Author: admin

  • Ancient arabic writings help scientists piece together climate

    ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News


    Ancient arabic writings help scientists piece together past climate

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 07:59 PM PST

    Ancient manuscripts written by Arabic scholars can provide valuable meteorological information to help modern scientists reconstruct the climate of the past, a new study has revealed. The research analyses the writings of scholars, historians and diarists in Iraq during the Islamic Golden Age between 816-1009 AD for evidence of abnormal weather patterns.
    You are subscribed to email updates from ScienceDaily: Severe Weather News
    To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
    Email delivery powered by Google
    Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610
  • Water Symposium reason for hope

    A key point made by Randall Cox from the Queensland Water Commission is that the buybacks in the MDB (and all their attendant social and political problems) are the result of overallocation and we should do every thing within our power to avoid a repeat of those problems in other areas. His work is to protect the Great Artesian Basin from a similar fate.

    Dramatic tension

    Other contrasting pairings that had emerged during the day included the energy companies and Great Artesian Basin Sustainability Initiative (CSG), SA Water and State Water NSW (Downstream flows), Melbourne Water Corporation and everybody else in the Murray Darling (75Glpa of Murray Darling water for Melbourne).

    The strongest differences expressed at the symposium were between some of the irrigation authorities and the Murray Darling Basin Authority. The good news is the goodwill being expressed to find a way through those differences and get a single plan up and running. A striking example of that flexibility to find compromises that result in win-win situations is the Barren Box Wetland. Google that and grin.

    There is a strong sentiment that environmental groups are not sitting at the same table as the rest of these groups in trying to establish a working rivers program.

    The themes of the day were many and varied but it emerged quite clearly that the National Water for our Future program is bringing together a lot of work by various authorities over the last century and there is a strong hope from all parties that it will hold together and create a powerful plan for the future.

    Groundwater in the mix

    One of the most heartening differences between this forum and similar groups as recently as two years ago is that while there are a lot of gaps in our understanding of the connections between groundwater, surface water and wetlands, everyone acknowledges the connected nature of the system and the need to manage each component as part of a linked whole.

    A similar conclusion was reached when considering the economic imperatives of food production, energy production and carbon management. In this case the sheer complexity of each individual area requires that they be dealt with as linked components rather than a single system.

    Takehome messages

    We all need to understand the relevant long term plans for water management in the areas where we are working. These include the Wild Rivers legislation, the Murray Darling Basin Plan, the Great Artesian Basin Sustainability Initiative.

    We all need to understand the role of the Catchment Management Authorities in our communities and their interface with the relevant water authorities in the area.

    We also need to be aware of the politics between state and federal water commissions and between the state and regional authorities. There are wildly different objectives in many cases and as scientific and engineering consultants we will often find ourselves walking a political tightrope, or answering questions designed to help the questioner score a political point.

    The better informed we are about the political landscape the better we can use our science to help our clients make good, clean water and deliver sustainable water solutions.

  • Volcanic Glass Yields Evidence of Ancient Water

    News 8 new results for volcanoes
    Volcanoes deliver 2 flavors of water
    Science Codex
    But in volcanoes from the Manus Basin they also discovered evidence of seawater distilled long ago from a more ancient plate descent event, preserved for as long as 1 billion years. The data indicate that these ancient oceanic “slabs” can return to the
    See all stories on this topic »
    Volcanic Glass Yields Evidence of Ancient Water
    Our Amazing Planet
    At underwater volcanoes in Southeast Asia, scientists have discovered evidence of ancient distilled seawater that has been preserved for 1 billion years. Seawater circulation pumps hydrogen and boron isotopes — hydrogen and boron have both light and
    See all stories on this topic »

    Our Amazing Planet

    Willamette University Athletics
    Climate change will shake the Earth
    The Guardian
    The idea that a changing climate can persuade the ground to shake, volcanoes to rumble and tsunamis to crash on to unsuspecting coastlines seems, at first, to be bordering on the insane. How can what happens in the thin envelope of gas that shrouds and
    See all stories on this topic »

    The Guardian
    Hawaii adds 2 new scenic byways on Big Island, Kauai; State officials seek
    Washington Post
    The Big Island route travels along Highway 11 from Manuka State Park in Kona to the eastern end of the island at the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. At 54 miles it’s the longest stretch of unspoiled natural scenery in the islands.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Volcanic Versus Coral: The Caribbean Throw-Down (PHOTOS)
    Huffington Post (blog)
    The younger islands — those formed by an arc of underwater volcanoes at the points of convergence between the Atlantic and Caribbean tectonic plates — surfaced relatively recently, and include Grenada, St. Vincent, St. Lucia, Martinique, Dominica,
    See all stories on this topic »
    Pantelleria, Its Magma Chamber And Possible Impact On Global Climate
    Science 2.0
    My friend has written a paper on Pantelleria (which I am a co-author of), and I thought it was a good opportunity to discuss some of the techniques we can use to reconstruct a volcano’s magma chamber using the petrology (chemistry and texture of the
    See all stories on this topic »
    Friends of HVNP programs in March
    Hawaii 24/7 (press release)
    Submit your original photographs taken in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park (park entrance fees apply). First, second, and third place awards will be given in 3 categories: Amateur-Beginner, Amateur-Advanced, and Professional. There will also be from 3 to
    See all stories on this topic »

     


    This once a day Google Alert is brought to you by Google.

    Delete this alert.
    Create another alert.
    Manage your alerts.

  • Civilisation faces’perfect storm of ecological and social problems

    Civilisation faces ‘perfect storm of ecological and social problems’

    Abuse of the environment has created an ‘absolutely unprecedented’ emergency, say Blue Planet prizewinners

    • guardian.co.uk, Monday 20 February 2012 14.45 GMT
    • Article history
    • COP15 climate change: drought and forest fires in Portugal

      Smoke billows from burned trees. A collective of scientists and development thinkers have warned that civilisation faces an ‘unprecedented emergency’. Photograph: CRISTINA QUICKLER/AFP/Getty Images

      Celebrated scientists and development thinkers today warn that civilisation is faced with a perfect storm of ecological and social problems driven by overpopulation, overconsumption and environmentally malign technologies.

      In the face of an “absolutely unprecedented emergency”, say the 18 past winners of the Blue Planet prize – the unofficial Nobel for the environment – society has “no choice but to take dramatic action to avert a collapse of civilisation. Either we will change our ways and build an entirely new kind of global society, or they will be changed for us”.

      The stark assessment of the current global outlook by the group, who include Sir Bob Watson, the government’s chief scientific adviser on environmental issues, US climate scientist James Hansen, Prof José Goldemberg, Brazil’s secretary of environment during the Rio Earth summit in 1992, and Stanford University Prof Paul Ehrlich, is published today on the 40th anniversary of the foundation of the UN environment programme (Unep). The paper, which was commissioned by Unep, will feed into the Rio +20 earth summit conference in June.

      Apart from dire warnings about biodiversity loss and climate change, the group challenges governments to think differently about economic “progress”.

      “The rapidly deteriorating biophysical situation is more than bad enough, but it is barely recognised by a global society infected by the irrational belief that physical economies can grow forever and disregarding the facts that the rich in developed and developing countries get richer and the poor are left behind.

      “The perpetual growth myth … promotes the impossible idea that indiscriminate economic growth is the cure for all the world’s problems, while it is actually the disease that is at the root cause of our unsustainable global practices”, they say.

      The group warns against over-reliance on markets but instead urges politicians to listen and learn from how poor communities all over the world see the problems of energy, water, food and livelihoods as interdependent and integrated as part of a living ecosystem.

      “The long-term answer is not a centralised system but a demystified and decentralised system where the management, control and ownership of the technology lie in the hands of the communities themselves and not dependent on paper-qualified professionals from outside the villages,” they say.

      “Community-based groups in the poorer most inaccessible rural areas around the world have demonstrated the power of grassroot action to change policy at regional and national levels… There is an urgency now to bring them into mainstream thinking, convey the belief all is not lost, and the planet can still be saved.”

      The answer to addressing the critical issues of poverty and climate change is not primarily technical but social, say the group. “The problems of corruption, wastage of funds, poor technology choices and absent transparency or accountability are social problems for which they are innovative solutions are emerging from the grassroots.”

      To transition to a more sustainable future will require simultaneously redesigning the economic system, a technological revolution, and, above all, behavioural change.

      “Delay is dangerous and would be a profound mistake. The ratchet effect and technological lock-in increase the risks of dangerous climate change: delay could make stabilisation of concentrations at acceptable levels very difficult. If we act strongly and science is wrong, then we will still have new technologies, greater efficiency and more forests. If fail to act and the science is right, then humanity is in deep trouble and it will be very difficult to extricate ourselves.

      The paper urges governments to:

      • Replace GDP as a measure of wealth with metrics for natural, built, human and social capital – and how they intersect.

      • Eliminate subsidies in sectors such as energy, transport and agriculture that create environmental and social costs, which currently go unpaid.

      • Tackle overconsumption in the rich world, and address population pressure by empowering women, improving education and making contraception accessible to all.

      • Transform decision-making processes to empower marginalised groups, and integrate economic, social and environmental policies instead of having them compete.

      • Conserve and value biodiversity and ecosystem services, and create markets for them that can form the basis of green economies.

      • Invest in knowledge through research and training.

      “The current system is broken,” said Watson. “It is driving humanity to a future that is 3-5C warmer than our species has ever known, and is eliminating the ecology that we depend on for our health, wealth and senses of self.”

  • Malaysian protest against rare earth refinery

    Malaysians protest against rare earth refinery

    Opponents of plant, which will process radioactive ore from Australia, say it poses health and environmental risks

    • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 26 February 2012 17.27 GMT
    • Article history
    • Malaysia protest

      Protesters say the rare earth plant being built in eastern Malaysia poses a hazard from radioactive waste. Photograph: Bazuki Muhammad/Reuters

      About 3,000 Malaysians have staged a protest against a refinery for rare earth elements being built by the Australian mining company Lynas over fears of radioactive contamination.

      It was the largest rally so far against the £146m plant in eastern Malaysia, and could pose a headache for the government with national elections widely expected this year.

      Authorities recently granted Lynas a licence to operate the rare earth plant in Pahang state, the first outside China in years, and it has been the subject of heated protests over health and environmental risks posed by potential leaks of radioactive waste.

      Lynas says its plant, which will refine radioactive ore from Australia, has state-of-the-art pollution controls and plans to start operations by June.

      Protesters, including opposition MPs, pledged on Sunday to put pressure on the government to scrap the project. Many wore green T-shirts with the words “Stop Lynas” and some shouted “Destroy Lynas” during the two-hour rally in the Pahang state capital, Kuantan.

      The opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, said his alliance would seek an emergency motion in parliament to urge the government to cancel the project. He also pledged that the opposition would scrap the plant if it won national polls expected by June.

      “We don’t want [this project] to sacrifice our culture and the safety of the children,” he told the crowd.

      Lynas says its refinery could meet nearly a third of world demand for rare earths, excluding China. It also may curtail China’s stranglehold on the global supply of 17 rare earths essential for making hi-tech goods, including flat-screen TVs, mobile phones, hybrid cars and weapons.

      Malaysian activists and Pahang residents have sought a court order to halt the Lynas plant.

      An International Atomic Energy Agency team, which assessed the Lynas project last year, found it lacked a comprehensive long-term waste management programme and a plan to dismantle the plant once it is no longer operating.

      Malaysia’s last rare earth refinery, operated by Mitsubishi of Japan, in northern Perak state, was closed in 1992 after protests and claims that it caused birth defects and leukaemia among residents. It is one of Asia’s largest radioactive waste cleanup sites.

  • More Nuclear news

    News 5 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    UK firms in danger of missing out on nuclear plant contracts
    Telegraph.co.uk
    British companies will struggle to win the bulk of the £60bn expected to be spent building the next generation of nuclear plants, the Prime Minister has been told. The French nuclear plant taken in Nogent-sur-Seine. Tim Fox, head of energy at the
    See all stories on this topic »

    Telegraph.co.uk
    CLIMATE SPECTATOR: What’s really wrong with nuclear
    Business Spectator
    It has achieved this while resulting in significantly less deaths than coal use, a major plus in my book in spite of Fukushima. I worry that Japan and Germany, with their nuclear phase-outs, will instead revert to fossil-fuels rather than renewables,
    See all stories on this topic »
    Briefly World: Kim issues threat before S Korea-US drill
    Indian Express
    TEHRAN: Iran’s first nuclear power plant will be connected to the national grid at full capacity in the coming weeks, the head of the country’s Atomic Energy Organisation Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani was quoted as saying by Iranian media Sunday.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Iran Is the New Iraq
    World Press Review
    This is all too familiar for us Arabs. Ten years ago, Brian Whitaker wrote in The Guardian, “One of the oldest tricks in the run-up to a war is to spread terrifying stories of things that the enemy may be about to do. Government officials plant these
    See all stories on this topic »

    World Press Review
    Brian Leyland: The only way is full steam ahead
    New Zealand Herald
    For electricity, nuclear power and, in particular, reactors burning thorium, promise us a virtually unlimited supply of electricity at a reasonable price. And for those who believe it is too dangerous to contemplate, recent research into radiation
    See all stories on this topic »

     


    This once a day Google Alert is brought to you by Google.

    Delete this alert.
    Create another alert.
    Manage your alerts.

    Reply
    Forward
    Click here to Reply or Forward