Author: Neville

  • Sea levels no longer included in State Government planning

    Sea levels no longer included in State Government planning

    Your Friends’ Activity

    NEW! Discover news with your friends. Give it a try.
    To get going, simply connect with your favourite social network:

    Facebook
    The Gold Coast is one area deemed at risk of sea level rises. Others include Cairns, Mackay and Hervey Bay.

    The Gold Coast is one area deemed at risk of sea level rises. Others include Cairns, Mackay and Hervey Bay. Source: News Limited

    THE State Government has controversially removed sea level rises from planning policy so as not to inhibit development and to allow councils greater independence in deciding development issues.

    The move has been dubbed a major legal and insurance nightmare, with the potential to send councils broke because a forecast 0.8m rise by 2100 has the potential to cause billions of dollars in damage.

    Although 35,000 Queensland homes are at risk of inundation, Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney said the Government would not apply an arbitrary, blanket ruling on sea levels.

    “We believe local governments are the best placed to make planning decisions according to their local circumstances and their communities and we are empowering them to do so,” Mr Seeney said.

    “Under the State Planning Policy, the State will still require councils to consider coastal storm surges and other natural hazards in preparing their local planning schemes.

    “Queensland is not alone in adopting this approach. The NSW Government determined the same policy framework for their planning schemes a year ago.”

    Local Government Association of Queensland chief executive Greg Hallam said the issue was a legal minefield.

    He said it could send councils broke and impact on residents because it might not be possible to insure properties in low-lying areas in future.

    If the Government chose not to accept sea level rises, then councils should receive indemnity.

    “We’ve been very clear on this. The Government can’t have it both ways,” he said. “If they don’t think sea level rises will occur, fine, indemnify us.”

    Opposition environment spokeswoman Jackie Trad said the Government had abandoned any pretence of believing in or planning for the effects of any climate change.

    “Because the Newman Government is refusing to act on climate change, future generations will have to pay the cost of coastal rehabilitation and repairing or relocating infrastructure and property damaged as a result of sea level rises,” she said.

    The Climate Commission has warned that scientific consensus on warming leading to sea level rises, heatwaves, bushfires and drought has strengthened.

    Mr Hallam said the LGAQ accepted that sea level rises occurred but no one knew to what level they might go.

    Ms Trad said developers would not have to deal with the consequences of bad planning laws, it would be average Queenslanders who would pay higher taxes and struggle to find home insurance.

    Mr Hallam said the LGAQ as an organisation also was exposed because it owned Local Government Mutual Liability, the council insurer.

    Mr Seeney declined to say whether he believed in sea level rises, if councils would be indemnified or who would pay for development which might be impacted.

    “…People should have the right to make up their own minds as to whether or not they’d like to live and work close to the ocean,” he said.

    A leaked Property and Infrastructure Cabinet Committee paper says: “Any local government that elects to include some allowance for sea level rise in their planning schemes will need to justify that the state interests relating to economic development are not materially affected by this.”

    The worst hit areas are deemed to be Cairns, Mackay, Hervey Bay and the Gold Coast.

    Mr Seeney said the SPP was landmark reform that would revolutionise the way councils, the development and construction industry and the State worked together.

  • Study Adds to Arctic Warming, Extreme Weather Debate

    Study Adds to Arctic Warming, Extreme Weather Debate

    • Andrew (AP)
    • Posted December 8, 2013 at 3:39 p.m.

    A new study for the first time found links between the rapid loss of snow and sea ice cover in the Arctic and a recent spate of exceptional extreme heat events in North America, Europe, and Asia. The study adds to the evidence showing that the free-fall in summer sea ice extent and even sharper decline in spring snow cover in the Northern Hemisphere is reverberating throughout the atmosphere, making extreme events more likely to occur.

    The study, published Sunday in the journal Nature Climate Change, is the first to find correlations between rapid Arctic warming and extreme summer weather events, since previous research had focused on the links between Arctic warming and fall and winter weather patterns.

    While the study adds to the body of evidence pointing to the outsized role the Arctic is playing in shaping weather patterns, it won’t end the debate within the scientific community over whether and how what is happening in the Far North could be having such far-reaching impacts.

    There is virtually no controversy among climate scientists and meteorologists that massive changes have occurred in the Arctic environment during the past three decades, and that those changes are largely due to manmade greenhouse gas emissions.

    Since the 1980s, Arctic sea ice extent has dropped at a rate of about 8 percent per decade during September, which is when the sea ice cover reaches its annual minimum. A record minimum was set in 2012. For a size comparison, consider that the area of summer sea ice lost since the 1980s would cover about 40 percent of the continental U.S., the study said.

    Spring snow cover extent loss during June has dropped even more precipitously than sea ice cover, the study found, at a rate of about 18 percent per decade since 1979.

    The reasons why the Arctic is warming so quickly — a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification — has to do with factors that are unique to the Arctic environment, involving feedbacks between sea ice, snow, water vapor and clouds. As the area warms in response to manmade greenhouse gases, melting ice and snow allow exposed land and water to absorb more of the Sun’s heat, which melts more ice and snow, and so on. A relatively small amount of initial warming can be greatly magnified in the Far North.

    It is also widely agreed that the world has seen a spate of extreme heat events in recent years, such as the 2011 Texas heat wave and drought and the deadly 2010 heat wave in Russia, and that global warming made some of these events more likely to occur and more severe.

    But scientific consensus breaks down when it comes to the issue of whether Arctic warming is altering weather patterns in the northern midlatitudes, stacking the deck in favor of extreme weather events.

    On one side of the issue are some meteorologists and climate scientists who in their studies have found correlations between the vanishing Arctic sea ice and snow cover (collectively known as the cryosphere) and weather patterns that can lead to extreme weather events.

    On the other side are other climate scientists and meteorologists who, while convinced that manmade climate change is having profound impacts on the planet, don’t yet see clear physical science evidence showing that Arctic warming is changing the already chaotic nature of weather patterns, and leading to extreme weather events.

    James Overland, a researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), said the split in the scientific community is an unusual one.

    “The skeptics (of the link between Arctic warming and extreme weather events) actually tend to be some of the real top midlatitude dynamics climate scientists,” Overland said in an interview. “They’re looking at the chaos of the long-wave atmospheric pattern and it’s really hard to see why modest additional forcing in the Arctic can overwhelm all the energy that’s in that chaotic pattern.”

    It’s all in the jet stream

    The case for a connection between Arctic warming and summertime extreme weather events rests on the Arctic’s crucial role as a pacesetter and shapemaker of the jet stream, the powerful ribbon of upper level winds that steer weather systems from west to east across the Northern Hemisphere.

    Because the temperature contrast between the frigid Arctic and the milder mid-latitudes is what drives the powerful jet stream winds that guide weather systems, what happens in the Arctic is bound to have some sort of influence on the world’s weather.

    NASA computer model animation showing the evolution of a large dip in the jet stream.

    The new study, along with other previously published research, showed that the decline in sea ice and snow cover has slowed the west-to-easterly component of the jet stream, thereby enhancing the north-to-south waviness of the jet, which leads to the creation of more stagnant or “blocked” weather patterns. In addition, the new study found an association between sea ice and snow cover decline and a northward shift in the jet stream, which allows more warm air to move into the U.S. and Europe during the summer.

    Paradoxically, other studies, including work by the same team of researchers, has shown that Arctic warming can actually enhance cold weather extremes in the U.S. and Europe during the winter.

    Jennifer Francis, a meteorologist at Rutgers University, co-author of the new study, and the most prominent proponent of the hypothesis that Arctic warming is leading to more extreme weather events, told Climate Central that this study adds further evidence to the growing body of research supporting her team’s conclusions.

    “While an observational study cannot pin down the mechanistic cause of the response, our results show a strong relationship between ice and snow losses during summer with heat waves in mid-latitude continents where billions of people are affected,” Francis said in an email conversation.

    But the lack of statistically significant results and, more important, the absence of evidence pointing to a smoking gun — a physical mechanism in the climate system that ties Arctic changes to extreme events — has left many top climate researchers unconvinced that rapid Arctic warming is a major player in causing extreme weather events outside of the Arctic itself.

    The result, some of these scientists told Climate Central, is a series of hypotheses that have not yet been fully tested.

    “I would have more confidence in the linkage being ‘real’ if there was a well-understood and proven mechanism to support the correlations,” James Screen, a climate researcher at the University of Exeter in the U.K., saud in an email. “The arguments presented are plausible, but in my opinion the evidence presented is far from conclusive (to put it mildly).”

    Kevin Trenberth, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., said the new study and others like it have failed to show statistically significant results. Additionally, he said they lack the physical evidence of what are known as “dynamical links,” — physical ties within elements of the Earth’s climate system, such as the upper oceans and lower atmosphere — between Arctic warming and extreme events.

    “There is no plausible physical mechanism or analysis of how the atmosphere is forced to behave in this manner,” Trenberth said in an email.

    Further adding to the divide within the climate science community is the fact that many of the climate models that Trenberth and others often use do not show the sorts of changes in the jet stream that the new study and others like it have pointed to, including the more frequently stagnated or “blocked” weather patterns that Francis cited. In fact, many of the newest generation of climate models show that atmospheric blocking will become less common in the North Atlantic than it is now.

    “We need more case studies, and more direct dynamics studies rather than just correlation studies,” Overland said.

    Overland pointed to the International Arctic Science Committee, which is making this a key focus of its research agenda during the next year. The International Arctic Science Committee is part of the World Meteorological Organization,

    Judah Cohen, lead seasonal weather forecaster at AER, a weather and climate consulting firm, said the possibility that Arctic climate change is leading to more extreme weather patterns has initiated a flurry of new studies. “I can tell you that I am busier now reviewing journal papers than I have ever been in my career and they are all on sea ice” he said in an email. “I think this will be a dominant area of research and discourse for years to come.”

    For her part, Francis is continuing to keep a wary eye on the weather map, convinced that the evidence for Arctic-induced weather extremes will continue to mount.

    “As we continue to emit ever-increasing amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and as the Arctic continues to warm faster than mid-latitudes, we will see the case for the linkage strengthen,” Francis said. “I expect that with every year we will see a clearer response of weather patterns in all four seasons, and new modeling experiments will help elucidate the links in the chain, as well.”

    Related Content Hansen: Extreme Weather Tied to Climate ChangeArctic Warming May Not be Altering Jet Stream: StudyA Closer Look at Arctic Sea Ice Melt and Extreme WeatherArctic Warming is Altering Jet Stream, Study ShowsAstonishing Ice Melt May Lead to More Extreme WintersWarming Arctic Fueling Cold, Snowy Winters, Study SaysVideo: Extreme Weather and Rapid Arctic WarmingArctic Sea Ice Sets Record Low, And It’s Not Over YetClimate Change and the Jet Stream

    Comments » 0

    Be the first to post a comment!

     

  • Will Greg Hunt protect our Reef?

    4 of 45
    Why this ad?
    Amaysimamaysim Holiday Offer – Get Bonus 1GB Data for 3 Months On our Award-Winning Unlimited Plan

    Will Greg Hunt protect our Reef?

    Inbox
    x
    GetUp!
    12:25 PM (3 hours ago)

    to me

    NEVILLE,

    Not so long ago, Environment Minister Greg Hunt fought against dredging in Port Phillip Bay.

    He led from the front, referring to dredge spoil as dangerous “toxic sludge” that harms the marine environment and would devastate the local tourism industry.1

    Now, he faces a decision to allow millions of tonnes of this toxic sludge to be dug up and dumped in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area at Abbot Point.

    A decision is due by this Friday, December 13. We’ve compiled a list of quick, easy actions you can take to keep the pressure on between now and the decision deadline.

    Can you email Minister Hunt and ask him to stand up for the Great Barrier Reef against dredging the same way he did for Port Phillip Bay? http://www.getup.org.au/contact-hunt

    Click here to tweet Minister Hunt and show him your support.

    Click here to spread the word over Facebook

    If it goes ahead, the dredging will make way for the world’s largest coal port at Abbot Point. It will facilitate massive coal mining projects in the Galilee Basin, with frightening consequences for our climate.

    All the usual suspects are involved. Gina Rinehart, Clive Palmer and Indian magnates Guatam Adani and GVK Reddy all have plans to develop mega-mines in the Galilee Basin, most of which rely on this dredging to be approved. Queensland Premier Campbell Newman has staked his reputation on getting the mines in operation. So much so, he has decided to reduce the mining royalties the fossil fuel industry will have to pay to open these mines.

    You can see the pressure Minister Hunt is facing. It’s huge. That’s why it’s our job to do everything we can to show him how much Australians care about protecting our Great Barrier Reef.

    Picking up the phone and calling a Minister’s office is an incredibly effective way of putting pressure on decision makers.

    Can you take two minutes to call Minister Hunt and show him there will always be more support for the protection of the Reef, than for its destruction? http://www.getup.org.au/call-hunt

    Click here to tweet Minister Hunt and show him your support.

    Click here to spread the word over Facebook

    GetUp members and other environmental groups have been fighting against this project for a long time. As a movement, we’ve seen three delays from two different Environment Ministers on this decision. The decision, ominously scheduled for Friday the 13th, is one of many that will need to be approved before coal from the Galilee Basin ever leaves our shore. Whatever happens, we’ll be there, fighting it every step of the way. But this is our chance to strike a crippling blow against these mega-mines early.

    Already, more than 15,000 GetUp members have written emails and made phone calls to Minister Hunt. They have written thousands of postcards, built a petition of over 243,000 signatures and marched with other environmental groups as part of a 3,000-strong crowd through the streets of Brisbane.

    Let’s keep up the pressure. http://www.getup.org.au/contact-hunt

    the GetUp team

  • Fw: Incredible Tribute on Normandy Beach

    Why this ad?
    70% Off Business Classwww.alphaflightguru.com – Up to 70% Off Business Class! First Class Service & Coach Prices

    Fw: Incredible Tribute on Normandy Beach

    Inbox
    x
    :
     Amazing!
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into the Sand on Normandy Beach to Commemorate Peace Day September 25, 2013
    Our politicians can close the Memorials to WWII but the French in Normandy can still pay tribute to those who gave their lives for Freedom.
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    9,000 Fallen Soldiers Etched into                                                            the Sand on                                                            Normandy Beach                                                            to Commemorate                                                            Peace Day WWII                                                            war sand                                                            Normandy                                                            installation
    British artists Jamie Wardley and Andy Moss accompanied by numerous volunteers, took to the beaches of Normandy with rakes and stencils in hand to etch 9,000 silhouettes representing fallen people into the sand. Titled The Fallen 9000, the piece is meant as a stark visual reminder of the civilians, Germans and allied forces who died during the D-Day beach landings at Arromanches on June 6, 1944 during WWII. The original team consisted of 60 volunteers, but as word spread nearly 500 additional local residents arrived to help with the temporary installation that lasted only a few hours before being washed away by the tide.