Author: Neville

  • Filipino super-typhoon an ominous warning of climate change impact

    Filipino super-typhoon an ominous warning of climate change impact

    Philippines is having to adapt and adjust to rapidly deteriorating climatic trends at a great cost to its economy
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    Simon Tisdall

    The Guardian, Sunday 17 February 2013 16.27 GMT

    Thousands of banana trees toppled by Bopha in New Bataan, Philippines. Photograph: Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images

    When Super-Typhoon Bopha struck without warning before dawn, flattening the walls of their home, Maria Amparo Jenobiagon, her two daughters and grandchildren ran for their lives.

    The storm on 4 December was the worst to ever hit the southern Philippines: torrential rain turned New Bataan’s river into a raging flood. Roads were washed away and the bridge turned into an enormous dam. Tens of thousands of coconut trees crashed down in an instant as unbelievably powerful winds struck. The banana crop was destroyed in a flash – and with it the livelihoods of hundreds of farmers.

    The only safe place the family could think of was the concrete grandstand at the village sports stadium. Two months later, Jenobiagon, 36, and her three-year-old granddaughter, Mary Aieshe, are still there, living in one of the improvised tents spanning its steep concrete tiers along with hundreds of other people.

    “We were terrified. All we could hear was loud crashing. We didn’t know what to do. So we came here,” Jenobiagon said. “Everyone ran to the health centre but houses were being swept away and the water was neck deep. Everywhere we went was full of mud and water. We went to a school but it was flooded, so we came to the stadium.”

    Lorenzo Balbin, the mayor of New Bataan, said the fury of the storm was far beyond the experience of anyone living in Mindanao. It would take 10 years to replace the coconut crop, he said. Some villages in Compostela Valley may be too unsafe to live in.

    Bopha, known locally as Pablo, broke records as well as hearts. At its height, it produced winds speeds of 160mph, gusting to 195mph. It was the world’s deadliest typhoon in 2012, killing 1,067 people with 800 left missing. More than 6.2 million people were affected; the cost of the damage may top $1bn.

    As a category 5 storm (the highest), Bopha was significantly more powerful than hurricane Katrina (category 3), which hit the US in 2005, and last year’s heavily publicised hurricane Sandy (category 2). With an estimated 216,000 houses destroyed or damaged, tens of thousands of people remain displaced, presenting a challenge for government responders and aid agencies.

    The lack of international media coverage of Bopha may in part be explained – though not excused – by western-centric news values, and in part by the high incidence of storms in the Pacific region.

    The Philippines experiences an average of 20 typhoons a year (including three super-typhoons) plus numerous incidents of flooding, drought, earthquakes and tremors and occasional volcanic eruptions, making it one of the most natural disaster-prone countries in the world.

    But more disturbing than Bopha’s size was the fact that it appeared to reflect rapidly deteriorating climatic trends.

    The five most devastating typhoons recorded in the Philippines have occurred since 1990, affecting 23 million people. Four of the costliest typhoons anywhere occurred in same period, according to an Oxfam report. What is more, Bopha hit an area where typhoons are all but unknown.

    The inter-governmental panel on climate change says mean temperatures in the Philippines are rising by 0.14C per decade. Since the 1980s, there has been an increase in annual mean rainfall. Yet two of the severest droughts ever recorded occurred in 1991-92 and 1997-98.

    Scientists are also registering steadily rising sea levels around the Philippines, and a falling water table. All this appears to increase the likelihood and incidence of extreme weather events while adversely affecting food production and yields through land erosion and degradation, analysts say.

    Mary Ann Lucille Sering, head of the Philippine government’s climate change commission, is in no doubt her country faces a deepening crisis that it can ill afford, financially and in human terms. Typhoon-related costs in 2009, the year the commission was created, amounted to 2.9% of GDP, she said, and have been rising each year since then.

    “Extreme weather is becoming more frequent, you could even call it the new normal,” Sering said. “Last year one typhoon [Bopha] hurt us very much. If this continues we are looking at a big drain on resources.” Human activity-related “slow onset impacts” included over-fishing, over-dependence on certain crops, over-extraction of ground water, and an expanding population (the Philippines has about 95 million people and a median age of 23).

    “Altogether this could eventually lead to disaster,” Sering said. Unlike countries such as Britain, where changing weather has a marginal impact on most people’s lives, climate change in the Philippines was “like a war”. Opinion surveys showed that Filipinos rated global warming as a bigger threat than rising food and fuel prices, she said.

    Even given this level of awareness, Bopha presented an enormous test for emergency services. Oxfam workers in Davao City, working with the UN, local NGO partners, and the government’s National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), quickly moved to the area to offer assistance. Oxfam has committed $2m in Bopha relief funds on top of its annual $4m Philippines budget. But the UN-co-ordinated Bopha Action Plan, which set an emergency funding target of $76m, has received only $27m so far.

    The overall post-Bopha response has comprised three phases: immediate help, including the provision of shelter and clean water, sanitation and hygiene facilities; rebuilding and relocation; and mitigation and prevention measures.

    “The first thing was to provide water bladders to the evacuation centre in New Bataan. We concentrated on providing emergency toilets and water systems,” said Kevin Lee, response manager for the Humanitarian Response Consortium, a group of five local NGOs. “We had a 15-strong team from Oxfam and the HRC, digging holes and putting in plastic pipe. Next we started looking at emergency food and shelter.

    “The devastation was worse than anything I have ever seen. Up to 90% of the coconut trees were just flattened. That’s the local economy on the ground. And that’s really difficult to fix quickly,” Lee said. But his team’s swift action had positive results, he added. There have been no water-borne diseases in New Bataan and no outbreak of cholera.

    The consortium has now moved on to longer-term projects such as building a waste management plant, setting up markets at relocation sites, and working on disaster risk reduction programmes, so that when the next typhoon hits, local people may be better prepared.

    The Lumbia resettlement project outside Cagayan de Oro, in northern Mindanao, provides an example of what can be achieved. Here, victims of tropical storm Washi, which swept through the area in 2011, killing 1,200 people and causing nearly $50m in damage, have been offered newly-built homes on land owned by the local university.

    The Lumbia project’s slogan is “build a community, not just homes”, and it has gone down well with displaced villagers. “It’s better here than before. It’s more elevated, we don’t have to worry about floods,” said Alexie Colibano, a Lumbia resident. “Before we were living on an island in the river. Now we feel more secure.”

    About 15,000 Bopha victims remain in evacuation centres, including in the New Bataan stadium grandstand. In total, about 200,000 are still living with friends or relatives.

    In Manila, meanwhile, Benito Ramos, the outgoing executive director of the NDRRMC, is busy planning for the next super-typhoon. “We are preparing for a national summit this month on how to prepare, including early warning, building codes, land use regulations, geo-hazard mapping, relocation and livelihoods,” he said.

    But the bigger issue is climate change, which posed an “existential threat” to the Philippines, Ramos said. “We are mainstreaming climate change in all government departments and policies. If we don’t adapt and adjust, we all agree we are heading for disaster.”

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  • Gillard brushes off poll slump as Abbott surges

    Gillard brushes off poll slump as Abbott surges

    By chief political correspondent Simon Cullen

    Updated 8 minutes ago

    Video: Abbott overtakes Gillard as preferred PM (ABC News)

    Related Story: Miners criticise Gillard’s jobs package

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    Map: Australia
    Julia Gillard has brushed off new opinion poll results which show voter support for Labor has plunged and Tony Abbott has overtaken her as preferred prime minister.

    The Nielsen poll, published in Fairfax newspapers, shows Labor’s primary vote has dropped five points since December to 30 per cent, while the Coalition’s has risen four points to 47 per cent.

    After preferences, the Coalition has a thumping election-winning lead of 56 per cent to 44 per cent.

    The figures also reveal a dramatic reversal in who voters would prefer as prime minister.

    Support for Mr Abbott has jumped nine points to 49 per cent, while Ms Gillard’s support has dropped five points to 45 per cent.

    Asked this morning what has gone wrong, Ms Gillard declined to comment on the latest poll results.

    “If I spent my time worrying about and commentating on opinion polls, then I wouldn’t have the time to get my job done,” she told Channel Seven.

    “And the job is more important. So each and every day I just let that wash through and I focus on what I need to do as prime minister so that we’ve got a strong economy today and everything we need for families today and we’re building a better future.”

    According to the Nielsen poll, a significant majority of voters prefer Kevin Rudd over Ms Gillard as Labor leader, although that is largely driven by Coalition supporters.

    Among Labor voters, Ms Gillard remains more popular.

    Even before today’s poll, there was a sense of despondency within Labor ranks over the Government’s performance, and internal tensions over the possibility of a Rudd comeback.

    Last week, the former prime minister said those speculating about a leadership change should take a “very long cold shower”. He then suggested they should “jump in the ice bath”.

    Yesterday, Mr Rudd said: “It’s time this debate was put in cryogenic storage. Frankly, it ain’t happening.”

    ‘Poll fatigue’

    Video: Paul Howes speaks to ABC News Breakfast (ABC News)

    This morning Australian Workers’ Union national secretary Paul Howes, who was instrumental in dumping Mr Rudd from the top job in 2010 following a slump in the polls, says he regrets spending so much time worrying about the polls.

    “I want to see some news outlet do a poll of all Australians about how much people care about polls,” Mr Howes told ABC News 24.

    “Because it kind of seems to me that this nation’s suffering from poll fatigue.

    “We can’t go for more than one week without Newspoll doing a poll, AC Nielsen doing a poll, Essential doing a poll, UMR doing a poll or having Roy Morgan doing a poll, and everyone getting overly excited about it.

    “Let’s actually start focusing the national conversation back on the issues that matter, and not based on telephone samples of a couple of thousand voters taken over a weekend.”

    Labor frontbencher Bill Shorten, who was also involved in replacing Mr Rudd as prime minister, has reaffirmed his loyalty to Ms Gillard.

    “What people want us to do is move beyond the gossip of personalities into the substance of what the Government’s doing for me and my family,” Mr Shorten told ABC radio.

    “I’d submit to you that manufacturing jobs, National Disability Insurance Scheme, better education, reasonable economic numbers compared to the rest of the world – that’s what we’re doing.”

    The Nielsen poll shows more voters disapprove of Mr Abbott’s performance than approve, but the margin has narrowed to 13 points compared with 29 point gap two months ago.

    More voters would prefer Malcolm Turnbull to be opposition leader over Mr Abbott, although his strongest support comes from Labor and Greens supporters.

    Among Coalition voters, Mr Abbott is more popular.

    Topics:federal-government, alp, gillard-julia, government-and-politics, australia

    First posted 10 hours 22 minutes ago

    Contact Simon Cullen

  • Sydney’s rail network is running 25 years behind London’s Underground says new rail boss Howard Collins

    Sydney’s rail network is running 25 years behind London’s Underground says new rail boss Howard Collins

    ANDREW CLENNELL STATE POLITICAL EDITOR
    The Daily Telegraph
    February 18, 201312:00AM
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    The London Underground is 25 years ahead of Sydney’s rail network. Picture: AP Photo/Adam Butler Source: AP

    SYDNEY’S train system is like London’s Tube “25 years ago”, according to the new boss of our creaking rail network.

    Howard Collins, outgoing chief operating officer of the London Underground, will take up his $530,000-a-year post as the CEO of Sydney Trains, which, together with NSW Trains, will replace Cityrail, in June.

    He admits to being taken aback by the Harbour City’s congestion problems.

    He said there was a place for more single-carriage metro train services to replace double decker trains and in a warning to his new employer, the state government, he said not to invest in new infrastructure, such as new train lines, would be a mistake that would cost Sydney being a “world city”.

    WHAT DO YOU THINK? COMMENT BELOW

    Mr Collins was surprised how tough transport was for Sydneysiders on a visit two weeks ago, saying things had worsened since 2006.

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    “When I travelled it reminded me of the London Underground 25 years ago in terms of the ticketing, the technology, the environment,” he said. “That’s what I want to help improve.”

    He said the introduction of the Opal card would be a major benefit – as the Oyster card had been for London.

    “What did surprise me in Sydney was the amount of traffic congestion and people struggling to get into work.

    “A lot of people don’t have an alternative other than them driving a car for an hour or so.

    “If you want to make Sydney feel like a world city, you have got to put public transport in in a big way.”

    Mr Collins told how the London Underground had been able to use many more services when signalling was improved and trains were allowed to travel faster.

    Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian’s plan involves introducing single-deck carriages to the new North West Rail Line and eventually progressing them on to other lines.

    “While some parts of Sydney do require heavy (double decker) capacity, we have done a lot of work in understanding it’s not so much the number of seats on each train but the number of seats per hour,” Mr Collins said.

    “Long-term investment in public transport is the only way to keep the arteries and veins of the city moving.

    “(Installing) heavy metro, it’s expensive, but if you don’t have that capital program into public transport, eventually the city will grind to a halt.”

    He planned to work hard on customer service to encourage more people to catch trains.

    “One of the things on the Tube, I have put in wi-fi. It’s made a massive difference to people.”

    In a 35-year career with Transport for London, Mr Collins has done everything from driving trains, to working in signalling.

    He ran the trains during the Olympics in his $380,000 (£250,000) a year job.

    Mr Collins defended his new salary saying: “I think I will be good value for money. It’s a big life change, it’s a big move. Living in Sydney’s probably one of the most expensive places in the world.”

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  • For Gillard, the bad news comes in threes

    For Gillard, the bad news comes in threes

    Date February 17, 2013 Category Opinion 397 reading now

    Comments 152
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    Peter Hartcher

    Sydney Morning Herald political and international editor

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    Rudd denies leadership bid… over and over again

    Former prime minister Kevin Rudd is constantly asked the question he doesn’t want to hear, and while his answer stays the same, his sense of humour does not.
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    Julia Gillard today gets the political news she most fears, at the time she fears it most.

    After declaring that she will go to the people on September 14, she now finds that the people are running from her.

    After declaring that she will go to the people on September 14, she now finds that the people are running from her.

    There are three distinct political tremors in today’s Herald-Nielsen poll result that, together, come as an earthquake for Labor.

    Losing popularity … Julia Gillard. Photo: Andrew Meares

    First is that the voter trend towards Labor in the second half of last year has now reversed.

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    Second is that Gillard has now lost to Tony Abbott her only poll advantages. While Labor has been in a losing position for a long time, Gillard had the consolation of two areas of personal dominance over Tony Abbott.

    She has now lost both – she is no longer preferred prime minister, and she no longer has a higher approval rating.

    Third, Kevin Rudd’s popularity not only remains strong, but has grown stronger.

    And while Gillard fears losing power to Tony Abbott at the election, the more urgent danger is from Rudd’s popularity. Because Rudd offers the party a way out of the landslide that, on today’s poll results, would sweep Labor out of power with a swing against it of 6 percentage points.

    The Prime Minister’s dramatic early announcement of the election arrested national attention.

    For a moment she had the chance to hold the initiative and monopolise the political airwaves. But the announcement was hastily conceived. There was no follow-through plan, apart from a jarring announcement of two cabinet resignations.

    We now know that Gillard lost her precious moment. Instead of the government towards a new momentum she merely provided Labor with a dramatic attention-grabbing moment for it to showcase its ugliest faces – the faces of scandal and corruption, the faces of Craig Thomson and Eddie Obeid. And, of course, the admission that its much-vaunted mining tax is a farce.

    ”I think the most likely thing is that the combined effect of Craig Thomson and Eddie Obeid created an atmosphere of crisis,” says Nielsen’s John Stirton.

    And while Labor lost its opportunity, Tony Abbott took his. ”I think the results probably reflect Abbott’s change of approach,” becoming less aggressive and more positive, says Stirton. ”There have been far fewer shots of him on the evening news in his shrill, hectoring mode. He’s been more moderate and bipartisan – it took him a long time to learn, but the voters rather like that.”

    This dire combination is not necessarily fatal for Gillard, or for Labor. John Howard recovered from worse polling to win in 2001. But each passing week of bungles and bad news narrows her options for recover.

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    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/for-gillard-the-bad-news-comes-in-threes-20130217-2elbp.html#ixzz2LCT6hKMu

  • East Coast Sea Level Rise Tied to Slowing of Gulf Stream

    East Coast Sea Level Rise Tied to Slowing of Gulf Stream

    February 15, 2013

    Posted by Neville underUncategorized

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    East Coast Sea Level Rise Tied to Slowing of Gulf Stream

    By Tom Yulsman | February 14, 2013 9:09 pm

    Sea level rise has been accelerating along the mid-Atlantic coast of the United States, and now, a paper published in the February issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans confirms the cause: the Gulf Stream is slowing.

    My colleague Michael Lemonick has an excellent post over at Climate Central explaining the science and the background in some detail. But for ImaGeo, I thought it would be valuable to add a visual perspective in the form of the visualization above.

    Produced by a computer model, it shows in breathtaking detail the Gulf Stream meandering and looping from the Gulf of Mexico up the East Coast and across the North Atlantic towards Western Europe. It was produced as part of of a NASA project called ECCO2. The colors correspond to sea surface temperature, with the warmer temperatures of the current quite evident.

    Looking at the visualization, you might be able to get a sense of how a slowing Gulf Stream may contribute to sea level rise along the East Coast. It’s northeasterly flow actually sucks water away from the land — and the effect isn’t really subtle. As Lemonick reports, it has kept sea level in the region up to a meter and a half lower than it would otherwise be.

    But as the Gulf Stream slows — a predicted consequence of global warming — the effect is lessening, and sea level is now rising faster than in the past. For cities like New York, this could mean trouble over the coming decades, especially when storms like Superstorm Sandy pile a significant surge of water atop a higher ocean.

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  • Red Cross celebrates 150th anniversary

    Red Cross celebrates 150th anniversary

    The work of the ICRC, in some of the most dangerous places in the world
    Continue reading the main story
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    Red Cross ‘cannot cope’ in Syria
    Profile: International Committee of the Red Cross

    As it turns 150, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says it faces unprecedented challenges in the complex age of modern warfare.

    These include “new weapons [and] new types of actors coming into conflict”, ICRC chief Peter Maurer said.

    The world’s oldest aid organisation recently warned it was unable to cope with the “catastrophic” humanitarian crisis in Syria.

    The movement currently employs 13,000 people working in 92 countries.

    The movement was founded by a Geneva businessman, Henri Dunant, in 1863 in response to the suffering of injured soldiers abandoned on the battlefield of Solferino in northern Italy.

    Horrified by what he saw, he documented the slaughter in his book, A Memory of Solferino, and decided to create an organisation dedicated to helping war wounded.
    Shifting frontlines

    Today, the ICRC, together with the Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent societies, has become a worldwide movement with tens of thousands of workers and volunteers.
    Continue reading the main story
    Red Cross: Key dates
    ICRC headquarters in Geneva

    7 February 1863: Launch of the International Committee for Relief to Wounded Soldiers, later to become the International Committee of the Red Cross.
    26-29 October 1863: Creation of National Societies and adoption of the red cross as a protective emblem
    22 August 1864: The original Geneva Convention is adopted to protect the sick and wounded in armies in the field. Paves the way for the 1949 Geneva Conventions.
    27 July 1929: Red crescent is officially recognised as a protective emblem.

    In addition to delivering aid, the organisation also aims to ensure that the rules of war are respected in conflict zones, and has a responsibility for looking after the rights of prisoners of war.

    But the organisation now faces challenges not foreseen in the original Geneva conventions, the BBC’s Imogen Foulkes reports.

    At Solferino, there was just one civilian casualty, whereas nowadays it is estimated civilians make up more than 90% of war victims.

    Warfare in the 21st Century is complex and chaotic, in part because of new weapons such as drones, conflicts – like that in Syria – with multiple armed groups, and shifting frontlines, Mr Maurer told our correspondent.

    “We see conflicts when one convoy has to overcome 35 roadblocks before the convoy gets to areas where food and medicine can be distributed,” Mr Maurer said.

    Last November, the ICRC issued a warning over Syria’s escalating humanitarian crisis.

    The constantly moving nature of the conflict meant it could not plan, but instead had to seize opportunities for aid delivery on a day-to-day basis, the organisation said.

    As a result, relief workers were unable to access certain parts of the country.

    Despite its strong reputation, the record of the ICRC is not perfect, our correspondent says.

    Its policy of confidentiality led it to keep silent about Nazi concentration camps in WW2, she explains.

    Confronted by widespread criticism, the organisation was later forced to issue an apology. It said it had feared that speaking out would jeopardise its access to allied prisoners.