traders do not show, though, are the things he missed.

    Larissa did three media interviews just before he showed. The ABC TV cameras were leaving as he pulled up. His minders had seen them come and go and sat po-faced and melting in the heat – Medicin sans frontiere and we had co-opted the shade – waiting for him to rush from another event. Kev was too late. Senator Waters gets on state television, Kev features on some Canadian kid’s youTube account.

    All the arrogance that lost him the top job is still there in spades. He practically barked the command, “Say Yes” at senate candidate, Adam Stone, in an attempt to cover his arse before apologising for Labor’s environmental policies. This is not the behaviour of a leader in waiting, or even a man who knows where he is going, this is political survival by an experienced operator who is schmoozing the Greens because he needs there preferences to survive.

    He plays the ex-Prime Minister card, front and centre. In pinching a key plank from the Greens Qld election campaign, he announces that “ex-prime minister Kevin Rudd, challenges the Premier to keep the promises he made during the state election campaign.”

    Labor has ridden on The Greens environmental policies as long as we have existed as a party, allowing us to do the hard work of educating the public, knocking the warts of the policy and testing the public’s taste for them, then taking the finished product and selling it as their own.

    That’s fine, The Greens are pleased to make a difference and green voters understand that this is the role of a party in its growth phase: Shift the agenda onto our ground.

    The hugging Mumbai business men, mouthing “I’m a dag” into Android devices and “when I was PM” speeches all serve to bouy the man up by keeping the myth alive but they beg the most important question.

    Where is all this going? What is next for Kevin Rudd?

    The party does not want him as leader. His leader does not want him as minister. His party needs him on the back bench but his personal ambition will not allow him to sit there much longer. Therese needs him to have a job, but international lobbying is a better paying and more glamorous job than sitting on the back-bench, so how long is he going to keep up this farce?

    The numbers indicate that he is going to need every preference he can get to scrape over the line in this election. A nine percent swing could defeat him and The Greens currently hold just over 15% of the vote. As a good party man he is most likely to fight for the seat to keep the government in power and then resign gracefully some time into the next parliamentary term.

    Everyone who points a camera at him this election campaign should be asking him to tell the camera what he plans to do next. It might make for interesting viewing.

  • More intense North Atlantic tropical storms likely in the future

    More intense North Atlantic tropical storms likely in the future

    Posted: 30 Nov 2012 12:16 PM PST

    Tropical storms that make their way into the North Atlantic, and possibly strike the East Coast of the United States, likely will become more intense during the rest of this century.
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  • Integrating science and policy to address the impacts of air pollution

    Integrating science and policy to address the impacts of air pollution

    Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:32 AM PST

    New research examines how science and policy address air pollution effects on human health and ecosystems, and climate change in Europe.