Sunday, December 31, 2006
An Inconvenient Truth conveniently on YouTube
It's not like YouTube needs its profile raised after featuring in Time Magazines Person on the Year article, but it is now hosting An Inconvenient Truth in nine 10-minute parts. Distributed freely to 16 million unique users per month, potentially, this give a huge reach to a powerpoint presentation that Al Gore's first started touting on the road 25 years or so ago. If you have seen the documentary, you could imagine Al Gore's gratification. This man who has devoted his life's work to his message, possibly the most unpopular one a messenger could have to bear, and got up and did it the old fashioned way, the hard way - going out and speaking to whoever would listen, and doing it again and again. And never quitting. City by city, family by family. At rotary town halls to the US Congress, and then some.
Jeff at Sustainablog is keeping an eye on whether it is an official release or a fan's initiative, favouring the latter possibility. If you, the newby, are blown away by what you see on YouTube, go and spend the $16.00 or so for the glacier cracking and shearing off into the ocean on the big-screen in dolby-stereo experience.
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Climate change explained at the Exploratorium
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Could Dick Cheney make a fine British politician?
British politics perhaps? :::[Huffington Post]
Global Warning Climate Change Cheney Politics
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Global warming mind-map
I don't know about the only having two kids, though. If people want to and have the means to have more children, that's their business. And they can carbon off-set their kids if they so choose, or even calculate them in as carbon sinks when working out their carbon footprints - all carbon based life is a carbon sink. As for eating less meat? I don't know about that either. I eat a little less of it anyway, for health reasons, but I love it. And if a cow we eat is a net carbon-sink, despite being a huge greenhouse contributor, then I figure that I am doing my bit to fight global warming by sinking my teeth into a giant t-bone steak.
UPDATE
June 24, 2007.
That someone has contacted me, a Jane Genovese. It was her and her mum who drew the mind-map, and she runs a company giving students tools to study, called Learning Fundamentals. I am so pleased to be able to credit both of you - it's a great piece of work, and very popular.
Read Jane Genovese bio here (turns out she's Aussie also), and she has some great workshop resources to help young people educate themselves on the most important environmental issue the world is facing (Global Warming: Too Hot to Handle?).
FURTHER UPDATE
From Jane's email:
I have updated the mindmap with some new information.
You can see it at
http://www.learningfundamentals.com.au/global-warming/
[...]
You mentioned that you didn't agree with the 'have only
2 children' part on the mindmap. We decided to put this
in as exponential population growth contributes largely
to global warming.
Keep up the great work,
Jane Genovese
www.learningfundamentals.com.au
Global Warning Climate Change Lifestyle
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Prophets of Hope preach sanity, War on Terror officially over in the UK
Two pieces of projected text read "How ironic to live in fear of terrorism and die of climate change" and "The ultimate terror threat is climate change". The projections were carried out by a group calling themselves The Prophets of Hope. Global Warming Watch's own straw poll in the sidebar shows that 69.2% of people nominate global warming as their biggest fear, vs global terror at 18.8% and global pandemic at 12%.
Prophets of Hope Myspace Prophets of Hope Website
Running time: 05:10
H/t: Calvin Jones of Climate Change Action
In a sign of the times, not long ago this would have been seen as radical action, and on the margin, but events are moving fast these days, and the Prophet of Hope message is quickly becoming mainstream and at least the bit about terrorism has become the subject of British Government action, even if the Stern Report didn't. :::[SMH: Britain to drop 'war on terror' usage]
Britain's foreign affairs ministry has urged government officials to stop using the US term "war on terror" amid concerns it angers British Muslims and undermines government aims, a weekly newspaper said today.
The government wants to "avoid reinforcing and giving succour to the terrorists' narrative by using language that, taken out of context, could be counter-productive", a British Foreign Office spokesman told The Observer newspaper.
The Foreign Office has sent the same message to cabinet ministers as well as diplomats and other government representatives around the world, according to the report.
"We tend to emphasise upholding shared values as a means to counter terrorists," the spokesman was quoted as saying.
Many British officials and experts, the weekly said, suspect that Islamist extremists find it easier to recruit followers when western governments speak of a war on terror, by suggesting it is actually a war against Islam.
Global Warning Climate Change Activism Polotics UK Prophets of Hope War on Terror
Saturday, December 09, 2006
'Truthiness' is US Word of 2006
"Truthiness" as defined by Colbert is "truth that comes from the gut, not books." :::[SMH]
"We're at a point where what constitutes truth is a question on a lot of people's minds, and truth has become up for grabs," said Merriam-Webster president John Morse. "'Truthiness' is a playful way for us to think about a very important issue."
Colbert hosts 'The Colbert Report', a parody of combative, conservative talk shows, where he does a great line in global warming skepticism, the core of which is truthiness' great capacity to comfortable navigate the rocky reefs of the findings thrown up by peer-reviewed climate science.
Colbert, who once derided the people at Merriam-Webster as the "word police" and a bunch of "wordinistas," was pleased."Though I'm no fan of reference books and their fact-based agendas, I am a fan of anyone who chooses to honour me," he said in an email to The Associated Press.
"And what an honour," he said. "Truthiness now joins the lexicographical pantheon with words like 'squash,' 'merry,' 'crumpet,' 'the,' 'xylophone,' 'circuitous,' 'others' and others."
"Truthiness" was initially introduced by Colbert in October 2005 but took on a life of its own in May 2006, when Colbert addressed the White House Annual Press Corps dinner where he skillfully deboned a squirming Bush: :::[Colbert makes sushi meal of Bush]. This did not play well with the tame white house press audience at the time but thanks to the Internet Colbert's speaking comic power to Bush's truthiness was too much of a triumph for punters to appreciate in silence. A week after Colbert's address a rapidly deployed fan site, Thankyoustephencolbert.org had recorded 50,000 heart-felt thank yous. :::[50,000 thank yous paint a picture for Bush]. In the address the largest response from an otherwise stunned audience was when Colbert satirised Bush's stance on global warming.
Global Warning Climate Change Bush Climate+Science Stephen Colbert Meme
British Treasury hard astern, Stern steams ahead.
The news came a day after Mr Brown made a pre-budget statement that embraced virtually none of the recommendations of the Stern report, and dashed hopes the Blair Government would move swiftly to a new environmental agenda.
Brown had been trying to sideline Stern by commissioning him to write the report, but this came back to bite him on the bum. There will be more in the future as the reality of global warming keeps bumping into the rhetoric of the denialist and skeptic.
Sir Nicholas issued a statement saying he had planned the move for some time and had hugely enjoyed working with Mr Brown. But relations between the two men are widely known to be tense, a Downing Street policy adviser said. It was understood that Mr Brown had initially asked Sir Nicholas to write his report in order to sideline him, and that it only achieved global prominence because of its timeliness.
The report says that fighting climate change will save, not cost, the global economy money, and has been hugely influential around the world. Many environment ministers quoted it in addresses to the global summit in Nairobi last month. The Guardian described Sir Nicholas, 60, as the first climate change rock star.
He will leave in March to take a chair at the London School of Economics. The Government lured him from the World Bank, where he was chief economist, in 2003.
The Stern report recommends using carbon and other green taxes as part of a comprehensive response to global warming. Its most significant finding is that the cost of effectively fighting climate change is just 1 percent of GDP. Just 1 percent.
Mr Brown's proposed new air tax on 75% of of flights increases amount to just 0.1 per cent of GDP. From £5 ($A12) to £10.
Global Warning Climate Change Global Economy The Stern Report UK Carbon Tax
Friday, December 08, 2006
Trend maps of Australia warming for 95 years
By selecting Mean Temperature from the drop down menus, and Australia, Annual season, and the period 1910-present (2005), and you can display an at-a-a-glance graphic representation of effects of global warming for those criteria.
The trend clearly is to warming, and we know that is currently at 2°C per decade. By playing around with the seasons you can see that summer, winter and autumn all show warming and cooling in what seems to the untrained eye to be a relative equilibrium, but spring is different. Spring is clearly when the warming is happening.
How much of that is due to land clearing over the 95 years? If carbon dioxide is not being transformed into furious spurts of spring growth by plants and trees, because they have been cleared, then it becomes apparent that there is a build up of heat-retaining atmospheric carbon dioxide carrying over into the next seasonal cycle, causing the warming trend from year to year. How much of a contribution comes from emitting into the atmosphere, and how much of it is because carbon-dioxide is not being taken out of the atmosphere by photosynthesis?
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Energy
Monday, December 04, 2006
Howard airs his global warming stance
:::[Rocco Bloggo: Howard and the whole parched truth]
... and adds that the upcoming election may be hindering Mr Howard from stating the real hard facts on global warming. A good example being how the price of energy will probably go right up through the ozone layer, and then further.
So according to Peter, Mr Howard underplays the problem.
If you are interested in the craft of the cartoonist, click the link to read the various stages Rocco goes through in creating a cartoon to accompany an article, in this case it was Peter Hartcher's story on Howard's inflexibility on global warming action being eroded by one of his own. :::[SMH: Next trick: saving the planet]
Global Warning Climate Change Howard politics Australia Kyoto Energy
Saturday, December 02, 2006
Global Cool Watch: Mug a global warming skeptic
This Christmas, give someone you love the gift of foresight and give them a Global Warming Mug.
Each mug is covered with a map of the world. When you pour in a hot beverage, the mug shows what happens when the world heats up and the oceans begin to rise... Land mass disappears before your very eyes! :::[Wacky Planet]
h/t Nexus 6
Global Warning Climate Change Rising Sea Levels
But does carbon capture and storage really work?
And nuclear. But the only way we are going to make nuclear cheap, is if we make coal expensive; i.e. if we burn clean coal. That's the theory we are bring sold, so what's the real plan? :::[SMH: Slow burn for carbon capture technology]
TECHNOLOGY to capture and store carbon pollution from a coal-fired power station on a large scale will be operating at only a handful of sites around the world by 2020, a coal industry report says.
There are nine large carbon capture and storage experiments under way, according to an international coal lobby group, the World Coal Institute. But even if they all stay on schedule, they will only be able to dispose of carbon generated from the equivalent of about four large coal-fired power plants.
"The race is on to have the first coal-fired carbon capture and storage demonstration project operating at a commercial scale," said the institute in a report issued on Tuesday. "A number of projects are vying for the honours in Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK and the USA."
The plan is scaring me, Mr Howard. When you can cut your lighting energy by 75% today by srewing in energy efficient bulbs, it's absurd that you can only give me four large power station being able to carbon geo-sequester in the whole world, and by 2020. How much of the Western Arctic Iceshelf would have bumped into New Zealand by then while your plan is still trying to get off the ground?
If we don't soon move past the stage where the more things change -- like the climate -- the more they stay the same -- like politics -- we're in trouble. Howard needs to consider people other than the coal and uranium industries in charting our energy future.
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Australian Politics Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Global Cool Watch: Wind powered robot kinetic sculptures
Theo Jansen is the Dutch creator of what he calls “Kinetic Sculptures,” where nature and technology meet. Essentially these sculptures are robots powered by the wind only. :::[Ministry of Tech]
h/t Nexus 6
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science Kinetic Sculpture Wind+Power Robotics BMW Energy
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Who is Frank Luntz? And why should you comply?
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frank I. Luntz (born February 23, 1962), an American pollster. Luntz formed The Luntz Research Companies in 1992, and maintains offices in Arlington, Virginia and New York City. He is considered a master of the art of political propaganda, and his use of language has led to his career as what is termed a "compliance professional," someone who uses whatever means may be at hand (propaganda, marketing, polling, sales, politics) to induce the compliance of a target audience.
Frank Luntz is the advisor to big fossil-fuel and their back-pocket Administration. He advised them on "target audience compliance".
Although Luntz later tried to distance himself from the Bush administration global warming policy, it was his idea to discredit the idea of science to keep the issue from influencing voters in the 2000 and 2004 US presidential elections. Luntz has since said that he is not responsible for what the administration has done since that time. Though he now accepts the scientific consensus that there is man-made global warming, he maintains that the science was in fact incomplete, and his recommendation sound, at the time he made it. [1]
Is this true? Sort of, and sort of not, and if true, then just true, just by the skin of its truth. I guess that's Luntz's job. No one had tested the scientific consensus up until that point, given that it had not been successfully challenged within the science community, rather it was added to as the picture became more complete.
The United States presidential election of 2004 was held on Tuesday 2 November 2004. The incumbent President, Republican George W. Bush of Texas defeated his main rival, Democratic Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts with 51% of the popular vote...
Then in the December 2004 issue of the journal Science Naomi Oreskes published "The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change" and established that it was uncontested amongst scientists.
The current scientific consensus is that "most of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been attributable to human activities"[2]. The extent of this consensus was the subject of a study—published in December 2004 in the journal Science—that considered the abstracts of 928 refereed scientific articles in the ISI citation database identified with the keywords "global climate change". This study concluded that 75% of the 928 articles either explicitly or implicitly accepted the consensus view — the remainder of the articles covered methods or paleoclimate and did not take any stance on recent climate change[3] [4].
By dint of a month Luntz could semantically claim the 100% consensus had not been measured. He now accepts the scientific consensus on global warming, but his work lives on in the handicraft of professional skeptics, like Andrew Bolt.
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change Skeptics Science Energy
Tuesday, November 28, 2006
Coal mining: Court rules in climate change considerations
Court finds climate change relevant to coal mine approval
A Newcastle environmentalist says a court ruling today means the New South Wales Government must take climate change into account when considering whether to approve new coal mines.
Peter Gray went to the New South Wales Land and Environment Court to challenge the environmental assessment for the proposed Anvill Hill coal mine in the Hunter Valley.
He argued the assessment was inadequate, because it did not take into account the impact that burning the coal would have on climate change.
The court voided the Government's decision that the environmental assessment was adequate.
Mr Gray is claiming victory, but says the ruling will not stop the mine from going ahead.
"It's certainly a setback for the process, I think it means a fresh look has to be taken at the mine," he said.
"The Government needs to consider the impacts that it will have on climate change so I do think it's a strong strike against Centennial Coal.'
The political and commercial repercussions of the Land and Environment Court ruling are being quickly felt as both the NSW and Federal Governments scramble to make sense of it. What, they didn't see the science coming? Not even the movie? But business has been asking for price signals on carbon for a while now. Now we know why.
That was late Monday. This is COD Tuesday:
The New South Wales Government says a court ruling on a coal mine proposed for the Hunter Valley could have significant implications for a range of industries, including mining.
and in federal politics, flushed from the gains of the Victorian Greens over the weekend,
Greens leader Bob Brown has attacked the Federal Opposition for voting against a motion to cap coal exports from Newcastle.
and scurrying from the light,
Federal Environment Minister Senator Ian Campbell says a proposed amendment to federal environment laws to reflect a New South Wales Environment Court ruling is not a solution to climate change.
This blog is heating up at a rate of 0.2 degrees a decade. Come back often.
Global Warning Climate Change Environmental Law CO2 Coal Mining Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Censored, at last!
Welcome enterprising visitor. Whether you are from (in no particular order) Pakistan, India, Iran or China, or anywhere else you may be using the masking service to get around someone's firewall black list (hopefully not during working hours, eh?). Welcome to freedom of (my) opinion. And yours. Definitely feel free to leave a comment if you wish.
Not everyone in the West wishes me to express my opinion freely, though. Indeed, in my very own country I am being censored by a rogue News opinion journalist. :::[Andrew Bolt Blog]
The man who called Dr Tim Flannery a wombat in his headline, and who is giving me short thrift with his SNIP shtick for abuse, accuses me of abuse whenever I request he only use scientific research from peer-review journals to make his case for anthropogenic global warming skepticism. :::[AB Blog: Greenpeace neo-cons hype up the terror threat]Posted by Wadard of Sydney on Tue 28 Nov 06 at 01:26pmSNIP
SNIP
You said goodbye to this site in a particularly abusive comment, even for you, and I’m rather anxious for you to follow through, given my wish to encourage a more civilised debate.
Goodbye.
Andrew Bolt
Tue 28 Nov 06 (02:00pm)
Posted by Wadard of Sydney on Mon 27 Nov 06 at 11:10pm
I have temporarily broken my lurking to congratulate you on using peer-reviewed science, even if it is only computer modeling, to make your points about science:"The study was performed for EPRI by ABS Consulting’s Irvine, Calif., office and by San Diego-based ANATECH. It was peer reviewed and critiqued as the computer modeling was being done by internationally recognized experts with decades of experience in structural analysis."
911's Friday 13th is here
I even complimented you on my blog for using it, and I hope this is a sign of more to come, especially when you blog about global warming.
So there, dear visitor, even in my country we have those who would stifle the voice of reason, and surprise, surprise, it's the very people most vocal in claiming to be for free-speech, democracy, et. al. It is more than reasonable to request that a skeptic stick to peer-review research in assembling their scientific arguments on global warming for the media. Especially given the stakes.
And if you do come across these skeptics spouting their opinion in your travels behind whatever curtain, or corporate firewall, you are behind, ask them to back it up with facts wrought from the Darwinian-like struggle for validity that occurs when scientific ideas are thown up for analysis by the most intellectually-rigorous scientists of their disciplines, as happens when research is published in peer-review journals. They'll shut you up, and thereby concede, quicker than they can type...
SNIP
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change Climate Change Skeptic Environment Science
Monday, November 27, 2006
9/11's Friday the 13th is here
What is your worst nighmare? If it is a commercial jetliner flying into one of Howard's 25 new nuclear facilities, then don't click the following link. :::[Greenpeace: Friday the 13th is here]
But if you are the type to be reassured by Andrew Bolt, who was on the ABC Insiders panel yesterday when the Greenpeace UK ad was aired for discussion, then fine. Click it. He rightly uses a peer-reviewed study (at last!) from 2002 to underline his point that America's nuclear power stations can withstand the 9,500 pound (4,309 kgs) impact of a Boeing 767-400 jetliner flying in at an assumed speed of 350 miles (550 kms) per hour and it "Would Not Breach Structures Housing Reactor Fuel".
The reason? They present a much smaller target than the WTC and the Pentagon so the combined force of the impacts of fueselage and engines is not fully transfered to the power station structure, which remains intact, protecting against radiation release.
If you ask me - well, they said that about the WTC, didn't they? That they would withstand a commercial jetliner impact. And still be standing. I trust that the scenarios modeled were accurate, but what if something outside those assumptions happened? The biggest Aussie back-yard bbq you'll ever see, that's what. I'm certainly not reassured by the capabilities of our government and allies to put the jihad djinni back in the bottle. Quite the opposite, in fact. While they are seemingly doing everything to train the next generation of al qaeda in the Baghad University of Blowback, and doing everthing else to roll-out their terror franchise globally, I just don't think this government should be trusted with building terrorist targets in 25 Australian cities.
Anyway, whether a 4,309 kg engine gets to penetrate the shell structure of a power plant or not, the terrorists achieve their aims by flying into them.
“Clearly an impact of this magnitude would do great damage to a plant’s ability to generate electricity. But the findings show, far more importantly, that public health and safety would be protected.”
Joe F. Colvin, NEI’s president and chief executive officer. :::[NEI]
Apart from the psychological king-hit we will suffer, will every life support system linked into that electric grid have long-term back-up generators? Will anything much at all?
I ask because it makes my point - if we are dependant on centralised non-renewable energy, we make ourselves targets. But I don't see terrorists seeking to take out your solar roof panels one-by-one to disrupt society.
Decentralised, renewable energy, whether off-the-grid, or selling excess capacity back into the grid, is the only way to go for a resilient, secure and safe energy source to take us into the future, for generations.
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science Nuclear+Energy Friday the 13th Nuclear Australia Greenpeace Energy
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Iceberg armada floats a global warming business
Ok, so I previously said that these iceberg shouldn't be used to make a case for global warming, but that hasn't stopped our eco-capitalists living off the tips of the icebergs (I hope you're off-setting your emissions, bro, you need trees to make icebergs). I anticipate boat fishing tours over the north pole next.
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change New Zealand
Saturday, November 25, 2006
Green revolution is a green technology one
With climate change hard upon us, a new green movement is taking shape, one that embraces environmentalism's concerns but rejects its worn-out answers. Technology can be a font of endlessly creative solutions. Business can be a vehicle for change. Prosperity can help us build the kind of world we want. Scientific exploration, innovative design, and cultural evolution are the most powerful tools we have. Entrepreneurial zeal and market forces, guided by sustainable policies, can propel the world into a bright green future.
Global Warning Climate Change Technology Science CO2Kyoto Energy
Bill Clinton on peak oil, and his reading list
Bill Clinton: Well first of all I’m not a petroleum geologist, but I can tell you this... :::[Carbonsink]
===
Update: Graph on U.S. Gov't Defense spending vs. their research on energy. No wonder the response to peak-oil musical chairs is most likely going to be a military one, than adaption.
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change Peak Oil Bill Clinton
Greens poised to win balance in Victorian election
A Galaxy Opinion poll forecast the Greens to win 12 per cent of the vote in today's state election, tipping Greens candidate Dr Richard DiNatale to take the lower house seat of Melbourne from Health Minister Bronwyn Pike.
In the 40 seat upper house the party may find the real power with opinion polls showing the likelihood of it winning between three and six seats. Enough to give it the balance of power. :::[News]
Andrew Bolt, of Melbourne, is asking, "please explain?". Time will soon tell whether Senator Brown explains right:
"Big issues like the drought, water supplies and climate change are at the forefront and people appreciate the Greens' role in tackling these issues."
Well he would say that - he's got the right to, he's leadhis party from the feral edge of Australian politics into the center, a long march in a few short years. Anyway, this is only the beginning of what I predict. :::[Australian politics starts to go green.]
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Greens Victoria Politics Kyoto Energy
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Carbon dioxide in the dock
Massachusetts v. EPA
#1. "Whether the EPA Administrator has authority to regulate carbon dioxide and other air pollutants associated with climate change under [the Clean Air Act]", and
#2. "whether the EPA Administrator may decline to issue emission standards for motor vehicles based on policy considerations not enumerated in [the Clean Air Act]".
Put simply, the certiorari are to decide whether the EPA has the duty to regulate carbon as a pollutant and, if so, do they have a right to not do their job properly? The EPA will be arguing that they have the right to choose the defintion of what a pollutant is?
Ohh boy. This is exciting. The first oral arguments will be heard at 10:00 AM on November 29th, and Gristmill's Justin Pidot will be slicing and dicing the transcripts as they become available.
I wonder what disinformation campaign about the role of excess CO2 the CEI will come up with this time around? I am still stuffing my entrails back into my sides after their "Carbon Dioxide: They call it Pollution, We call it Life" TVC effort did the rounds on commercial television in the US. Are they really going to take this Supreme Court assault lying down? Is their funding drying up?
Other blogs on: global warming climate change massachusetts epa clean air act
Monday, November 20, 2006
Gaia gets a gander on Bolt's Faith Festival
I support the new rules and it will make for better commenting. In the spirit of the inclusiveness of the inter-faith dialogue you propose, would you accept a sermon from the Green religion - though you often rail against it?
I would be happy to drop into the nearest oak-grove, next full moon, and report my local druid's global warming sermon. I might plant a sapling for you. ;)
I hope he sees it as a bit of fun and gives me a go. Or I'll have to change the headline.
Other blogs on: Global Warning Climate Change Religion
Has Howard's global warming Tampa set sail?
This bizarre result might prove that merely genuflecting to the god of global warming gets you respect:
A POLL has found the Coalition leading Labor on the management of climate change, leaving the ALP scrambling to defend its environmental credentials.
The Ipsos Mackay poll found climate change would determine the vote of 60 per cent of Australians at the next election.Twenty-four per cent of respondents said the Greens were the best party to manage climate change, while 23 per cent chose the Liberals and just 19 per cent chose Labor.
The Liberals are trusted on this almost as much as the Greens, and more than Labor?
That tells me the poll could also show that the hot gospellors of the new faith make a lot of voters nervous, and that less is more for a politiciann trying to scare up votes.
I would be amazed if the the Australian voter would allow Howard and this government to turn on a five cent piece on global warming. But, it's happened before, and if anyone can, he can.
I looked for more information about the poll, and discovered that no media organisation, other than Murdoch's News, has published it. :::[Google: "allintext: "Ipsos Mackay poll" "climate change" "60%"in past three month].
Nothing to see here, like with most of Bolt's links. But before moving along, this does raise the question of whether Howard deserves to get a free pass from his recalcitrant history on acknowledging the real science of global warming, and the real economics of climate change. Does he deserve it, if he has a climate change epiphany on his personal road to Damascus, or in today's terms, Washington? I'll be looking at this, and the recent history of the politics of climate change in Australia in upcoming posts. Lest we forget who got us into this situation.
Other posts on the greening of Australian politics:
- Australian politics starts to go green
- The heat is on, it's on the street
- Costello concedes on carbon trading
Sunday, November 19, 2006
How to talk to climate skeptics
Global Warning Climate Change Climate Change Skepticss Science CO2 Carbon Sink Kyoto Energy
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Worldcoolers: Canada shamed, Stern summarised
There's a story about Canada's pitiful attempt at reaching their Kyoto targets :::[Worldcoolers]
Kyoto committed Canada to cutting emissions by 6 percent from 1990 levels by 2012. Emissions are now 35 percent above that target and are set to rise more rapidly as oil-rich tar sands are opened up in western Canada, which happens to be the Conservatives' power base.
And a BBC At-A-Glance Stern Report Review. :::[Worldcoolers]
Extreme weather could reduce global gross domestic product (GDP) by up to 1% A two to three degrees Celsius rise in temperatures could reduce global economic output by 3% If temperatures rise by five degrees Celsius, up to 10% of global output could be lost. The poorest countries would lose more than 10% of their output In the worst case scenario global consumption per head would fall 20%
To stabilise at manageable levels, emissions would need to stabilise in the next 20 years and fall between 1% and 3% after that. This would cost 1% of GDP
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Economics Stern Report Canada Kyoto
Australia's Nairobi spectator status tragic: Opposion
It is a tragedy that Australia could not fully participate in the UN's Climate Change Conference in Kenya, opposition environment spokesman Anthony Albanese said today.
He described the Howard Government's postition as "all over the shop" on climate change and said we could never be a world leader on the issue until it signed up to the Kyoto agreement.
"Australia should ratify the Kyoto Protocol and never again should the world meet without Australia having a seat at the table to determine the way forward.
"It is quite clear that Kyoto, whilst not perfect, is the vehicle which the world will move forward on post-2012."
The Howard government seems set on delaying the inevitable for as long as possible.
Australian Environment Minister Ian Campbell, who along with many of his counterparts from rich nations called for a review of the Kyoto Protocol at the two-week summit in Nairobi, acknowledged the slow progress of the talks."My own sense is that none of the action or activity is at the sort of pace the world needs, but momentum is probably building," Senator Campbell told Reuters.
It's all he can say. My own sense is that Ian Campbell's paucity of contribution gives truth to Albenese's claims.
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Increasing carbon dioxide does not make forest grow faster
Releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere spurs global warming. Trees absorb carbon dioxide.
In fact, they thrive on the stuff, and all this thriving and spreading was predicted.
Pedal to the metal, tree lovers!
Perhaps Andrew felt his logic exposed, because he felt the need to bolter it with annecdotal research. The pox vox:
UPDATEReader White Mouse reports:
My daughter works at a hydroponic farm where they actually pump CO2 into the glass houses because the plants grow faster and produce more fruit.Hmm. Would that work on a global scale?
I wondered that myself, did some research, and dropped a debunk on his blog. I'm reposting it here because Andrew can be selective when publishing me.
===
Good question, Andrew - it's been looked into by:
STEPHEN W. PACALA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University.
Pacala, S.W., J.P. Casperson and M. Hansen. 2003. Forest Inventory Data Falsify Ecosystem Models of CO2 Fertilization. (Manuscript Abstract)
We analyze tree growth data from Wisconsin forest inventories completed in 1968, 1983, 1996 and 2002. These show that the rate of forest tree growth decreased steadily over the period, in contrast to the increases predicted by CO2 fertilization models. Measured growth rate changed an average of -0.27% y-1 (95% confidence range: -0.05% to -0.49% y-1), whereas the prediction for CO2 fertilization is 0.16% y-1 (corresponding to a ß of 0.36). The high statistical precision is due both to large sample sizes and positive inter-temporal correlations among the growth rates within the same plot. Decreased growth occurred in stands of all ages, and so our results are not caused by age-related declines in growth.
[...]
Neither the direct analysis of growth rates in Wisconsin, nor the re-analysis of the Michigan inventories is consistent with the CO2 fertilization model in Joos et al. (2002).
State-of-the-art ecosystem models of CO2 fertilization are evidently false for this region over the later third of the 20th century. We discuss the implications of this and other reasons for skepticism about the future magnitude of CO2 fertilization. In particular, the fossil fuel emissions reductions required to stabilize atmospheric CO2 at 500+50 ppm must begin decades sooner if the predictions of the CO2 fertilization models in the IPCC Third Assessment (Prentice et al. 2001) are incorrect. The difference between a terrestrial carbon sink that grows because of CO2 fertilization, and one that shrinks because it is caused by recovery from past land use, is the difference between the luxury of decades of delay and the need to act now.
[End abstract]
... and the answer is no, so we have even less time to reduce emissions than the IPCC previously thought .
The reason why forests are coming back is a direct result of conservation as a reading of your News article tells you.
Global Warning Climate Change Forests Science CO2 Carbon Sink Energy
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Costello concedes on carbon trading
"I think the ground is changing," he told ABC television programme, Insiders, today:
"... and I think from Australia's point of view if the world starts
moving towards a carbon trading system, we can't be left out of that."I think the weakness up until now has been that key consumers such as China and India have not been in this.
"But as the world moves towards a carbon trading system, Australia obviously can't stand out against the rest of the world."
This is significant. Someone's learning the lessons of the US Republicans' routing in their mid-terms, and Costello seems to be distancing himself from Howard's stance. How green will Australian politics get?
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Saturday, November 11, 2006
Iraq, corruption, economy or pushing "global warming alarmist" term?
So the big question being asked by some conservative opinion journalists in Australia is does Bush's Man-Of-Steel, Deputy-Sherrif, and Partner-in-The-Coalition-Of-The-Willing have a such list?
I'll kick off with:
- Not signing up to Kyoto
- Pushing the idea that reducing carbon emissions would damage the economy
- Letting the Greenhouse Mafia write government energy policy
- Bailing out Stan Howard
- Interfering with Brazillian ethanol importation into Australia, to protect his Queensland sugercane mates
- Free-trade hypocrisy in relation to above point
- Capping the ethanol limit at 10% in ethanol blend petrol to protect his petrol mates
- Not increasing renewable energy target quotas, thus drawing investment into renewables, then killing it off.
- Ignoring energy demand reduction, or efficiency yield improvements as a greenhouse strategy
- Putting all his eggs into the nuclear and yet to be developed 'clean-coal' technological solutions baskets that are yet to be weaved
- Their AP6 Group pretend policy to tackling climate change
- Misrepresenting our 'not landclearing' as Australia on track to meeting our 'Kyoto' targets
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Wednesday, November 08, 2006
The heat is on, it's on the street
In country where the Australian government have let the self-styled Greenhouse Mafia, the fossil-fuel lobby, effectively write their energy policy.
In a country where the Greenhouse Mafia used political influence our leading climate scientists censored.
In a world where global Greenhouse Mafia money has spent-up big pushing doubt int the public analysis of the science. To great effect; a study by Naomie Oreskes established that the scientific consensus on global warming is absolute, but in the public discussion half the oxygen is given to climate change skeptics. Here, we have our Andrew Bolt, Miranda Devine and Piers Akerman as mercenary foot soldiers in the War on Climate. A war they have lost.
I have seriously underestimated the Australian public. They are a lot more aware of the problem than I had imagined. It makes writing this blog more rewarding. It's amusing to watch the government play catch up.
Global Warning Climate Change Environment Science CO2 Carbon Sink Earth Australia Kyoto Energy
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Australian politics starts to go green
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Monday, November 06, 2006
Giant icebergs off NZ not from global warming
The truth about global warming is sobering enough.
The armarda of 100 giant icebergs is drifting at a rate of 2 kilometers an hour north towards South Island NZ, and is currently 250kms off-shore.
So here is my call - in order to save ourselved from the drought we could mobilise a few tugboats out of Tassie, lasso, and nick 'em for ourselves. If we get a rise out of the Kiwis, even better. :::[Perthnow]
Global Warning Climate Change Antartica
Drive beyond oil drive
Gentlemen, start your emissions-free engines: :::[Drive Beyond Oil]
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The Climate Skeptic Challenge
If "propaganda has integrity", then Andrew Bolt is a paragon of virtue.
One commenter wrote:
"Given that Global Warming has been news for a few years now, surely some of those early prediction dates must have passed and the events forecast failed to materialise. Time to "out" all those false prophets and hold them accountable for their claims."
===
Ahh, excellent test. I throw this up as a challenge to the sceptics commenting here and, of course, Andrew: if anyone can find verifiable evidence that one of the early prediction dates have passed I will publish it on my blog, Global Warming Watch, under a big heading saying that "I could be wrong about global warming".
My blog lives here: http://globalwarmingwatch.blogspot.com/ and as you can see, I am a strong believer of the idea of man-made global warming.
I might even show Andrew how it's done and say sorry ;)
RULES:
1a. Said evidence may come from the general media, but any claims it makes must be accurate, and be accurately representative of, and sourced to published scientific papers in any of the peer-reviewed scientific journals that exist to cater to the wide-ranging disciplines of climate-science.
1b. No other sources for evidence will be considered. It doesn't have to just ulitmately come from a climate-scientist, or those in closely related fields, but also has had to be published in relevent scientific journals. Don't want nuffin from scientists speaking out of school, so to speak.
2. Entries must be in before Christmas. They will be judged as they come to hand.
3. All entries will be published on my blog, but only those entries proving an earlier-predicted global warming event has not come to pass, and that meet the above conditions, will be posted under the special headline, "I could be wrong about global warming".
4. I am the final arbiter, but will take submissions and consult widely before passing judgement. I commit to remain bias free - hey, my integrity is at stake, and it is something I value highly.
I trust the conditions are not too onerous. You can publish the evidence here, or in the comments section on my blog, and you don't even have to be a sceptic to play - just curious.
So any takers? Can I have a virtual show of hands? Andrew?
To his credit Andrew published the challenge, but I wonder if anyone is brave enough to have a go?
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Sunday, November 05, 2006
Walk against Warming global
The event included a march from the United States embassy in protest against US President George W Bush's refusal to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on cutting climate-warming gases from fossil fuels.
By rights it should have also wound its way past the Australian embassy.
Barrie Cassidy, presenter of the ABC Insiders program this morning described the groundswell of global warming awareness as a 'tsunami', propelled by the success of Al Gore's "The Inconvenient Truth", the strong signals from business leaders for carbon emissions price signals, the Stern Report release and Rupert Murdoch's conversion to the cause by his son, Lachlan. The tsunami hit in London:
"We are reaching audiences today in a way that was impossible a year ago," Ashok Sinha, director of organisers Stop Climate Chaos (SCC), told Reuters.
"We are getting people to look at the total carbon emisson of their lives and to start making adjustments, because every single bit helps.
"We are talking about personal actions but it is also building up pressure on governments to take action to stop the destruction of the planet."
It's particularly gratifying for me. This blog started out as an investigation into the facts of global warming, and then I realised that facts were not the only things being considered, if at all, in constructing public policy on climate change in Australia and the US. It was the considerable considerations of entrenched dirty energy industries that were mainly being considered while they muddied the science for the public. They did this by mobilising a phalanx of journos, opinion journos like Andrew Bolt of the Herald Sun, to spout well orchestrated and deliberately duplicious pseudo-science to depict the scientific consensus as nonexistent. The thinking behind this strategy is that if the public is confused, then they go with the status quo, and make no changes to what energy they choose to consume.
Well the stragegy is not working for 12,000 Sydney and 22,500 Londoner protesters this weekend, nor the 9 out of 10 Australians who believe our big fossil fuel friendly government is not doing what it needs to be doing. Just learning about the facts is an instrinsically satisfying part of this blog. But I see that the public is keenly aware, and that it has not been sidetracked into inertia by the professional global warming skeptics mobilised by the Big Fossil-Fuel fueled thinktank industry, and it makes up for some of the effort I have devoted to this blog.
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Saturday, November 04, 2006
Good and bad global warming tipping points
All this suggests that the climate sceptics are right in one sense. They say the future is much less certain than the climate models predict. They have a point. We know less than we think. But the sceptics are wrong in concluding the models have been exaggerating the threat. Far from it. Evidence emerging in the past five years or so suggests the presence of many previously unknown tipping points that could trigger dangerous climate change.
The article, about how we have not thought through how fast Greenland can melt, is timely in this recent period of hightened awareness of global warming. It is coalescing from tectonic shifts in the public discussion caused by Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" world tour, the release of the Stern Report, the admission from John Howard about AGW, and not least, uncle Rupert Murdoch's conversion. Proof plenty of this are the estimated 10,000 to 12,000 people who 'Walked against Warming' in Sydney's CBD today, despite the wet and rain. Thank goodness, because now we badly need to talk about tipping points:
That is what is so worrying about the British Met Office's warning that the Amazon rainforest could die by mid-century, releasing its stored carbon from trees and soils into the air. And why we should take serious note when Peter Cox, professor of climate systems at Exeter University, warns that the world's soils - soaking up carbon for centuries - may be close to a tipping beyond which they will release it all again.
Other threats lurk on the horizon. We know that there are trillions of tonnes of methane, a virulent greenhouse gas, trapped in permafrost and in sediments beneath the ocean bed. There are fears this methane may start leaking out as temperatures rise. It seems this happened 55 million years ago, when gradual warming of the atmosphere penetrated to the ocean depths and unlocked the methane, which caused a much greater warming that resulted in the extinction of millions of species.
The only good tipping point is the one going on right now in the public conversation. Gore is right, the the impetus for a global warming policy that deals with the problem, rather than pander to Big Fossil or Radiological Fuel, is only going to come from voters.
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