Author: Neville

  • Southern oceans heating up faster than scientists realized

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    Southern oceans heating up faster than scientists realized
    The Conversation
    10 Oct 2014
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    The upper layers of the world’s oceans have been warming much faster than oceanographers realised over the past few decades, according to a new study.

    Sparse sampling of the Southern Hemisphere’s oceans have led to conservative estimates of warming. But the new research, published in Nature Climate Change, suggests that the amount of heat energy entering the upper 700 metres of these oceans has been underestimated by anything from 48% to 152%.

    Because the Southern Hemisphere contains 60% of the world’s ocean, this means that globally, the oceans have been heating between 24% and 58% faster than previously thought.

    Meanwhile, a separate study has found that very little of the warming since 2005 has penetrated the “bottom half” of the oceans, below 2 kilometres, although shallower waters have continued to warm.
    Models and boats

    More than 90% of the excess heat generated by global warming goes into the oceans, causing sea levels to rise as the water expands.

    But while climate models were good at replicating the precise satellite observations of sea-level rise since 1993, they were inconsistent with global estimates of the oceans’ changing heat content, as calculated using the relatively few direct measurements of temperature taken in southern regions.

    Paul Durack, a researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who led the new study, said temperatures in the Southern Ocean had only been sparsely sampled, which had led previous observations to underestimate the actual warming.

    “Historical observations are much more numerous in the Northern Hemisphere because the developed countries (Europe, US, Japan) had boats which were travelling across the Northern Hemisphere oceans. As there’s less land in the Southern Hemisphere, this led to far fewer observations,” he said.

    That situation was not remedied until 2004, when the Argo network of 3600 submersible floats began to produce global data on the world’s oceans.

    Dr Durack and his colleagues calculated that southern ocean warming has been underestimated between 1970 and 2004, before researchers had access to the Argo network.
    Heat not reaching the deepest seas

    The Argo floats were used in the second study, to profile the movement of heat down to depths of 2 km.

    The results suggest that sea-level rise is due to changes in the shallower oceans and to the addition of meltwater from land, rather than to thermal expansion in the deeper parts of the ocean, report researchers led by William Llovel of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, also in Nature Climate Change.

    “One thing that is clear from both these studies is the ocean is continuing to warm,” Dr Durack said.

    Richard Allan, a climatologist at the University of Reading, said the results were consistent with his own previous research showing continued ocean heating from 1985 to 2012.

    Professor Allan said the new research “helps to reconcile observed ocean heating with sea level rise”. Over the past two decades, seas have risen by an average of 3 mm a year.

    Previously, the lack of data on Southern Hemisphere ocean temperatures led oceanographers to assume, for the sake of conservatism, that unsampled areas were not warming. The new data paint a much more realistic picture, Prof Allan said.

    The new research also gives a clearer explanation of where the excess heat of global warming is going, Prof Allan said.

    “The ocean heating rate is consistent with rising greenhouse gas concentrations. The slowing in global surface warming reflects a change in the vertical distribution of the heating to deeper layers below around 300 metres,” he said.

    He added that the lack of heating expansion in the deepest oceans is “unfortunately not reassuring”, given that this situation may change in the future.

    “Heating of the deep ocean below is not yet detectable, nor is any contribution to current rates of sea-level rise. Since the layer below 2000 metres contains half the ocean volume, as this begins to warm over many hundreds of years in response to the surface warming there is the potential for accelerating sea level rise.”

    This article was amended on October 8, 2014, to clarify that the previous problem was with the sparse pre-2004 temperature measurements, not the climate models.

    The Conversation

    By Michael Hopkin, The Conversation

    This article was originally published on The Conversation.
    Read the original article.

  • Let’s stop degrees from costing a mortgage (Australian Unions team

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    Ged Kearney <info@actu.org.au>

    5:02 PM (3 minutes ago)

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    Neville —
    One of the most vicious and spiteful parts of Tony Abbott’s agenda is the plan to deregulate the university sector. This plan–driven by his attack-dog Christopher Pyne—will see massive rises in universities fees and laden students with a lifetime of debt, locking many young people out of the university system. 

    These “reforms” aren’t just bad, they are horrible.

    The National Tertiary Education Union have been fighting one heck of a campaign to stop these changes – and they are so close to winning. That’s why the NTEU is teaming up with the National Union of Students and online campaigning organisation Getup! for a big advertising push to get the campaign over the line and ruin Christopher Pyne’s dreams of bringing American-style student debt to Australia.  

    Together they have made an ad that highlights just how terrible these changes will be. The whole community–not just students and university staff–are chipping in to get the ad on air and stop these horrible reforms. Let’s help them make a difference.

    Click here to chip in $10 or $20 and make a difference in the fight to stop Pyne’s changes: https://actuonline.nationbuilder.com/auction_ad_fundraiser

    This is yet another example of where Tony Abbott and his mates have massively overreached. A clear majority of the public–63% in recent polling–oppose Pynes plans for American-style student debt. It is less popular than the Medicare co-payment, increasing the pension age and cutting funding to the ABC.

    In fact, according to the polls, these changes are more than twice as unpopular as Tony Abbott himself – and that says a lot.

    Australians are right about this. We should work on making the future brighter for young people and not saddle them with a lifetime of debt for $100k degrees.  Degrees shouldn’t cost a mortgage. People get that.

    Click here to stand with members of the NTEU, NUS and Getup!–and the vast majority of Australians–and help get this ad on the air: https://actuonline.nationbuilder.com/auction_ad_fundraiser

    The Government’s harsh budget strategy is in disarray. It was always headed that way – Australians are much smarter than Tony Abbott gives us credit for. We are always willing to stand up for the things that matter – and quality, affordable tertiary education matters.

    Let’s push this campaign over the line and stop Tony Abbott’s plans to wrap students up in a lifetime of debt.

    In union –

    Ged K and the Australian Unions team

  • People vs. Ebola AVAAZ ORG

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    People vs. Ebola

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    Ricken Patel – Avaaz

    8:11 PM (20 minutes ago)

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    Dear Avaazers,

    Ebola could threaten us all, and the most urgent need to stop it is for volunteers. If just 120 doctors among us volunteer, it will *double* the number of doctors in Sierra Leone. Other volunteers – in health, sanitation, skills – can help too. This is a call to serve humanity in the deepest possible way, to accept serious risk for our fellow human beings. Click to learn more, and show our gratitude to those making this powerful choice:

    TAKE ACTION NOW

    Three weeks ago, hundreds of thousands of us went offline to fight climate change. This week, we’re going offline to help stop Ebola.

    The Ebola virus is spiraling out of control. Cases in West Africa are doubling every 2-3 weeks and the latest estimate says that up to 1.4 million people could be infected by mid-January. At that scale, this monster threatens the entire world.

    Previous Ebola outbreaks have been repeatedly contained at small numbers. But the scale of this epidemic has swamped the region’s weak health systems. Liberia has less than 1 doctor for every 100,000 people. Governments are providing funds, but there just aren’t enough medical staff to stem the epidemic.

    That’s where we come in. 39 million people are receiving this email. Our polling shows that 6% of us are health workers – doctors or nurses – that’s nearly 2 million of us. If just 120 doctors among us volunteer, it will *double* the number of doctors in Sierra Leone.

    Other volunteers can help too — lab technicians, logisticians, water and sanitation workers, and transport workers. Volunteering means more than time. It means risk. Ebola is highly contagious. Health professionals have already died fighting it. But if there’s any group of people that would consider taking this risk for their fellow human beings, it’s our community. I and others on the Avaaz team are ready to take that risk with you, traveling to the front lines of this crisis.

    Great things come from listening to the deepest voices within us. If you’re a health professional, or have other skills that can help, I ask you to take a moment, listen to the part of you that you most trust, and follow it.

    Click below to volunteer, see messages from volunteers about why they’ve made this choice, and leave your own message of appreciation and encouragement for them:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/ebola_volunteers_thank_you_3/?bhPqncb&v=47377

    Raising your hand to volunteer is the first step. You’ll need to get, and provide, a lot of information to ensure you’re well matched to an available position. You will likely need to discuss this decision with your loved ones, and you can withdraw from the process later if you choose to. For this effort, Avaaz is working with Partners In Health, Save the Children, and International Medical Corps, three of the leading organisations fighting this deadly disease. We are also consulting with the governments of Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, and the World Health Organization.

    While there is substantial risk, there are also clear ways to contain that risk. Ebola is spread by physical contact, so with extreme care, the risk of contracting it can be minimized. So far, 94 health care workers have died of Ebola in Liberia, but almost all of them have been national health workers, who sadly are far less well equipped than international volunteers. With treatment, the chances of surviving the virus are better than 50%.

    Many of us, from police to activists to soldiers, have jobs that involve risking our lives for our country. It’s the most powerful statement we can make about what’s worth living for. Taking this risk to fight Ebola, makes a statement that our fellow human beings, wherever they are, are worth living for:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/ebola_volunteers_thank_you_3/?bhPqncb&v=47377

    If Ebola spirals further out of control, it could soon threaten us all. The fact that a weak health care system in a small country can let this monster grow to a size that threatens the world is a powerful statement of just how interdependent we are. But this interdependence is far more than just interests. We are connected, all of us, in a community of human beings. All the lies that have divided us – about nation and religion and sexuality – are being torn down, and we are realizing that we really are one people, one tribe. That a young mother and her daughter in Liberia fear the same things and love the same things as a young mother and her daughter in Brazil, or the Netherlands. And in this unfolding understanding, a new world is being born. Out of the darkest places come our brightest lights. Out of the depths of the Ebola nightmare, let’s bring the hope of a new world of one people, willing to give, and sacrifice, for each other.

    With hope and determination,

    Ricken, John, Alice, Danny, and the whole Avaaz team.

    More information:

    Up to 1.4m people could be infected with Ebola by January, CDC warns (The Guardian)
    http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/sep/23/ebola-cdc-millions-infected-quarantine-africa-epidemi…

    Known Cases and Outbreaks of Ebola Virus Disease, in Chronological Order (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
    http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/history/chronology.html

    Ebola ‘devouring everything in its path’ (Al Jazeera)
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2014/09/ebola-devouring-everything-path-201499161646914388.html

    Ebola death rates 70% – WHO study (BBC)
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29327741

    Unprecedented number of medical staff infected with Ebola (WHO)
    http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/ebola/25-august-2014/en/

    Support the Avaaz Community!
    We’re entirely funded by donations and receive no money from governments or corporations. Our dedicated team ensures even the smallest contributions go a long way.
    Donate Now


    Avaaz.org is a 38-million-person global campaign network
    that works to ensure that the views and values of the world’s people shape global decision-making. (“Avaaz” means “voice” or “song” in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 18 countries on 6 continents and operates in 17 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz’s biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

  • China tariffs on coal could rebound on Australian solar industry Giles Parkinson

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    2:09 PM (52 minutes ago)

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    China tariffs on coal could rebound on Australian solar industry; Momentum builds for Paris climate deal; Capital is moving to clean energy; One stop shop for renewables mapping data; Graph of the Day; KfW issues largest every $US green bond; US gas capital makes solar its default generation source; and Grid restrictions could slow Japan’s solar revolution.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    The solar industry has been worried that Australian may impose tariffs on cheap solar module imports from China. The surprise imposition of tariffs on Australian coal imports has just lifted the stakes dramatically.
    Australia’s leading negotiator says it is clear that the UN climate summit held in New York last month generated momentum towards an agreement in Paris at the end of 2015.
    Investors say capital flows are moving swiftly towards clean energy investments, and governments such as Australia’s need to stop “stuffing around” get out of the way.
    ARENA to fund online national renewable energy mapping platform.
    Energy efficiency has saved more energy than is used by the EU, China or the US according to a new report from the International Energy Agency.
    Central banks accounted for 37% of investors (that’s huge!) and over half of the central banks were interested in green aspect of the bond.
    Austin declares solar energy its default generation resource.
    Speed of PV’s expansion placing strain on grid’s capacity to absorb solar-powered electricity, prompting five utilities to restrict grid access of new solar farms.
  • Acid damage to coral reefs could cost $1 trillion

    Acid damage to coral reefs could cost $1 trillion

    Ocean acidification is set to cost us $1 trillion by 2100 as it eats away at our tropical coral reefs.

    That’s the warning from a report released today by the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity, which assesses the economic impacts the problem could have.

    The ocean’s pH is now 8.0, down from 8.1 in the mid-18th century. Because the pH scale is logarithmic, this change means that, over the past 250 years, the world’s oceans have seen a 26 per cent increase in acidity – a result of the oceans absorbing about a quarter of our carbon dioxide emissions.

    With ocean pH projected to dip to 7.9 by the end of the century, the oceans may soon be 170 per cent more acidic than they were before the industrial revolution – a change that is likely to affect not just our ecosystems, but our economies too.

    Rapid pace

    Ocean acidification is a trend that went largely unnoticed until a decade ago, but the rapid pace of scientific investigation since means huge progress has been made in understanding its effects.

    “It’s really challenging staying on top of the subject it’s growing so rapidly,” says Murray Roberts at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, UK, who co-edited the report.

    We know that acidification will be bad for marine organisms because past increases in acidity led to mass extinctions – particularly of those with hard calcium carbonate shells.

    Coral reefs are particularly at risk. Acidification reduces the concentration of carbonate ions in the upper layers of the ocean, and when carbonate levels get too low, the calcium carbonate skeletons of the corals themselves will start to dissolve.

    But simply pointing out that marine biodiversity will suffer may not be enough to encourage governments to take action, which is why some researchers have begun to put a price on the problem.

    “If you’re coming at ocean acidification as someone in government and you need to decide between investing here or elsewhere, you need something compelling to help you understand why this is important,” says Roberts.

    Lost tourism

    The report argues that the loss of tropical coral reefs to acidification could cost $1 trillion by 2100 in terms of lost shoreline protection and lost revenues for the tourism and food industries. Cold, deep-water reefs, meanwhile, are home to marine organisms that produce potent molecules that might inspire new anti-cancer therapies.

    Such findings might be enough to encourage governments to continue to fund studies into the effects that lower ocean pH will bring – but no amount of research will reduce the problem. That can only come from efforts to reduce our carbon dioxide emissions, says Roberts.

    Ken Caldeira at Stanford University in California agrees. In 2003, he published a paper that helped spur wider interest in ocean acidification.

    “Ecosystems that have thrived and developed over millions of years are being smashed down by human activities in just a few decades,” says Caldeira. “It is a very sad state of affairs that hopefully we can turn around before it is too late.”

    Colin Barras, New Scientist, 8 October 2014. Article.

  • Global economy to lose billions without action to stop ocean acidification, UN report warns

    Global economy to lose billions without action to stop ocean acidification, UN report warns

    Photo by Carl Gustav (WB)

    8 October 2014 – The global economy could be losing as much as $1 trillion annually by the end of the century if countries do not take urgent steps to stop ocean acidification, says a United Nations report launched today in Pyeongchang, Republic of Korea (ROK).

    This figure reflects the economic loss for industries linked to coral reefs alone, which are some of the most vulnerable species to this phenomenon. The overall financial and environmental costs are still uncertain, states the report, An Updated Synthesis of the Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Marine Biodiversity, issued in Pyeongchang by the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) at the 12th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the CBD (COP-12).

    “When ecosystems stop delivering the way they should, they essentially deliver less services and less benefits. In the case of coral reefs, those systems are essential for people’s livelihoods in many regions of the world and they will be significantly affected,” said Salvatore Arico, who acts as the principal focal point on biodiversity and policy at the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

    Ocean acidification is the ongoing decrease in the pH of the Earth’s oceans, caused by a drastic increase in carbon dioxide emissions due to human activity. The report stresses that this phenomenon is occurring at unprecedented levels, threatening marine biodiversity and ultimately human society.

    Higher acidity makes it harder for marine organisms like corals to calcify their shells and skeletons, which disturbs the balance of the entire ecosystem. For example, pteropods, which act as the “potato chips of the sea” because lots of organisms feed on them, are important in lots of food webs, but are severely threatened by ocean acidification.

    The report, which was put together by a team of 30 international experts led by UK scientists, finds that ocean acidification has increased by around 26 per cent since pre-industrial times, and will continue to increase in the next 50 to 100 years, drastically affecting marine organisms and ecosystems as well as the goods and services they provide.

    “While $1 trillion may sound like a huge figure, but we need to consider the benefits derived from marine biodiversity to many major industries,” Mr. Arico said in an interview. “Ocean acidification will greatly affect food security in the coming years, as well as tourism and other industries such as the pharmaceutical industry which relies on many marine organisms.”

    While reversing ocean acidification is impossible at this stage, it is still possible to reduce the rate of CO2 emissions and eventually halt them.

    “The main challenge is to link the current knowledge on ocean acidification with the post-Kyoto negotiations on climate change,” Mr. Arico said, referring to the negotiations to be held by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Lima, Peru later this year, and in Paris, France, in 2015. “It would be really very useful if ocean acidification be taken into account in the context of these negotiations because it would inform the ultimate decisions by governments.”

    UN News Centre, 8 October 2014. Article.