Author: Neville

  • Northeast U.S. Sees Second Driest November in More Than a Century

    Northeast U.S. Sees Second Driest November in More Than a Century

    ScienceDaily (Dec. 5, 2012) — Even though Hurricane Sandy helped create wet start to the month for several states, November 2012 went into the record books as the second-driest November since 1895 in the Northeast. With an average of 1.04 inches or precipitation, the region received only 27 percent of its normal level.

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    The record driest November was 1917 when the Northeast received only 0.88 inches of precipitation.

    All states were drier than average. Departures ranged from 16 percent of normal in Connecticut, their second-driest November, to 37 percent of normal in New Jersey, their 11th driest. Of the remaining states, New Hampshire, Vermont and West Virginia had their second-driest November; Delaware, Maine, Maryland and New York had their third driest. Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Massachusetts also ranked in the top 10 driest Novembers.

    Overall for autumn, the Northeast was slightly drier than average with 11.36 inches of precipitation (98 percent of normal). The region was split down the middle with half of the states drier and half the states wetter than normal. Connecticut took the title of driest state with only 78 percent of normal, while Delaware led the wet states with 120 percent of normal.

    The latest U.S. Drought Monitor, issued Nov. 27, indicated abnormal dryness continued in upstate New York while a new area of abnormal dryness popped up near the Vermont-New Hampshire border and in central-southern West Virginia.

    In addition to being dry, the Northeast was cooler than normal for November — in spite of a brief mind-month warmup. With an average temperature of 37.2 degrees, it was 2.5 degrees cooler than normal and was the coolest November since 1997. All states reported below average temperatures for the first time since October 2009. West Virginia and Maine were the coolest at 4.1 degrees below average. Departures for the rest of the states ranged from 4 degrees below normal in New Jersey to 0.9 degrees below normal in Vermont.

    Autumn’s overall average temperature of 50 degrees was average for November in the Northeast. West Virginia was the coolest at 1.6 degrees below average for the season. Of the warm states, Vermont was the warmest at 1.1 degrees above average.

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  • Break the grip of corporate power to secure our future MONBIOT

    Break the grip of corporate power to secure our future

    Neoliberal dogma forbids the intervention required to stop climate change. To save the planet we must articulate a new politics
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    George Monbiot

    The Guardian, Monday 3 December 2012 20.30 GMT

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    Illustration by Daniel Pudles

    Humankind’s greatest crisis coincides with the rise of an ideology that makes it impossible to address. By the late 1980s, when it became clear that man-made climate change endangered the living planet and its people, the world was in the grip of an extreme political doctrine whose tenets forbid the kind of intervention required to arrest it.

    Neoliberalism, also known as market fundamentalism or laissez-faire economics, purports to liberate the market from political interference. The state, it asserts, should do little but defend the realm, protect private property and remove barriers to business. In practice it looks nothing like this. What neoliberal theorists call shrinking the state looks more like shrinking democracy: reducing the means by which citizens can restrain the power of the elite. What they call “the market” looks more like the interests of corporations and the ultra-rich. Neoliberalism appears to be little more than a justification for plutocracy.

    The doctrine was first applied in Chile in 1973, as former students of the University of Chicago, schooled in Milton Friedman’s extreme prescriptions and funded by the CIA, worked alongside General Pinochet to impose a programme that would have been impossible in a democratic state. The result was an economic catastrophe, but one in which the rich – who took over Chile’s privatised industries and unprotected natural resources – prospered exceedingly.

    The creed was taken up by Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. It was forced upon the poor world by the IMF and the World Bank. By the time James Hansen presented the first detailed attempt to model future temperature rises to the US Senate in 1988, the doctrine was being implanted everywhere.

    As we saw in 2007 and 2008 (when neoliberal governments were forced to abandon their principles to bail out the banks), there could scarcely be a worse set of circumstances for addressing a crisis of any kind. Until it has no choice, the self-hating state will not intervene, however acute the crisis or grave the consequences. Neoliberalism protects the interests of the elite against all-comers.

    Preventing climate breakdown – the four, five or six degrees of warming now predicted for this century by green extremists like, er, the World Bank, the International Energy Agency and PriceWaterhouseCoopers – means confronting the oil, gas and coal industries. It means forcing those industries to abandon the four-fifths or more of fossil fuel reserves that we cannot afford to burn. It means cancelling the prospecting and development of new reserves – what’s the point if we can’t use current stocks? – and reversing the expansion of any infrastructure (such as airports) that cannot be run without them.

    But the self-hating state cannot act. Captured by interests that democracy is supposed to restrain, it can only sit on the road, ears pricked and whiskers twitching, as the truck thunders towards it. Confrontation is forbidden, action is a mortal sin. You may, perhaps, disperse some money for new energy; you may not legislate against the old.

    So Barack Obama pursues what he calls an “all of the above” policy: promoting wind, solar, oil and gas. Ed Davey, the British climate change secretary, launched an energy bill in the House of Commons last week whose purpose was to decarbonise the energy supply. In the same debate he also promised that he would “maximise the potential” of oil and gas production in the North Sea and other offshore fields.

    Lord Stern described climate change as “the greatest and widest-ranging market failure ever seen”. The useless Earth summit in June; the feeble measures now being debated in Doha; the energy bill and electricity-demand-reduction paper launched in Britain last week (better than they might have been, but unmatched to the scale of the problem) – all expose the greatest and widest-ranging failure of market fundamentalism: its incapacity to address our existential crisis.

    The 1,000-year legacy of current carbon emissions is long enough to smash anything resembling human civilisation into splinters. Complex societies have sometimes survived the rise and fall of empires, plagues, wars and famines. They won’t survive six degrees of climate change, sustained for a millennium. In return for 150 years of explosive consumption, much of which does nothing to advance human welfare, we are atomising the natural world and the human systems that depend on it.

    The climate summit (or foothill) in Doha and the sound and fury of the British government’s new measures probe the current limits of political action. Go further and you break your covenant with power, a covenant both disguised and validated by the neoliberal creed.

    Neoliberalism is not the root of the problem: it is the ideology used, often retrospectively, to justify a global grab of power, public assets and natural resources by an unrestrained elite. But the problem cannot be addressed until the doctrine is challenged by effective political alternatives.

    In other words, the struggle against climate change – and all the crises that now beset both human beings and the natural world – cannot be won without a wider political fight: a democratic mobilisation against plutocracy. This should start with an effort to reform campaign finance – the means by which corporations and the very rich buy policies and politicians. Some of us will be launching a petition in the UK in the next few weeks, and I hope you will sign it.

    But this is scarcely a beginning. We must start to articulate a new politics, one that sees intervention as legitimate, that contains a higher purpose than corporate emancipation disguised as market freedom, that puts the survival of people and the living world above the survival of a few favoured industries. In other words, a politics that belongs to us, not just the super-rich.

    Twitter: @georgemonbiot

    A fully referenced version of this article can be found at Monbiot.com

  • ‘Controverisal’ Obeid family’s stake in mining venture kept secret

    ‘Controverisal’ Obeid family’s stake in mining venture kept secret

    Amy Dale and Vanda Carson
    The Daily Telegraph
    December 06, 20121:30PM

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    Pictured is James McGuigan (centre) leaving ICAC during a break today. Picture: Tim Hunter Source: The Daily Telegraph

    THE Obeid family’s stake in a coal mining venture was kept a secret because of their “controversial” name, a corruption inquiry has heard.

    But the connection was nearly revealed by James McGuigan, a junior staffer at Cascade Coal who was warned via email “Jimmy what are you thinking? You can’t say this.”

    The outburst by Cascade director Richard Poole came after Mr McGuigan drafted a legal document setting out who was involved in the joint mining venture.

    Later drafts were edited to remove mention of Buffalo Resources, an Obeid company.

    Cascade Coal was the successful bidder for the mining exploration licence for the Mount Penny property, near Mudgee.

    ICAC is investigating allegations former minister Ian Macdonald rigged the tender process for the mining licences, placing the Obeids in a position to profit to the tune of $100 million.

    In his evidence this morning, Mr McGuigan admitted he gave false evidence at a private hearing earlier this year about his knowledge of the Obeid ties to Cascade Coal, saying he did so because he was “flustered.”

    Mr McGuigan is the son of Cascade Coal shareholder John McGuigan.

    When asked by Geoffrey Watson SC, the counsel assisting the inquiry, why he acknowledged in an email to Mr Poole of the need for secrecy with Obeid family stake, Mr McGuigan replied “they’re controversial people I guess.”

    “It was a NSW parliamentarian, who was a friend of Ian Macdonald who owns a farm and then buys into a joint venture, it just doesn’t sound right,” Mr Watson told the hearing.

    The inquiry continues this afternoon with mining billionaire Travers Duncan set to appear.

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  • King tides give sneak peek at sea rise future

    King tides give sneak peek at sea rise future

    Updated 1 hour 9 minutes ago

    Map: NSW
    Coastal residents around Australia are being asked to photograph coming king tides to illustrate the potential impact of climate change on rising sea levels.

    The New South Wales and Tasmanian Governments are jointly funding the Witness King Tides Project, which is being run by climate change organisation Green Cross Australia.

    On December 14 king tides will hit NSW and parts of the Tasmanian coast.

    Other states and territories will have their turn next year.

    Mara Bun from Green Cross says king tides are not caused by climate change but they show what a warmer future could look like.

    “It just so happens that when you look at that visually, it represents what might be the case much more often as our oceans gradually warm and rise and so it’s incontrovertible that the ocean is warming and therefore we have a challenge and we’ve got to wake up to it,” she said.

    Phil Watson, a principal coastal specialist with the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, says the tide will come close to the upper range of predictions for the average sea level rise.

    “That’s of the order of 90-100 centimetres, then basically that’s half of the tidal range at the moment,” he said.

    “So a king tide today is going to be very close to mean sea level by 2100 if we get that sort of sea level rise.”

    King tides occur twice a year and are caused by an alignment of the gravitation pull between the sun and the moon.

    Topics:climate-change, oceans-and-reefs, nsw, tas, australia

  • Here we go again: Faulkner’s call falls on Labor deaf ears

    Here we go again: Faulkner’s call falls on Labor deaf ears

    Date December 6, 2012 Vote
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    Phillip Coorey, Sean Nicholls

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    A CALL by the NSW Labor Senator John Faulkner for the ALP to reduce the influence of factions has sparked a factional brawl after the Left formally apologised for supporting Ian Macdonald into State Parliament and suggested the Right do the same regarding Eddie Obeid.

    It also reinvigorated federal tensions with Kevin Rudd, who lost the prime ministership in 2010 in a coup led by the NSW Right, backing Senator Faulkner and saying the ALP was ”sick”.

    Senator Faulkner also sparked anger outside NSW with Labor MPs saying they were sick of both the excesses of the NSW branch and its constant navel gazing casting a pall on the party federally when it was trying to govern.

    In a speech on Tuesday, Senator Faulkner said the NSW Labor Party needed to lead by example to restore public confidence in politics and rid itself of the factional influences which had ”enabled too much disgraceful conduct and arrogantly corrupt behaviour”.

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    He referred to the Independent Commission Against Corruption hearings that have examined allegations surrounding the actions of Mr Obeid and Mr Macdonald when ministers in the previous NSW Labor government.

    After his speech, Senator Faulkner flew back to a Left factional meeting in Sydney and introduced a motion that was passed unanimously. It resolved NSW Labor had to acknowledge its mistakes if it were to change its culture.

    ”We accept responsibility for the fact that Ian Macdonald was preselected by the NSW Left as a candidate for the NSW Legislative Council,” a Left statement said.

    It said that when Mr Macdonald was expelled from the faction in 2009, ”we acknowledged that he was not a suitable representative, but we didn’t do so publicly. We do so now and apologise for his selection”.

    It called on the NSW branch to hold a special conference to deal with ”extreme factionalism” within NSW Labor, the operation of Labor’s tribunals and to examine the direct election by party members of the NSW parliamentary leader.

    Left sources told Fairfax Media the motion was designed to pressure the dominant Right to follow suit and to also apologise for preselecting Mr Obeid.

    This was rejected as provocative by the NSW ALP general secretary, Sam Dastyari, who is an advocate of reform.

    ”Rather than holding a faction meeting to discuss that there’s a problem with faction meetings, perhaps they should stop meeting,” he said.

    ”Rather than apologising, what we should actually be doing is reforming.”

    Mr Rudd has been calling for reform ever since he was dumped at the hand of the so-called ”faceless men”.

    ”There’s something sick which needs to be healed,” he said. ”It’s that closed culture of faceless factional men which makes a whole series of things possible.”

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    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/here-we-go-again-faulkners-call-falls-on-labor-deaf-ears-20121205-2avvg.html#ixzz2EFAoOSRi

  • Scientists to reveal full extent of Arctic ice loss amid climate change fears

    Scientists to reveal full extent of Arctic ice loss amid climate change fears

    US science agency Noaa to deliver annual report on polar region after year of record-breaking and extreme weather events
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    Suzanne Goldenberg US environment correspondent

    guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 5 December 2012 17.00 GMT

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    Large-scale thawing of the Arctic permafrost may already be underway. Photograph: John McConnico/AP

    The full extent of the extreme loss of Arctic ice cover is due to be revealed on Wednesday when a premier US science agency delivers its annual report on the polar region.

    The report, overseen by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), provides the most comprehensive review so far of a year of record-breaking and extreme weather events in the Arctic.

    Some scientists have warned the changes in the Arctic recorded this year – particularly signs of thawing permafrost – could bring the planet much closer to a climate tipping point than previously anticipated.

    “Climate change is taking place before our eyes, and will continue to do so as a result of the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, which have risen constantly and again reached new records,” the World Meteorological Organisation’s secretary general, Michael Jarraud, said.

    Nowhere has that been more apparent this year than the Arctic, according to scientists.

    Noaa’s administrator, Jane Lubchenco, and other scientists were due to deliver their own assessment at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco on Wednesday afternoon.

    The scientists will outline the record loss of summer sea ice – which reached its lowest value on the satellite records of 26 August 2012, the decline in spring snow extent, rising temperatures in the permafrost in northern Alaska, and the dramatic melting of the surface of the Greenland ice sheet, according to the AGU website.

    Some of those findings have already been made public, reinforcing the already extensive evidence – in real time – of climate change.

    New satellite and aerial data presented to the AGU week earlier this week suggested that the entire Greenland ice sheet was losing about 22 gigatons of ice a year, with rapid thinning in the northern edge of the ice sheet.

    The entire ice sheet experienced rapid melting over a four day period last July, in an event that stunned and alarmed scientists.

    The melting ice in Greenland has added to global sea-level rise over the last two decades. Future melting is also expected to add to rising seas.

    The UN’s weather agency, the World Meteorological Organisation, told negotiators trying to reach a global climate agreement in Doha, that an area of Arctic sea ice bigger than the entire United States melted this year.

    Meanwhile, the United Nations Environmental Programme released a report warning scientists may have been underestimating the melting of the Arctic. Large-scale thawing of the permafrost, the frozen soil that traps vast amounts of carbon, may already be underway, releasing more of the gases that cause climate change.

    This year is predicted to be one of the warmest on record, with global land and ocean temperatures in the first 10 months of 2012 about .45 degrees celsius above the average recorded even in the mid-20th century.

    America and Europe baked under heat waves, the American midwest weathered its worst drought in a generation, and parts of Brazil and China also went without rain. Pakistan, meanwhile, lost hundreds to floods caused by epic monsoon rains. West Africa also experienced floods.

    But it was the Arctic that exhibited the most staggering changes, according to scientists, and which dominated the United Nations’ annual climate change report.