Author: Neville

  • Doubling down on our Faustian bargain

    Doubling down on our Faustian bargain

    Posted: 29 Mar 2013 09:11 PM PDT
    Intro note: NASA’s James Hansen and colleagues Pushker Kharecha and Makiko Sato have a new paper, “Climate forcing growth rates: doubling down on our Faustian bargain,” in the current issue of Environmental Research Letters. They have also summarised their findings in an overview out today, and reproduced below. Main points include:

    Associated with human greenhouse gas production is the release of fine particle known as aerosols which have a temporary cooling effect (they last in the atmosphere less than a week).
    Aerosol cooling probably reduced global warming “by about half over the past century”. In the paper Hansen et al estimate the temporary cooling “aerosol forcing -1.6 ± 0.3 watts per sq. m.”. This is around 1.2 degrees Celsius. That is, without the aerosols associated with burning fossil fuels, the planetary would be more than a degree warmer!
    The amount is uncertain because global aerosols and their effect on clouds are not measured accurately. Overcoming this gap in knowledge is urgent.
    To prevent catastrophic global warming human greenhouse gas emission must cease, but this will also end the aerosol cooling effect and the full heating effect of our “Faustian bargain” will be revealed.
    Because of the huge increase of the rate of fossil fuel carbon dioxide emissions in the past decade, we must expect reports of annual carbon dioxide increases exceeding 3 parts per million carbon dioxide, compared to recent trend increases of ~ 2 parts per million carbon dioxide per year.
    The surge of fossil fuel use, mainly coal, and rapid increases in atmopsheric carbon dioxide and nitrogen have “fertilised” the biosphere, “causing a large increase in net primary productivity of temperate and boreal forests”, and hence an annual carbon drawdown of one billion tonnes a year.
    Increased carbon dioxide uptake “does not necessarily mean that the biosphere is healthier or that the increased carbon uptake will continue indefinitely”.
    Increased short- term masking of greenhouse gas warming by fossil fuel particulate and nitrogen pollution is a “doubling down” of the Faustian bargain, an increase in the stakes: “The more we allow the Faustian debt to build, the more unmanageable the eventual consequences will be. Yet globally there are plans to build more than 1000 coal-fired power plants and plans to develop some of the dirtiest oil sources on the planet.”

    Doubling down on our Faustian bargain
    by James Hansen, Pushker Kharecha, Makiko Sato

    Summary: Humanity is doubling down on its Faustian climate bargain by pumping up fossil fuel particulate and nitrogen pollution. The more the Faustian debt grows, the more unmanageable the eventual consequences will be. Yet there are plans to build more than 1000 coal- fired power plants and plans to develop some of the dirtiest oil sources on the planet. These plans should be vigorously resisted. We are already in a deep hole — it is time to stop digging.

    Humanity’s Faustian climate bargain is well known (1,2). Humans have been pumping both greenhouse gases (mainly carbob dioxide – CO2) and aerosols (fine particles) into the atmosphere for more than a century. The CO2 accumulates steadily, staying in the climate system for millennia, with a continuously increasing warming effect. Aerosols have a cooling effect (by reducing solar heating of the ground) that depends on the rate that we pump aerosols into the air, because they fall out after about five days.

    Aerosol cooling probably reduced global warming by about half over the past century (3), but the amount is uncertain because global aerosols and their effect on clouds are not measured accurately. Aerosols increased rapidly after World War II as fossil fuel use increased ~5%/year with little pollution control (Fig. 1). Aerosol growth slowed in the 1970s with pollution controls in the U.S. and Europe, but accelerated again after ~2000.

    Figure 1. CO2 annual emissions from fossil fuel use and cement manufacture, update of a figure (4) using recent data (5)

    Figure 2. Annual increase of CO2 at Mauna Loa. The 12-month running mean reduces the double noise in the 12- month change. Blue asterisks show the end-of-year 12-month change often reported in the media.

    The rapid growth of fossil fuel CO2 emissions in the past decade is mainly from increased coal use (Figure 1), mostly in China with little control of aerosol emissions. It is thus likely that there has been an increase in the negative (cooling) climate forcing by aerosols in the past decade, as suggested by regional aerosols measurements in the Far East, but until proper global aerosol monitoring is initiated, as discussed below, the aerosol portion of the amplified Faustian bargain remains largely unquantified.

    In our current paper (6) we describe another component to the fossil fuel Faustian bargain, which is suggested by a careful look at observed atmospheric CO2 change (Figure 2). The orange curve in Fig. 2 is the 12-month change of CO2 at Mauna Loa. This curve is quite “noisy”, in part because it has double- noise, being affected by short-term variability at both the start-point and end-point in taking the 12-month difference in CO2 amount. A more meaningful measure of the CO2 growth is provided by the 12-month running mean (red curve in Figure 2). The temporal variability of the red curve has physical significance, most of the variability being accounted for by the Southern (El Nino–La Nina) Oscillation and the Pinatubo volcanic eruption in the early 1990s, as discussed in our paper.

    NOAA recently reported the second largest annual CO2 increase in their Mauna Loa record. What they report is the end-of-year change in the noisy orange curve, the end-of-year values being indicated by blue asterisks in Fig. 2. It is practically certain that still larger CO2 increases will soon be reported, because of the huge increase of the rate of fossil fuel CO2 emissions in the past decade (black curve in Fig. 1), indeed we must expect reports of annual CO2 increases exceeding 3 ppm CO2.

    An interesting point, however, is the failure of the observed increases in atmospheric CO2 to increase as rapidly as the fossil fuel source has increased. This fact is contrary to suggestions that terrestrial (7,8) and ocean (9,10) carbon sinks are tending to saturate as CO2 emissions continue.

    An informative presentation of CO2 observations is the ratio of annual CO2 increase in the air divided by annual fossil fuel CO2 emissions (11), the “airborne fraction” (Figure 3, right scale). This airborne fraction, clearly, is not increasing. Thus the net ocean plus terrestrial sink for carbon emissions has increased by a factor of 3-4 since 1958, accommodating the emissions increase by that factor.
    Figure 3. Fossil fuel CO2 emissions (left scale) and airborne fraction, i.e., the ratio of observed atmospheric CO2 increase to fossil fuel CO2 emissions. Final three values are 5-, 3- and 1-year means
    Remarkably, the airborne fraction has declined since 2000. The 7-year running mean had remained close to 60% up to 2000, except for the period affected by Pinatubo. The airborne fraction is affected by factors other than the efficiency of carbon sinks, most notably by changes in the rate of fossil fuel emissions (12). However, the change of emission rate in 2000 from 1.5%/year to 3.1%/year (Figure 1), other things being equal, would have caused a sharp increase of the airborne fraction (because a rapid source increase provides less time for carbon to be moved downward out of the ocean’s upper layers). A decrease in land use emissions during the past decade (13) might contribute a partial explanation for the decrease of the airborne fraction, but something more than land use change seems to be occurring.

    We suggest that the surge of fossil fuel use, mainly coal, since 2000 is a basic cause of the large increase of carbon uptake by the combined terrestrial and ocean carbon sinks. One mechanism by which fossil fuel emissions increase carbon uptake is by fertilizing the biosphere via provision of nutrients essential for tissue building, especially nitrogen, which plays a critical role in controlling net primary productivity and is limited in many ecosystems (14). Modeling (15) and field studies (16) confirm a major role of nitrogen deposition, working in concert with CO2 fertilization, in causing a large increase in net primary productivity of temperate and boreal forests. A plausible addition of 5 TgN/year from fossil fuels and net ecosystem productivity of 200 kgC per kgN16 yields an annual carbon drawdown of 1 GtC/year, which is of the order of what is needed to explain the post-2000 anomaly in airborne CO2.

    Independent of a possible aerosol effect on the carbon cycle, it is known that aerosols are an important climate forcing. IPCC (17) concludes that aerosols are a negative (cooling) forcing, probably between -0.5 and -2.5 W/m2. Hansen et al. (18), based mainly on analysis of Earth’s energy imbalance, derive an aerosol forcing -1.6 ± 0.3 W/m2, consistent with an analysis of Murphy et al. (19) that suggests an aerosol forcing about -1.5 W/m2. This large negative aerosol forcing reduces the net climate forcing of the past century by about half.
    Reduction of the net human-made climate forcing by aerosols has been described as a “Faustian bargain” (1,2), because the aerosols constitute deleterious particulate air pollution. Reduction of the net climate forcing by half will continue only if we allow air pollution to build up to greater and greater amounts. More likely, humanity will demand and achieve a reduction of particulate air pollution, whereupon, because the CO2 from fossil fuel burning remains in the surface climate system for millennia, the “devil’s payment” will be extracted from humanity via increased global warming
    .
    So is the new data we present here good news or bad news, and how does it alter the “Faustian bargain”? At first glance there seems to be some good news. First, if our interpretation of the data iscorrect, the surge of fossil fuel emissions, especially from coal burning, along with the increasing atmospheric CO2 level is “fertilizing” the biosphere, and thus limiting the growth of atmospheric CO2. Also, despite the absence of accurate global aerosol measurements, it seems that the aerosol cooling effect is probably increasing based on evidence of aerosol increases in the Far East.

    Both effects work to limit global warming and thus help explain why the rate of global warming seems to be less this decade than it has been during the prior quarter century. This data interpretation also helps explain why multiple warnings that some carbon sinks are “drying up” and could even become carbon sources, e.g., boreal forests infested by pine bark beetles (20) and the Amazon rain forest suffering from drought (21), have not produced an obvious impact on atmospheric CO2.

    However, increased CO2 uptake does not necessarily mean that the biosphere is healthier or that the increased carbon uptake will continue indefinitely (22). Nor does it change the basic facts about the potential magnitude of the fossil fuel carbon source and the long lifetime of fossil fuel CO2 in the surface carbon reservoirs (atmosphere, ocean, soil, biosphere) once the fossil fuels are burned (23). Fertilization of the biosphere affects the distribution of the fossil fuel carbon among these reservoirs, at least on the short run, but it does not alter the fact that the fossil carbon will remain in these reservoirs for millennia.

    The principal implication of our present analysis relates to the Faustian bargain. Increased short- term masking of greenhouse gas warming by fossil fuel particulate and nitrogen pollution is a “doubling down” of the Faustian bargain, an increase in the stakes. The more we allow the Faustian debt to build, the more unmanageable the eventual consequences will be. Yet globally there are plans to build more than 1000 coal-fired power plants (24) and plans to develop some of the dirtiest oil sources on the planet (25). These plans should be vigorously resisted. We are already in a deep hole — it is time to stop digging.

    The tragedy of this science story is that the great uncertainty in interpretations of the climate forcings did not have to be. Global aerosol properties should be monitored to high precision, similar to the way CO2 is monitored. The capability of measuring detailed aerosol properties has long existed, as demonstrated by observations of Venus.26 The requirement is measurement of the polarization of reflected sunlight to an accuracy of 0.1%, with measurements covering the spectral range from near- ultraviolet to the near-infrared at a range of scattering angles, as is possible from an orbiting satellite. (27,28,29) Unfortunately, the satellite mission designed for that purpose (30) failed to achieve orbit, suffering precisely the same launch failure as the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO). Although a replacement OCO mission is in preparation, no replacement aerosol mission is scheduled.

    Footnotes are available at: http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/mailings/2013/20130329_FaustianBargain.pdf

  • Mega volcanoes may have killed half of Earth’s species

    Mega volcanoes may have killed half of Earth’s species

    The eruptions would also have released large amounts of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, causing global warming.

    By

    Tanya Lewis, LiveScience

    Fri, Mar 22 2013 at 9:51 AM

    Related Topics:

    Extinction, Natural Disasters, Volcanoes

    In Clifton, New Jersey, a massive lava flow (black rock on left) from the time of the End Triassic is exposed in a former quarry. Reddish sedimentary rocks signaling the extinction itself lie to the far right. (Photo: Paul Olsen/Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory)

    Massive volcanic eruptions may have led to the extermination of half of Earth’s species some 200 million years ago, a new study suggests.

    The release of gases from giant eruptions caused climate change that led to the End-Triassic Extinction, the widespread loss of land and sea species that made way for the rise of the dinosaurs, the research says. The new study, published on March 21 in the journal Science, shows that a set of major eruptions spanning from what is now New Jersey to Morocco occurred very close to the time of the extinction.

    Scientists suspected previously that such volcanic activity and the resultant climate change were responsible for this major extinction and at least four others. But researchers weren’t able to constrain the dates of the eruptions and extinctions well enough to prove the hypothesis. The new study, however, dates the End-Triassic Extinction to 201.56 million years ago, the same time the volcanoes were blowing their tops.

    The eruptions, known as the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, began when the land on Earth was part of one giant supercontinent called Pangaea. They lasted more than 600,000 years and created a rift that became the Atlantic Ocean. The researchers studied lava from these flows in modern-day Nova Scotia, Morocco and New Jersey. [Big Blasts: History’s 10 Most Destructive Volcanoes]

    The previous dates for these eruptions had error margins of 1 million to 3 million years, but this study decreases those numbers by an order of magnitude, lead author Terrence Blackburn, a geologist at the Carnegie Institution for Science, told LiveScience.

    The results showed that the oldest massive eruptions were in Morocco, followed by the ones in Nova Scotia 3,000 years later and then those in New Jersey another 10,000 years after that. Animal and plant fossils, along with pollen and spores from the Triassic era, can be found in sediment layers underneath the lava flows, but not in layers above them. This suggests the eruptions wiped out those species. The organisms that went extinct include eel-like fish called conodonts, early crocodile species, tree lizards and broad-leaved plants.

    The evidence heats up

    Blackburn and colleagues determined the age of the lavas based on their mineral content. When lava flows cool, the center regions remain hot, and some chemical elements, like the mineral zircon, fail to crystallize. Zircon incorporates large amounts of uranium, which radioactively decays into lead at a specific rate. By measuring the ratio of uranium to lead in lava rock, the scientists could figure out precisely when the eruptions occurred.

    “Zircon’s really the perfect time capsule,”Blackburn said.

    A second piece of evidence supporting the role of volcanism comes from reversals in the Earth’s magnetic field. The researchers found mineral grains from one of these reversals in the sediment layer that formed just before the extinction. Since the researchers found the same layers at every site they studied, the magnetic reversal serves as a marker for when the extinction occurred.

    A final line of evidence comes from repetitive motions of the Earth. As the planet rotates on its axis, it wobbles around like a top, which causes the amount of energy it receives from the sun to fluctuate depending on the areas that are pointed directly at the sun. These fluctuations correspond to different climate conditions and occur on a regular interval. By using these intervals, the researchers were able to determine the age of fossil-containing sediments to within 20,000 years.

    Warming the planet

    The gigantic eruptions would have vented sulfates that reflected sunlight back into space, effectively cooling the planet for several thousand years. But the eruptions would also have released large amounts of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, causing global warming. Many species wouldn’t have been able to survive this dramatic shift in temperature and would have died out.

    The findings are “a nice confirmation of what we and others have been aware of for some time,” geologist Paul Renne of the Berkeley Geochronology Center in California, who was not involved in the study, told LiveScience. “The main difference is the dating that they used is more precise than our results were.”

    Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

    Related on LiveScience and MNN:

    50 Amazing Facts About Planet Earth


    Wipe Out: History’s Most Mysterious Extinctions


    The 10 Biggest Volcanic Eruptions in History


    MNN: Mass extinction event may have been caused by extreme global warming

    This story was originally written for LiveScience and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

  • Glacier melts in Patagonia

    Big melt expected for Canadian Arctic glaciers

    Scientists used computer models to predict how the glaciers would respond to future climate change, and the results were not reassuring.

    By

    Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience

    Thu, Mar 07 2013 at 5:50 PM

    Related Topics:

    Arctic, Climate Change, Glaciers, Global Warming

    Scientists work on the ice in the Arctic under a midnight sun. (Photo: Jeremy Potter NOAA/OAR/OER)

    A fifth of Canada’s Arctic Archipelago glaciers may disappear by the end of the century, contributing 1.4 inches (3.5 centimeters) to sea-level rise, new research finds.

    For the study, published online Thursday (March 7) in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, scientists used computer models to predict how the glaciers would respond to future climate change. The results were not reassuring.

    “Even if we assume that global warming is not happening quite so fast, it is still highly likely that the ice is going to melt at an alarming rate,” study leader Jan Lenaerts of Utrecht University said in a statement. “The chances of it growing back are very slim.”

    Melting ice

    Glaciers worldwide are retreating rapidly in the face of climate change. In the Andes of South America, glaciers have lost between 30 percent and 50 percent of their surface area since the late 1970s, according to research published in January in the journal Cryosphere. Himalayan glaciers are losing mass as well.

    Meanwhile, summer melts on the Arctic ice sheet have been breaking records, including rates of glacial retreat, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). In the new study, Lenaerts and colleagues calibrated a computer model to the last 10 years of melt along the Arctic Archipelago, the scattering of islands that reaches from the top of the Canadian mainland toward the North Pole.

    Once the model’s melt predictions matched reality when fed old climate data, the researchers used it to predict future glacier melt with various scenarios of continued climate change. In one scenario, global temperatures rise by 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit (3 degrees Celsius). As a result, 20 percent of the archipelago glacier volume vanishes by the end of the century.

    This scenario is not out of the realm of possibility. International climate negotiators have pledged to keep global temperatures from rising more than 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C), but recent climate talks have made only small steps toward reaching that goal.

    Once the glaciers are gone, they’re unlikely to come back, Lenaerts and his colleagues found. Snow and ice reflect sunlight away from the Earth’s surface, but as the snow and ice melt, that reflective protection vanishes, too. The ground will then absorb more sunlight, increasing local temperature. In a 3-degree Celsius warmed world, the temperature around the Canadian ice caps is expected to rise more like 14.4 degrees F (8 degrees C), due to that feedback. [Images of Melt: Earth’s Vanishing Ice]

    Sea-level rise

    If a fifth of the Arctic Archipelago glacial ice melts, the resulting sea-level rise would be 1.4 inches (3.5 cm), the researchers found. It’s a significant contribution from an area that doesn’t always get much attention in climate discussions.

    “Most attention goes out to Greenland and Antarctica, which is understandable, because they are the two largest ice bodies in the world,” study researcher Michiel van den Broeke of Utretcht University said in a statement. “However, with this research we want to show that the Canadian ice caps should be included in the calculations.”

    Follow Stephanie Pappas @sipappas. Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience, Facebookor Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

    Related on LiveScience and MNN:


    Ice World: Gallery of Awe-Inspiring Glaciers


    8 Ways Global Warming Is Already Changing the World


    Weather vs. Climate Change: Test Yourself


    MNN: Time-lapse video: Glacier melts in Patagonia

    This story was originally written for LiveScience and is republished with permission here. Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

  • Critical report on bushfire crisis

    Critical report on bushfire crisis

    ABCUpdated March 31, 2013, 12:29 pm

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    Properties damaged in fierce bushfire

    It’s feared up 12 properties have been destroyed by a bushfire which tore through 113 hectares, west of Melbourne.

    ABC © Enlarge photo

    The first emergency agency to report on Tasmania’s bushfire crisis has found communication failures and a lack of coordination and planning all contributed to the disaster.

    The Dodges Ferry Sea Rescue was at the centre of the January emergency when bushfires cut roads to the Tasman Peninsula.

    Volunteer, Peter Derklin says it was a scary time.

    “We were pulling people off jetties and putting them on boats,” Mr Derklin said.

    The Sea Rescue’s report on the disaster says volunteers could not find an emergency plan and had difficulty contacting the police radio room without phones and radio.

    It also notes an apparent lack of control at evacuation sites.

    The Sea Rescue president, Mark Donovan, hopes the findings will become part of a larger review.

    “We have asked to be part of the debrief,” Mr Donovan said.

    The Deputy Police Commissioner, Scott Tilyard, says police have arranged to meet volunteers to discuss the report.
    About 200 properties around the state were destroyed in the bushfires, but no one died in the blazes.

  • North Korea entering ‘state of war’ against South Korea

    North Korea entering ‘state of war’ against South Korea

    Date March 30, 2013 – 3:20PM 151 reading now

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    This photo taken and released by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on March 29, 2013 shows, according to KCNA, North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un discussing the strike plan with officers. The lettering on the map, rear left, reads as “Strategic Forces’ US Mainland Striking Plan” Photo: AFP PHOTO / KCNA via KNS

    North Korea says it has formally entered a “state of war” with South Korea and warns that any provocation will swiftly escalate into a nuclear conflict.

    “As of now, inter-Korea relations enter a state of war and all matters between the two Koreas will be handled according to wartime protocol,” the North said in a statement on Saturday attributed to all government bodies and institutions.

    It is the latest in a string of dire threats from Pyongyang that have been matched by tough warnings from South Korea and the United States, fuelling international concerns that the situation is spiralling out of control.

    This photo taken and released by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on March 29, 2013 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un looking at and signing documents at an undisclosed location, in front of a map which appears to show the tracked or projected movement of the US Seventh Fleet in the Pacific Ocean. Photo: AFP PHOTO / KCNA via KNS

    “The long-standing situation of the Korean peninsula being neither at peace nor at war is finally over,” said the statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

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    The two Koreas have always technically remained at war because the 1950-53 Korean War concluded with an armistice rather than a peace treaty.

    The North had announced earlier this month that it was ripping up the armistice and other bilateral peace pacts signed with Seoul in protest against South Korea-US joint military exercises.

    “This is not really a new threat – just part of a series of provocative threats,” the South’s Unification Ministry said in a statement.

    The defence ministry added that no particular troop movement had been observed along the border.

    Voiding the ceasefire theoretically opened the way to a resumption of hostilities, although observers noted it was far from the first time that North Korea had announced the demise of the armistice.

    The armistice was approved by the UN General Assembly, and both the United Nations and South Korea have repudiated the North’s unilateral withdrawal.

    Saturday’s statement warned that any military provocation near the North-South land or sea border would result “in a full-scale conflict and a nuclear war”.

    Most observers still believe this will remain a rhetorical rather than a physical battle, but the situation has now become so volatile that any slight miscalculation carries the potential for rapid escalation.

    Both China and Russia asked for all sides to co-operate to prevent the situation worsening on Friday, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov voicing particular concern.

    “We can simply see the situation getting out of control, it would spiral down into a vicious circle,” Lavrov told reporters.

    His warning came after North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un ordered missile units to prepare to strike US mainland and military bases, vowing to “settle accounts” after US stealth bombers flew over South Korea.

    US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel stressed that Washington would not be cowed by Pyongyang’s bellicose threats and stood ready to respond to “any eventuality”.

    The high-stakes standoff has its roots in North Korea’s successful long-range rocket launch in December and the third nuclear test it carried out in February.

    Both events drew UN sanctions that incensed Pyongyang, which then switched the focus of its anger to the annual joint South Korea-US military drills.

    AFP

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/north-korea-entering-state-of-war-against-south-korea-20130330-2h02v.html#ixzz2P1gjTz2c

  • U.S Scientists Create Image of Seafloor Forming

    03/29/2013 11:01 AM ID: 93095 Permalink
    U.S Scientists Create Image of Seafloor Forming

    Researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California in San Diego say they now have a better idea of how new seafloor in the Pacific Ocean is created.

    By using electromagnetic technology, researchers made unique images of a site deep in the Earth where magma is generated.

    “Our data show that mantle upwelling beneath the mid-ocean ridge creates a deeper and broader melting region than previously thought. It was really a surprise to discover that melting started so deep in the mantle — much deeper than was expected,”

    Source: www.upi.com
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