Author: Neville

  • Tipping Point Nears for ‘Emerging Flooding Crisis’

    Tipping Point Nears for ‘Emerging Flooding Crisis’

    SAN FRANCISCO — Soggy times are coming for cities along both U.S. coasts and they’ll be here much quicker than previously thought. By mid-century, sea level rise is set to make floods a monthly occurrence in more than two dozen major cities, and in some of those cities, it could become a daily occurrence by the 2070s.

    The watery findings come from a new study published Thursday and presented at the American Geophysical Union meeting. It builds on findings earlier this year from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) scientists that show sea level rise tipping points are just a few decades away for the majority of the cities they looked at.

    Flooding on San Francisco’s Embarcadero during the 2012 King Tide.
    Credit: Sergio Ruiz/Flickr

    Flooding has already become 10 times more likely in Baltimore and Honolulu and five times more likely in Philadelphia, Norfolk, Va., and Charleston, S.C., since 1930. That’s in large part because since the start of the 20th century, sea levels have risen by about 8 inches globally due to human greenhouse gas emissions that have caused oceans to warm and land ice to melt, swelling the seas.

    “It’s an emerging flooding crisis,” William Sweet, an oceanographer with NOAA who led the new report, said.

    And while the onset of the crisis has been gradual, it’s likely to reach a tipping point in the 2050s for all 26 cities that Sweet examined, after which point the risk of flooding increases dramatically. Sweet defined a tipping point as the time when a city would experience 30 days of nuisance flooding — floods roughly up to 20 inches above the high-tide mark — per year.

    While most cities will reach that tipping point around 2050 unless greenhouse gas emissions are slowed, a number of locations will cross that line much sooner. Boston has nearly crossed that mark already and New York and Philadelphia are likely to reach the 30-day flood threshold at some point in the 2020s.

    Reaching those levels is a near guarantee due to the sea level rise already locked in. After that, the world’s choice on when or if to reduce greenhouse emissions will determine just how regular future flooding will be. In cities such as Norfolk and San Francisco, it will become a daily problem by the 2070s on the current emissions pathway, at which points seas could be up to 4 feet higher, according to recent climate projections.

    Downtown Manhattan.
    Credit: Brian Kahn

    Sweet’s analysis is one of three major studies to look at nuisance flooding in the U.S. this year. Researchers from the Union of Concerned Scientists and Old Dominion also examined flooding and found similar results while using slightly different methodology to reach their conclusions.

    While nuisance flooding doesn’t have quite the same “wow” factor of storm surge flooding like Sandy and Haiyan, the financial ramifications are huge. Coastal flooding could cost the world trillions of dollars over the 21st century unless adaptation measures are taken. And it has very real implications for people living in low-level floodplains.

    “Nuisance floods have an important role in driving adaptation because that’s the flooding most people have to deal with every year. Nuisance flood damage isn’t going to reimbursed by the National Flood Insurance Program and I don’t think your insurance company will reimburse you for a flood that happens 30 days a year,” said Bob Kopp, a sea level rise researcher at Rutgers University whose sea level rise estimates were used in the new study.

    Kopp said the findings provide a nice complement to other studies looking at larger-scale floods. The findings provide information that municipalities, individuals and insurers could use to consider the impacts of sea level rise just as research looking at 100-year floods can inform national flood planning.

    Sweet also sees the utility of these projections in planning because they cover a range of possible sea level rise scenarios.

    “(Communities) can actively participate and see on a year-to-year basis how impacts are playing out and make the right (adaptation) decision based on the trajectory they’re experiencing,” he said.

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  • Merry Christmas From Bill Shorten

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    Merry Christmas

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    Bill Shorten via sendgrid.info 

    10:26 AM (3 minutes ago)

    to me
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    G’day Neville,At the end of a big year, I want to wish you all a Merry Christmas.

    I hope you get the chance to celebrate with your friends and loved ones over a delicious meal.

    Personally, I’m looking forward to some relaxing time with my family – and a whole new supply of jokes from the Christmas crackers.

    At this time of year, we think of all those Australians who won’t get the chance to spend Christmas with the people they love.

    billthumbnail.png

    The men and women in our defence force, stationed around the world.

    Our emergency services personnel, our ambos, fireys, nurses and police, working through the day and night to keep us safe.

    And the heroes who don’t wear a uniform – Australians working unsociable hours to make ends meet and make our community a better place.

    And finally, as we give thanks for how lucky we are, let’s think of everyone who will go without this Christmas. Let’s think of the people who are doing it tough – here in Australia and around the world.

    And let’s all try and do something to bring a little bit of Christmas cheer into their lives, to make their 2015 better than 2014.

    Merry Christmas everyone and a Happy New Year,

    Bill

  • Assuring Real Progress on Climate HANSEN

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    Assuring Real Progress on Climate

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    James Hansen via mail93.atl51.rsgsv.net 

    8:55 AM (21 minutes ago)

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    Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
    Assuring Real Progress on Climate
    Assuring Real Progress on Climate is available here in pdf format, on my web site, and on our blog.

    ~Jim
    23 December 2014

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    csas.ei.columbia.edu

  • Irreversible Antarctica ice melt to redefine coastlines: NASA

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    Irreversible Antarctica ice melt to redefine coastlines: NASA

    The sea levels are on course to rise ‘unstoppably’ in future due to the melting of Antarctic ice sheets, as has been confirmed by NASA scientists.

    It is noted that the rise in sea level by 10 feet could spell doom for many coastal towns and displace millions of people and this could happen within several centuries.

    This warning has come from two teams of scientists with different approaches, focused on studying the changes made in different parts of the Antarctic. “A large sector of the West Antarctic ice sheet has gone into irreversible retreat,” according to Eric Rignot, a glaciologist at the University of California, Irvine, who led one of the teams.

    “It has passed the point of no return,” he added. Rignot and his team measured shrinkages of 10 to 35 kilometers in several retreating glaciers since the early 1990s and found that many of these glaciers were thinning.

    The warming of air has also intensified the winds that sweep round the Antarctic, but the glaciers are not melting due to warming air but they are drawing warm waters to the surface and that’s causing the melting of ice.

    The main cause of this warming is the greenhouse effects of increasing carbon dioxide from burning gas, oil, and coal. The ozone hole, which is also caused due to human activities, might also playing an important role in intensifying the winds.

    The sea level rise across the globe has been caused mainly by the heat-caused expansion of seawater and the melting of ice will definitely cause a rise in the sea level.

    Ian Joughin, leader of the other research team, said that the collapse of the ice sheet is unstoppable, adding, “There’s no stabilization mechanism.”

  • Our take on the Royal Commission CFEMU Team Leadership

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    Our take on the Royal Commission

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    CFMEU Leadership Team <info@whymrabbott.org.au>

    5:09 PM (30 minutes ago)

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    Dear Neville

    Last week the Minister for Employment Eric Abetz released the Interim Report of the Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption.

    The Royal Commission has not found any corruption in the CFMEU. Instead they have made recommendations and findings regarding industrial disputes the union has been involved in.

    That’s not surprising for our industries where a worker is killed or seriously injured every 6 minutes and where employers frequently underpay and rip off workers’ entitlements. The CFMEU makes no apology for standing up for its members.

    The Royal Commission was set up by the Abbott Government to pave the way for a raft of anti-worker initiatives including the Australian Building and Construction Commission and the recently announced Productivity Commission Review of the Fair Work Act, which will seek to cut penalty rates and rights at work. If Abbott and Abetz get their way our wages will be cut and workplace health and safety compromised.

    Not only is the Royal Commission a massive waste of taxpayers’ money – $50 million and counting- it does nothing to fix the real problems facing our country: the increasing cost of living, rising unemployment and the highest rate of youth unemployment in decades.

    In this short video we give you our take on the Royal Commission.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOATn64_nUA&feature=youtu.be

    We wish all our members a safe and happy holiday season.

    We will return in 2015 to keep fighting for the right of all workers to stand up, speak out and come home.

    In unity,

    Michael O’Connor – National Secretary

    Tony Maher – National President

    Dave Noonan – National Assistant Secretary

  • Uncle Eric has a Christmas gift for you Australian Unions Team

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    Uncle Eric has a Christmas gift for you

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    Neville Gillmore <nevilleg729@gmail.com>

    2:23 PM (24 minutes ago)

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    Uncle Eric has a Christmas gift for you

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    Australian Unions Team <info@actu.org.au>

    2:03 PM (18 minutes ago)

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    Neville —

    Last Friday, under the cover of Christmas, Eric Abetz launched a stealth attack on Australian workers by announcing a full scale inquiry into our rights at work.

    This inquiry, which will begin in the new year, is the next step in his plan to cut penalty rates, reintroduce widespread individual contracts, reduce wages and conditions, and make it harder to have a voice at work.

    That’s his Christmas present to us.

    But as we showed in 2014, by joining together, and fighting for what we believe in, we can protect the living standards of Australian workers and their families.

    Ged has recorded a fantastic Christmas message to thank you for all of your hard work this year.

    Congratulations – you made a real difference.

    We stopped the Coalition in their tracks in 2014, and we’re up for a fight again in 2015.

    We hope that you have a safe and relaxing Christmas and New Year.

    Dave, Ged and all the whole Australian Unions team
    http://www.australianunions.org.au/