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Digby Scorgie at 14:54 PM on 10 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
RedBaron @15
Ah, I see what you mean about matching farming method with corresponding biome.
I had a look at the article about rice. It lists all the advantages, but doesn't say how it differs from traditional methods. How does it?
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william5331 at 14:07 PM on 10 September 2017Study: mild floods are declining, but intense floods are on the rise
If the intensity of rainfall events is indeed increasing, it becomes even more vital to adopt the farming techniques described in David R Montgomery's book, Growing a Revolution. Also valuable is to encourage the spread of beavers in all our catchments. Both not only reduce flood peaks but increase flows during low water. Beavers replace the function of glaciers in storing water during high winter precipitation and releasing water during the growing season.
http://mtkass.blogspot.co.nz/2007/07/canadian-beaver-pest-or-benefactor.html
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Eclectic at 12:43 PM on 10 September 2017Other planets are warming
Jonplumb @46 ,
Lest you think that Daniel's reply is giving you the "brusque off" . . . let me expand the answer to your humorous question [though to be more precise, your question is more like 3 jocular assertions, well beyond science fiction comedy].
Since our solar system is roughly 25,000 light years from the galactic center, then our solar system would need to travel around 20,000 light years to get into the more densely-starred inner regions, where, let us suppose [though it isn't] the background radiation level is the equivalent of 1 degree hotter (i.e. the 1 degree hotter that the Earth's surface temperature has risen, in the past 150 years or so).
The hypothetical rubber-band pulling our solar system (toward the inner Galaxy) would need to be extraordinarily strong — also, if you care to calculate the accelerations involved, they turn out to be truly formidable. And there is the (relatively small) problem that the solar system would need to travel at well over 100 times the speed of light. [Fortunately, Einstein is long dead, and so won't be able to protest against that "Alternative Fact".]
Then there is the minor difficulty: umpteen thousand professional and amateur astronomers (as well as a few billion non-astronomer humans) have not detected any significant displacement of Earth relative to the stars visible at nighttime, during the past century or so. Though conceivably that may all be a ginormous Conspiracy cover-up (a conspiracy in which your own eyes are also participating! Damn your lying eyes!).
All that aside — and assuming that (despite appearances) we are now really close to the galactic center, and this position (somehow) caused recent rapid global warming — there is still the problem of CO2. Since the fossil-fuel CO2 in the atmosphere does (scientifically) nicely explain the recent 1 degree temperature rise . . . then we must (somehow) discover some totally unexpected and new factor (a cooling factor) which nicely cancels out the 1 degree of AGW.
So, overall, the "rubber-band" oscillation of our solar system within the galaxy . . . is an "explanation" which is trying to push a megaton of sewage uphill with a pointed stick (of toothpick size).
BTW, Jonplumb, the true center of the galaxy is not "fiery" but actually a Black Hole — the very opposite of "fiery". Let's just hope that the supposed Galactic Rubber Band is not slingshotting our whole solar system right into the Black Hole! That would be a grave situation — indeed, a situation of extreme gravity!
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Patrick K at 11:16 AM on 10 September 2017CERN CLOUD experiment proved cosmic rays are causing global warming
Hi there, this is my first post to your site and is more of a question than a comment.
I recently had the misfortune of watching the documentary "The Cloud Mystery" which presented Henrik Svensmark's Cosmic Ray Theory (CRT) as being the driving force for climate change. The documentary did not appear to be solid science to me which is why i was surpised CERN appeared to be reasearching CRT for climate change. Aside from the documentary's lack of defining or explaining scientific terms, and, misrepresentation of the fundementals Geology and Atronomy, i.e., our solar system does not move to different arms of our galaxy as we orbit the galactic center, the documentary really didn't adress a basic question. Do we need cosmic rays to create aerosols for cloulds to form? Are cosmic rays the only way to get aerosols in the astmosphere? Is there or was there ever a shortage of aerosols in our atmosphere that prevented cloud formation thus making our asmosphere supersaturated with water vapor that couldn't condense? This is just my cursory look at the CRT for climate change, but it appears to me that the CRT may be a solution to a problem that doesn't exist.
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guad at 11:11 AM on 10 September 2017Animals and plants can adapt
This is appeal to nature fallacy. Just because some species exist, doesnt mean it's necessarily good that they continue to exist. Also, "animals/plants can adapt" doesnt necessarily mean every specie will adapt. it means life in general will adapt and create new forms of animals who, guess what, can now survive in the new climate. Throughout history catastrophic events changed entire climate of the planet in a day. and yet life survived, and flourished. So this entire appeal to nature fallacy is wholly uninteresting to me.
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Jonas at 08:06 AM on 10 September 2017New research, August 21-27, 2017
Thank you for this list. Will try to digest
whatever lists you post whenever, whereever.
As a normal worker, I have no chance to keep up,
otherwise. -
nigelj at 08:00 AM on 10 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #36
The "6 questions on hurricanes irma etc" link doesn't work. I tracked down the article using google as below.
Moderator Response:[JH] Link fixed. Thank you for bringing this to our attention.
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Daniel Bailey at 07:54 AM on 10 September 2017Other planets are warming
No.
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nigelj at 06:49 AM on 10 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
One Planet Only @34
I think you are technically correct about the term warmist and what it implies, and context etc. Shrewd observation.
I also find the term demeaning and very annoying, and its intended to be demeaning like the term "liberal elite" or "too pc".
But most people wont have any idea what you are getting at (average IQ is 100) They will just see you as being petty and over complicating things.
It's a term I hate, but accept in good humour. Instead I would say "yes Im a warmist because thats where the evidence points". Dont let them "bait you" with label, move right on past it and swivel discussion right back to the facts and evidence.
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jonplumb at 06:28 AM on 10 September 2017Other planets are warming
I've found this thread very intriguing (and long-running). I just wanted to ask a question related to all of this:
First, I recently read a theory that our solar system might be weaving in and out of our galaxy, moving over time closer to the galactic center and rubber-banding out to the outer rim, repeatedly. Would this not be cause enough for global warming? It would surely explain the supposed temperature increases on other celestial objects (while understanding that some objects could still cool to lower temperatures simply because of its phase in its lifecycle). Even with the sun reducing its output, the general increase in temperature as we approach our fiery galactic center could easily counter the decrease in output by the sun. Also, if the cosmic dust cloud we're traveling through were to get any thicker, even by a small fraction, would that not also "trap" the sun's heat increasing the temperature of our solar system?
I'm just curious if our temperature changes might be related to the position of our solar system withon the galaxy, just as seasons temperatures can change based on our position around our sun.
Thoughts?
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NorrisM at 05:23 AM on 10 September 2017Climate's changed before
Moderator. I would be happy to avoid "sloganeering" if I knew what it was. I was not using slogans in the part snipped above. Can you define this term? You have my email address. I would be happy to have the definition offline. There are numerous contributors to this website who present political comment who are not chastised when they make reference to matters which are not factual based. For example, the discussion of who is and who is not a "denier" and what various subsets there should be of this classification. Have requested a definition of "sloganeering" before. Could you provide one? Thanks
Moderator Response:[JH] "Sloganeering" is explicitly defined in the SKS Comments Policy. You have been advised more than once to read the Comments Policy and to adhere to it.
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Bob Loblaw at 05:17 AM on 10 September 2017Climate's changed before
NorrisM:
I am not a moderator here, but I've been around a while. In my interpretation, "sloganeering" is the repeated posting of unsupported assertions, covering the same material, while ignoring comments that have pointed out information that contradicts the assertions.
You appear to be simply ignoring a lot of comments. SkS also has a rule against "dog-piling", where one commenter is facing comments from a large number of opponents. Regulars here do try to avoid that by restricting comments, but you can help by selected a very small number of posts to comment on, and sticking to those issues until more-or-less resolved, before going on to other topics.
Moderator Response:[JH] "Sloganeering" is explicitly defined in the SKS Comments Policy.
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NorrisM at 03:16 AM on 10 September 2017Climate's changed before
nijelj
In looking for something else, I just saw this reply of yours on one of the blogs:
"Your understanding or information is wrong. Sea level rose from AD800 to around 1500 then fell until about 1900, then started rising as in the link below. This correlates reasonably well with burning of fossil fuels so all or nearly all this sea level rise can be attributed to fossil fuels."
Just curious but does this sea level rise and drop pre 1900 correlate quite well with the theory of the MWP and the Little Ice Age?
We now have the Chinese study which also seems to support both the MWP and Little Ice Age. If you need I cite for the Chinese study I can get it for you.
Again this does not prove anything about the existing warming but the denial of the MWP and the Little Ice Age is part of the "Hockeystick" theory suggesting that this present warming is anomalous over the last 2000 years.
Moderator Response:[JH] Sloganeering snipped.
Please note that posting comments here at SkS is a privilege, not a right. This privilege can and will be rescinded if the posting individual continues to treat adherence to the Comments Policy as optional, rather than the mandatory condition of participating in this online forum.
Moderating this site is a tiresome chore, particularly when commentators repeatedly submit offensive, off-topic posts or intentionally misleading comments and graphics or simply make things up. We really appreciate people's cooperation in abiding by the Comments Policy, which is largely responsible for the quality of this site.
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One Planet Only Forever at 02:30 AM on 10 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
nigelj@23,
I am still sorting out thoughts to try to be brief yet clear.
The term/label Warmist, without clear context, is not a good term to use by itself.
Climate science has robustly established Good Reasoned Explanations based on all the available evidence.
Therefore, people who want to claim that the amount of warming due to increased CO2 is less than the established understanding without actually providing significant robust new information or explanations are a sub-set of the Denier/Delayer group.
Some people are referring to those type of made-up claim-makers as Warmists (including those type of people referring to themselves that way). But such a label needs to be clearly understood to be a sub-set of the Denier/delayer group. Using Warmist to refer to people who aren't honestly legitimately contributing to increased awareness and better understanding may shed an undeserved 'positive light' on what they are trying to get away with, or may annoy people who think that an 'ist' label like Warm-ist is undeservingly dismissive.
NorrisM referring to the scientific consensus group as "Warmists" could easily be interpretted as a denigration of the science consensus group (and his use of that term that way is the main focus of my commenting). His other comments appear to be attempts to be dismissive of, or argue unjustifiably against, the scientific consensus and the resulting required changes of human activity (basically trying to argue against part of the Sustainable Develop Goals without justification) rather than contribute to increased awareness and better understanding.
My point is that the consensus understanding regarding climate science issues are 'robustly defendable for what they are'. It would be clearer if all claim-making that does not have a robust significant 'new understanding' basis, or persistent questioning contrary to that understanding (a failure to learn from the responses to questions asked) was always referred to as the actions of a Denier/Delayer or a sub-group, not just "Warmists".
NorrisM's use of Warmist for the Climate Science Consensus group could be seen as 'legitimate by someone having unjust reasons for preferring to believe things that are contrary to the developed best understanding (a Denier/Delayer)'. And 'someone having unjust reasons for preferring to believe things that are contrary to the developed best understanding (a Denier/Delayer)' could see the use of the term Warmist by people trying to support the consensus understanding as an undeserved denigration of what the Denier/Delayers would prefer to believe.
Perception can lead to 'Belief'. And 'Belief' can clearly be contrary to independently confirmable understanding (Reality).
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KojoKerr at 01:52 AM on 10 September 2017Study: mild floods are declining, but intense floods are on the rise
Hi
The premise explained beginning of this post is incorrect. Although you explained some limitations, you missed the most important limitation being; understanding of the geology of the highly porous and high transmissivity of the Holocene recent and the hydrological dynamics of the cover and basement.
In addition, the comments introducing the topic constitute alarmist rhetoric. Shameterism at best. I suppose that's what you get with suspicious journals and the quality of their peers!
The NH is warming in places and the SH seems to be cooling despite slowly climing CO2. There is actually more evidence for a cooling SH than a warming simply because our macro observations cannot be fudged in the same way the data is been!
Moderator Response:[JH] Nonsensical and inflamatory sloganeering snipped.
Please note that posting comments here at SkS is a privilege, not a right. This privilege can be rescinded if the posting individual treats adherence to the Comments Policy as optional, rather than the mandatory condition of participating in this online forum.
Please take the time to review the policy and ensure future comments are in full compliance with it. Thanks for your understanding and compliance in this matter.
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michael sweet at 21:08 PM on 9 September 2017The connection between Hurricane Sandy and global warming
Tom13:
You have a lot of brass asing me to produce citations when you never do.
Now you are just making things up. As nigelj has shown your claim "there has been a reasonably steady rate of SLR since circa 800ad" (with no citation) is simply fabricated from whole cloth. You have made a great many other unsubstantiated claims here at SkS.
Readers beware: Tom13 is simply fabricating his claims. I do not have time to look up citations to counter your fabricated data.
Nigelj: I was going to link to the realclimate post but I noticed you already had.
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RedBaron at 20:26 PM on 9 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Digby Scorgie,
You have it pretty good for general concepts. I would only add that the primary common feature is biomimicry. In the case of most dryland crops you have it. But it could vary depending. For example paddy rice production differs substantially, because it is mimicking a different biome, namely more marshy partial grassy wetland biomes. Here is what that looks like:
The System of Rice Intensification (SRI)…
… is climate-smart rice productionA tree nut or fruit crop would appear more like a forest or open woodland biome and called a food forest. You probably are beginning to see the pattern. Grass crops are grown in fields simulating the grassland savannas, Graziers simulate the great herd migrations. No matter what the crop is, we look at the natural functioning wild biome to inform us of the pattern we need to simulate. It even applies to fish farming too! We know we found the pattern when instead of degrading the environment, it begins to regenerate. This requires careful monitoring. There is no magic here.. Takes lots of knowledge, work, and sophisticated proactive monitoring of ecosystem services. But when it works, the results can seem pretty magical.
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Digby Scorgie at 15:10 PM on 9 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
RedBaron @11
I've read more about this new (?) type of agriculture recently. I think I prefer the term "conservation agriculture", but then a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. What interests me is what such farming would look like to a townie like me. The following is my current understanding:
Conservation agriculture has three aspects. All three aspects must be present for the system to work properly. The three are:
(1) no tilling
(2) crop rotation
(3) keep it covered
To elaborate: Firstly, tilling is to be avoided as much as possible. Each Seed is simply injected into the soil, regardless of what else is growing in the soil (see 3).
Secondly, rotation of the "cash" crop is practised. The more choice there is for these crops the better, With a random change of crops from season to season, pests find it difficult to get a foothold.
Thirdly, going hand in hand with the no-till approach is the practice of keeping the soil covered at all times. This can take several forms: a cover crop that is grown out of phase with the cash crop, leaving the residue of harvest covering the soil, adding organic waste, and making use of animals. Weeds have a hard time in such an environment.
When carefully organized, very little or no pesticides are needed, very little or no herbicides are needed, and much less fossil fuel is needed. There is also the potential to replace the fossil fuel with electricity.
Incidentally, regarding animals, this ties in with Alan Savory's "mob grazing", which we've discussed elsewhere at SkS.
Not being a farmer, I've probably got the story somewhat garbled, but the essential message is that with this type of agriculture, one sequesters much more carbon, one has much less of a negative impact on the evironment, it is indefinitely sustainable, it is profitable (but not to the people who supply herbicides, pesticides and fossil fuel), it is drought-resistant, it is flood-resistant, and it builds rather than degrades the soil.
I'll leave it to the experts to correct my mistakes.
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nigelj at 07:45 AM on 9 September 2017The connection between Hurricane Sandy and global warming
Tom13
Just a couple of comments on your views about contribution of sea level rise to hurricane Sandy. I think you have to be careful with your back of envelope calculation. You are assuming the global sea level rise since 1850 applies to the area struck by hurricane sandy. In fact rates of sea level rise can differ quite a lot regionally, so the 6% attribution is probably more likely.
And whatever the number its only going to increase in the future.
You claim "A) the 1 foot SLR since circa 1850 would only be partly attributable to AGW. As the the graph from the study note, there has been a reasonably steady rate of SLR since circa 800ad. A reasonable estimate of the SLR since circa 1850 would be less than 1/2 foot. Obvioulsy cant attribute the full 1ft to AGW."
Your understanding or information is wrong. Sea level rose from AD800 to around 1500 then fell until about 1900, then started rising as in the link below. This correlates reasonably well with burning of fossil fuels so all or nearly all this sea level rise can be attributed to fossil fuels.
www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2011/06/2000-years-of-sea-level/
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nigelj at 07:07 AM on 9 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Wol @10
Im not entirely sure where you are going with this. I do reiterate our only option is cutting fossil fuel use, and would appreciate a clear cut view from you on this.
And lets put the fundamental cause thing aside. I certainly agree population growth is a huge problem. Its putting a lot of pressure on the environment. You have no argument from me there!
We have to get growth rates down. It may or may not stabilise, and it really depends on whether we can shift enough people out of poverty such that it enables them to have smaller families with confidence. It really comes down to this because other options are brutal therefore economic policy should focus on poverty reduction.
As to sustainable levels of population, that is a huge question. I think the planet is already showing obvious signs of stress. You are right we have delayed Mathus predictions with technology, but its only a delay. Everything Red Baron says on it is true, although it goes beyond just issues of agriculture obviously to climate impacts, high levels of nitrates, over fishing, depletion of minerals etc.
If you look at realistic pathways for agriculture 10 -12 billion might be possible, but if it gets above that bad things will happen. Or we will all be living in high rise towers eating laboratory made food, but even that probably has its limits, and its a horrible thought anyway.
You can't have infinite population growth, it will ultimately crash. Even high growth becomes absurd, because why would we want to pack in the maximum possible numbers of people? Its a nightmare scenario with reduced quality of life.
You can't have infinite economic growth on a finite planet either, although recycling and cheap energy can prolong growth for some time yet, although probably at a lower rates than we have had in the past. Its more a question of promoting environmentally friendly growth, and wealth creation. I think in a capitalist economy that can only be done with good quality environmental laws. But thats beside your point about population.
So to finish population is a problem, but the only realistic alternatives are promoting less poverty and thus smaller families, and also maximising agricultural capacity but in a sensible and sustainable way, and having sustainable development and environmental policies.
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John Hartz at 07:00 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Michael Sweet & Tom 13: Please take your ongoing discussion of the link between sea level rise and Sandy's storm surge to the SkS rebuttal article:
The connection between Hurricane Sandy and global warming by Dana Nuccitelli.
It is chocked full of references/links to peer-reviewed studies.
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Tom13 at 06:39 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
The seemingly modest 1 foot of sea level rise off the New York City and New Jersey coast made a Sandy-like storm surge of 14 feet far more likely,
Two additional points -
A) the 1 foot SLR since circa 1850 would only be partly attributable to AGW. As the the graph from the study note, there has been a reasonably steady rate of SLR since circa 800ad. A reasonable estimate of the SLR since circa 1850 would be less than 1/2 foot. Obvioulsy cant attribute the full 1ft to AGW.
B) Since the storm surge is the difference between the water level without the storm and the level with the storm, the delta for the storm surge shouldnt change. In other words the height of the storm surge should be affected.
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NorrisM at 06:39 AM on 9 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
michael sweet @ 83
Thanks for the reference to your SkS article. Just cost me the last hour skimming it. I have heard of the Jacobsen paper. I suspect it was highlighted in an issue of National Geographic. That particular stream seems to have petered out in 2016 but it does make more sense than this one.
For now I will spend some time reading both what I referenced above and the other information provided in the stream arising out of your post.
I personally would 100% prefer the risks inherent with nuclear power waste disposal than wind turbines defacing our land but it seems that the costs imposed on nuclear by the regulatory requirments (both cost and time) have effectively killed nuclear power. It has to be this cost if the Weissbach analysis is anywhere close in its EROI comparisons. Hansen suggests that France and Sweden converted to nuclear power within 8 years. I appreciate that was a long time ago but we are talking about the whole country.
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Tom13 at 05:19 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Thank to the link to an actual study. - A brief review of the study raises the following observations - Hope you can address
1) the study appears to attribute all the SLR rise to warming without separating the natural SLR from the agw slr. There has been approx 1.0-1.5mm rise per year since the emergance from the LIA and even before,
2) the attribution to various other factors appears to be underweighted. The other factors being the funnel effect of the geography with Sandy hitting at the very center point of the funnel, , the lunar tide and the high tide. All three of those factors contributed significantly to the storm surge. The study doesnt provide the actual math ( at least not in easily obtainable format) which makes it difficult to ascertain the reasonableness of the assumptions
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John Hartz at 04:45 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Speaking of Sandy and sea level rise...
For example, even if we could say nothing else, we can conclude that sea level rise has contributed to the coastal flooding associated with recent major hurricanes: nearly a foot at Battery Park in New York City in the case of 2012 Superstorm Sandy and roughly half a foot in the case of Hurricane Harvey. The seemingly modest 1 foot of sea level rise off the New York City and New Jersey coast made a Sandy-like storm surge of 14 feet far more likely, and led to 25 additional square miles of flooding and several billion extra dollars of damage.
What We Know about the Climate Change–Hurricane Connection by Michael E. Mann, Thomas C. Peterson & Susan Joy Hassol, Scientific American, Sep 8, 2017
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BaerbelW at 04:38 AM on 9 September 2017Getting involved with Climate Science via crowdfunding and crowdsourcing
Just added a neat new crowdsourcing project to the list:
In this project you can help transcribe "forgotten weather records from the UK's highest mountain".
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Tom13 at 04:12 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Michael - You mention the gaurdian article as being peer reviewed. How do you get a peer reviewed study on an issue where the factors are highly subjective?
I have provided a link to a peer reviewed study (the authors of the OP-Ed I cited link to their peer reviewed study) that found that the last foot of sea level rise caused $2 billion in damage.
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BaerbelW at 03:58 AM on 9 September 2017The Trump administration wants to bail out failed contrarian climate scientists
Here is an op-ed by Christine Todd Whitman, a Republican who was the E.P.A. administrator from 2001 to 2003 (appointed by George W. Bush) and the governor of New Jersey from 1994 to 2001.
Some relevant snippets:
"[,,,] On the other side is a tiny minority of contrarians who publish very little by comparison, are rarely cited in the scientific literature and are often funded by fossil fuel interests, and whose books are published, most often, by special interest groups. That Mr. Pruitt seeks to use the power of the E.P.A. to elevate those who have already lost the argument is shameful, and the only outcome will be that the public will know less about the science of climate change than before.
The red-team idea is a waste of the government’s time, energy and resources, and a slap in the face to fiscal responsibility and responsible governance. Sending scientists on a wild-goose chase so that Mr. Pruitt, Rick Perry, the energy secretary, who has endorsed this approach, and President Trump can avoid acknowledging and acting on the reality of climate change is simply unjustifiable. And truly, it ignores and distracts from the real imperative: developing solutions that create good jobs, grow our economy, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and prepare for the impacts of climate change.[...]"
and the final paragraph:
"If this project goes forward, it should be treated for what it is: a shameful attempt to confuse the public into accepting the false premise that there is no need to regulate fossil fuels."
Really says it all!
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Tom13 at 03:52 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Michael # 22
I am currently on the Chesapeake bay in Maryland. The houses nearby where I am have lost 50% of their value because of sea level rise.
Do you have a peer reviewed study supporting your calculation of lost value to SLR. Chesapeake bay area has a lot of subsistance Have you factored that into your estimate?
Michael # 21 _ I gave you link to the tide gauges. The fact that Sandy hit into the funnel of new york harbor, hudson river, etc is well know and the geography is well known, Would not think you need a citation for that info. That Sandy came in at both the high tide and at the high lunar tide is also well known, I would not think you need a citation for that data. I did provide a link to the tide gauges which should assist you in reviewing the reasonableness of the peer reviewed study and the reasonableness of the computation.
Can you provide a link to the Actual Study. You provided a citation to the guardian, not exactly a scientific journal. The links the guardian links to either advocacy websites or dead ends. A link to the actual study does make it easier to review the reasonableness to the study.
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michael sweet at 03:32 AM on 9 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
NorrisM
Here is a link to the SkS article I linked above at 57 on the costs of renewable energy. It would probably make more sense to discuss the costs of renewable energy on that thread. Use the search function in the upper corner of your screen to find other SkS threads on renewable energy. If you read Jacobson's paper he gives a great deal of information on energy and how it might be generated in the future.
There is not yet a consensus on the best way to switch to all renewables. Jacobson's articles are the most detailed that I know of but some people think he greatly underestimates the cost of energy storage.
The general idea is to rapidly build out wind and solar until they produce most of the power used. Existing gas plants could be used as back-up as you have suggested during this phase. All industry and transportation would be switched to electrical power from current fossil fuels. Once you have enough renewable energy to have excess production some of the time you would start to build out storage. Jacobson likes hydrogen gas for bulk storage with several other types of storage also used.
Baseload power plants like coal and nuclear do not back up solar and wind well. Hydro and gas peaker plants are much better at filling in for peak requirements (or when the wind does not blow enough).
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michael sweet at 02:58 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Tom13
For those who cannot do math, 6% of $2 billion is $120 million. That is for New York only and only for Sandy. When worldwide damage for all storms, drought and floods is calculated it will be much, much greater.
I am currently on the Chesapeake bay in Maryland. The houses nearby where I am have lost 50% of their value because of sea level rise. Will land in Miami be worth anything after Irma? This is the cost of Global Warming.
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NorrisM at 02:56 AM on 9 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
scaddenp and MA Rodger
Thanks. I think "exergy" is really what I remember from science classes as "kinetic energy".
My sense is that the EROI is just one thing to consider when analyzing alternatives to fossil fuels or the "cost" of moving to wind and solar. The "buffer" issue is obviously massively important. Seems EMROI is a more economic term. I see what you mean that nuclear power would require buffering for the same reason as wind and solar but for different reasons. I would like to know how France dealt with this issue. I assume that the nuclear power provided the "base load" and left "peak load" to be supplied from other sources.
My reading of the Summary for Policy Makers of the IPCC WG3 2014 report did not provide a lot of information that policy makers could actually use to implement any policy. My plan is to read the full IPCC WG 3 2014 report which I assume will have a lot more detail on costs of infrastructure.
Does anyone have any references to what fairly immediate changes will have to be made to the power grids in large cities of the US to accommodate the increase in EV sales?
Now that the US has over a 100 years supply of cheap natural gas which puts up about 50% of the pollutants into the air (and no sulphur), it seemed to me that the most logical first step (even if interim) should have been for the US to immediately move from coal to natural gas for electricity power generation. I appreciate that is what Obama was doing. Then these power plants could be used as the buffer source for wind and solar if that is where the US public wants to go (as opposed to nuclear).
The Pew Research Report referenced earlier clearly shows US public support for wind turbines. Not my favourite choice but looks like Americans do not have the same aesthetic concerns that I do. I guess my numerous times driving the Interstate 10 from LA to Palm Springs (which goes right through a wind mill farm) has impacted me. We had a family friend with a place in PS but spring breaks with the kids always required the necessary first stop in Disneyland in LA. It actually would be interesting to have the results of the Pew Research Report for LA alone where the public actually have experienced a wind farm close to them.
Perhaps SKS should consider adding this topic of "renewable energy costs" to its website rather than having to "key" off of the "Trump country" blog. Perhaps the "myth" could be that "the costs of change will be massive".
It seems to me that getting the American public onside with taking action means convincing them that the costs will not be massive compared to those continuing with fossil fuels (leaving aside the other benefits of renewable energy).
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michael sweet at 02:44 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
Tom13
I have provided a link to a peer reviewed study (the authors of the OP-Ed I cited link to their peer reviewed study) that found that the last foot of sea level rise caused $2 billion in damage. You respond with "I doubt it" and a seat of the pants obbservation. You generally do not cite anything to support your wild speculations. Are you claiming that the scientists who did the peer reviewed study do not konw the tidal range of New York? Your argument is absurd.
This is a scientific blog. If you cannot cite peer reviewed data to support your claims you should go somewhere else. "I doubt it" is not an argument.
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MA Rodger at 01:26 AM on 9 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
NorrisM @78,
Concerning the definition of Primary Energy, it isn't impossible to consider it to be "the potential energy at the top of the waterfall" or "the calorific value of the coal" but, as scaddemp@79 & Philippe Chantreau@80 well illustrates with the geothermal example, the concept of Primary Energy has to be applied with care when you start using it in ways it wasn't originally intended. Weißbach et al (2013) are in many ways using concepts outside their usual use but as for as using care, that is something Weißbach et al entirely fail to demonstrate. I describe their work up-thread as "in so many ways extremely silly" because of their poor bounding of such concepts as Primary Energy.
I should say that when I introduced the text of Weißbach et al up thread, I did not expect it to be studied line-by-line. To unpick all their errors and thus grasp fully the task they undertake may not be as intractable as some situations, (☺ they do delve into Schleswig-Holstein, but that is purely for data-gathering ☺) but it is not a task for the faint-hearted. Indeed, it is a challenge even to identify which is the most useful example of their hubris as illustration of the sort of problems there are within Weißbach et al (2013).
Perhaps it is best to demonstrate how foolish is their main finding, that renewables are rubbish (Wind (E-66) cannot even manage an EROI(buffered) of 4) while traditional power-plants are wonderful (Nuclear (PWR) manages a a splendid EROI of 75 ). In their words "The results show that nuclear, hydro, coal, and natural gas power systems (in this order) are one order of magnitude more effective than photovoltaics and wind power." Does such a finding bear scrutiny?
I cannot see that it can. Their calculation of EROI only make sense if all your electricity is supplied from a single source 24/7. That is not realistic. So in terms of a real-world electricity supply, the EROI numbers presented are meaningless.
Even if it were useful considering a single source supply, nuclear would surely need some form of discounted (buffered) value as while wind is highly intermittent at a single-windfarm scale, nuclear is the exact opposite - nuclear is on at full-power 24/365 (and that is pretty-much across all nuclear plant) while demand peaks daily and annually. (We should also note that a load-factors of 23% for 'wind' and 91% for nuclear is seriously taking the mickey.)
And as the alleged goal is to have an EROI>7 (thus nuclear is not in any way superior to coal simply because it has double the EROI), surely the finding of such a study would not be as in Weißbach et al (2013) that certain technologies were below the "economical limit" (and in saying that you would expect such a limit had been at least roughly established which is not the case), the finding would be what is required to ensure those 'certain' technologies can be established above the limit and what is required to prevent other technologies falling below.My advise then would be not to waste your time scrutinising Weißbach et al (2013).
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Tom13 at 00:50 AM on 9 September 20172017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #35
#19 Michael Sweet -
During Sandy in New York City alone, over $2 billion dollars of damage was caused by higher sea level.
Sandy came ashore in the funnel of NY , at high tide, at the high lunar tide. Those three factors drawfted any affect of the the additional 12-13inches of higher sea level since circa 1850. The difference in high & low tide in NYC is approx 6 ft,. Add in the high tide and high lunar tide factors, and the difference is approx 7 feet. This means the 12 inches is a minute difference.
www.weatherforyou.com/reports/index.php?forecast=tides&place=New+York&state=NY
Assuming the 6% attribution to XOM Chevron, and BP is correct, - that equates to less than one inch - How much additional damage would be a reasonable estimate for the 1 inch vs the 6+ feet for the tide.
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Philippe Chantreau at 23:28 PM on 8 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
Scaddenp, that applies to conventional geothermal. Enhanced geothermal is different.
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RedBaron at 21:31 PM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Apparently a broken link above.
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RedBaron at 21:19 PM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Overpopulation occurs when a species' population exceeds the carrying capacity of its ecological niche. It can result from an increase in births (fertility rate), a decline in the mortality rate, an increase in immigration, or an unsustainable biome and depletion of resources.[1]
So we have two choices for a solution of overpopulation:
- Reduce our population. We can do that like China did with 1 child per family laws, or like India did with forced sterilizations, or unfortunately the more typical strategy is like the NAZIs, Soviets, Turks, Mongols and Aztecs etc… did with mass murder of entire populations. War is another way. Almost universally these are all considered unethical, even downright evil. Or we can ignore it and let nature take its course with plagues, famines etc… in a sort of Malthusian catastrophe which most people agree is almost as bad.
- Improve the carrying capacity of the planet. In the past we did that to avoid a Malthusian catastrophe by simply breeding better crops and increasing agricultural ground. Early on we figured how to rotate land to reduce the inevitable soil degradation caused by agriculture. Every major cradle of civilization developed higher yielding domesticated crops.
The problem is this:The carrying capacity of a biological species in an environment is the maximum population size of the species that the environment can sustain indefinitely, given the food, habitat, water, and other necessities available in the environment.
And there is the rub. Once Industrial ag became the dominant new improved “green revolution” production model it did increase yields, but actually at the same time increased soil degradation and habitat loss. In short it was a temporary fix that is unsustainable. Thus it really didn’t increase carrying capacity, but did allow population growth.
Farming Claims Almost Half Earth's Land, New Maps Show
Only 60 Years of Farming Left If Soil Degradation Continues
We will soon reach a crisis where we once again must chose between the unethical population reductions of the past involving mass destruction, war, mass murder, forced sterilizations etc…. Or a new way to do agriculture that retains the higher yields similar to the green revolution, but without degrading habitat.
Meet regenerative organic agriculture or permaculture:
"Organic agriculture is an ecological production management system that promotes and enhances biodiversity, biological cycles and soil biological activity. It is based on minimal use of off-farm inputs and on management practices that restore, maintain and enhance ecological harmony." USDA
"Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labor; & of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system." Bill Mollison
“Yes, agriculture done improperly can definitely be a problem, but agriculture done in a proper way is an important solution to environmental issues including climate change, water issues, and biodiversity.”-Rattan Lal
In short using biomimicry to make agricultural systems sustainable and even regenerative.
Is organic farming more sustainable than regular farming?
More importantly, this solution instead of creating more problems actually solves more.
"If all farmland was a net sink rather than a net source for CO2, atmospheric CO2 levels would fall at the same time as farm productivity and watershed function improved. This would solve the vast majority of our food production, environmental and human health ‘problems’." Dr. Christine Jones
Overpopulation is here now, however, that need not necessarily be true. Humans are a clever tool making species. What matters for human populations is how we use those tools. We actually have the technology to support a far larger population almost indefinitely. But we simply must convert our energy systems to renewable energy like solar, wind, geothermal and hydro etc…, and we must change our agricultural systems to regenerative organic systems.
So will your child help accomplish these goals? If so then have 10 children if you want. We desperately need them and soon. Will your child instead be a drain on resources and/or destructive to the land? Then please, don’t even bother having children. It’s suicidal.
Bottom line is teach your children well and raise them to understand the seriousness of the situation and we can live in paradise on Earth.
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Wol at 21:01 PM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
nigelj @ 9: I can't agree with you: if there were no humans using technology to be able to exponentially increase their numbers then obviously the natural carbon cycle would be stable - as it was, effectively, until the industrial revolution.
And this of-quoted "stabilisation" of population at 10Bn (and recently I've seenestimates of 12Bn) rather begs the question - what would be a sustainable population? Certainly even 7+ Bn isn't, starting from where we are now.
Human ingenuity has enabled us - or, certainly in the Western societies - to superficially ignore Malthus but time ran out decades ago and whichever way you look at it - food, land, raw materials, energy, CO2 etc - the future to me looks very bleak. You can feel the pressure of population everywhere, from the streets of New York or London to Nairobi and Bangkok and to surmise that it will stabilise at any figure above what it was when I was at school - some 2.5Bn - just ignores how unsustainable it is.
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nigelj at 13:34 PM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Wol @8
I dont think numbers of people is the fundamental cause of climate change. Our energy choices are the fundamental cause. But numbers of people is right in the mix.
Yes your "what if" scenario makes sense. Except natural sinks wouldn't absorb the carbon any quicker, its just the atmospheric concentrations would not be so high.
Global population is currently approx. 7.5 billion. Plenty of experts believe it will stabilise around 10 billion around 2100, as more countriies go through a demographic transition. Although rates of population growth have been exponential over the least few centuries the trend has declined slightly since the 1950s, mainly as birth rates have dropped in western countries. They are also dropping in latin america.
The current problem is mainly Africa and parts of asia with strong population growth and only significantly increased incomes will give people the confidence, and the lower infant mortality, to have smaller families.
But the point is population is at least moderately likely to stabilise around 2100, so that means its worth tackling climate change. If that was the point you were making?
And even a growing population can use alternative forms of energy, and may have to anyway as oil will not last forever. So population growth does not automatically lock in climate change.
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Wol at 13:08 PM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
>>Yes the number of people is a cause of climate change<<
Actually, it IS the fundamental cause.
If the planet's human population had never gone above, say, 1Bn, then in all likelihood even if all had a Western standard of living (which would admittedly be unlikely since there wouldn't be the consumer population to support the manufacturing segments) there would not be an overabundance of CO2 to warm the atmosphere. Natural carbon cycle would probably absorb it.
Since neither I nor anyone else has an answer to population control (except the Chinese and that's now in the past) I really can't see any solution that's going to work.
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nigelj at 11:52 AM on 8 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
NorrsM @29
And yes as pointed out by others the IPCC doesn't do research, it figures out where the research is pointing.
Every chapter has a bibliography of hundreds and hundreds of science papers they have reviewed. Quite how a red blue team can do a similar in depth review with a couple of people over a couple of months eludes me. And the trouble is its hard isolating the critical research, climate science is something where you just have to review everything.
It was only after I read several popular books and followed up on several things in more detail on the physical laws, and climate data, that I was able to sort things out and see the sceptical myths for what they are, clever twisted rhetoric: Sophistry, and you would fully understand that word given your academic training.
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nigelj at 11:31 AM on 8 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
NorrisM @29
" My understanding of the purpose of this website was to inform those who had questions. “
Yes it is, but you often ignore the answers in the past.
“You seem to suggest that the IPCC has done some research to show that the intensity of hurricanes will increase. I will take your word on that in “
Well the contents page will get you to the right chapter. The IPCC say theres no clear evidence of whether hurricanes have got worse so far, but the problem is hurricanes are not that common and records of intensity are rough. However theres evidence levels of associated rainfall have increased.
The IPCC predict more intensity of hurricane wind forces and general energy content and rainfall content in the future, but probably not more frequency of hurricanes. They present reasons for both.
“I have to admit that I wondered whether I should have made the comment about Michael Mann because I knew it would not go over well. But that is certainly what I would think the "man on the street" would think about Michael Mann and his area of expertise.”
Yes I see your point the man in the street might react like that, but if you had just noted after your comment that he was in fact more widely qualified it wouldn’t have got my back up, and possibly others. Michael Mann has had death threats, and Im a guy interested in science so I get defensive when he's criticised unfairly or missrepresented on his qualifications.
“Let me know when someone comes up with an answer on how to move forward in the face of a Republican administration if it is not to embrace the Red Team Blue Team.”
I undertand where you are going with that and you mean well, but the problem is the red blue team has too much chance of moving things backwards, so is not worth the risk.
“I would like to stay on the blog relating to costs of changing from a fossil fuel based economy to a renewable energy economy because this is much more related to numbers rather than predictions.”
Yes I see where you are coming from people are generally more receptive to renewable energy than squabbles over model predictions, but this website is mostly a science website and only touches on renewable energy in passing. Maybe it should include it more.
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nigelj at 11:03 AM on 8 September 201730 Climate Lessons I Learned in 30 Years
Wol @6
Yes the number of people is a cause of climate change.
What do you propose doing about the number of people on the planet? Engage in a China one child only policy? Make giving birth illegal? Kill off half the population? These things arent really desirable, ethical or possible.
Other than promoting contraception its got me beaten. Population growth falls as countries become wealthier and go through the demographic transition, but this is a slow process.
Because its so difficult to reduce numbers of people we need to reduce consumption of fossil fuels. Am I missing something with that logic?
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nigelj at 10:54 AM on 8 September 2017I was an Exxon-funded climate scientist
DrivingBy @2
Yes my computer contains plenty of plastic, so sends a demand signal to fossil fuel companies.
However I'm not sure of your point as follows:
1) All computers contain plenty of plastic even expensive ones, so I have no choice but to buy them if I want a computer.
2) Oils used to formulate plastic are not actually causing climate change , so we will always have a need for some oil for things like this. The more important demand driven feedback would be buying petrol.
3) Not sure how your comment follows from what I said.
The practical ways to deal with climate change are carbon taxes, or cap and trade, building renewable energy, buying electric cars, etc.
Maybe I have missed your point.
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scaddenp at 10:32 AM on 8 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
Yes. Or the calorific value of the coal. One of the places where "primary energy" is pretty useless is geothermal. The primary energy (at least in common reporting terms) is high but the extractable work is low.
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DrivingBy at 10:10 AM on 8 September 2017I was an Exxon-funded climate scientist
@nigelj
Do device(s) you posted the comment from contain plastics? If so, you are sending a demand signal via the oil and gas industries, which are fulfilling your request by producing more feedstock.
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Bob Loblaw at 10:09 AM on 8 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
NorrisM: "You seem to suggest that the IPCC has done some research..."
Please get this straight: the IPCC does not do research. They review it. They report on research that has been done indepently by others and published by others. Yes, the participants in the IPCC are researchers and have done some of the research being cited - but they do that research outside the function of the IPCC.
Do you understnad why this is important? Please acknowledge that you understand, or ask for clarification if you do not.
...and as a suggestion for reading, do not go to the later IPCC reports first. I suggest that you start with the first IPCC report, from 1990:
Why? Because the first report covers a lot more of the basics of climatology. It is less technical. It serves as a better reader for the student, rather than the expert.The later reports assume a pre-existing knlowedge of much of the material covered in earlier reports.
And you will also realize that an awful lot was already known over 25 years ago.
Moderator Response:[RH] Shortened link.
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Bob Loblaw at 09:59 AM on 8 September 2017Denying Hurricane Harvey’s climate links only worsens future suffering
And once again, Tom13 pretends that lack of conclusive evidence is the same as no evidence at all.
Do you really seriously believe that, Tom, or are you just hoping nobody notices? I can keep pointing it out as fast as you keep making this mistake. If you want to discuss this properly, feel free to engage.
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NorrisM at 09:58 AM on 8 September 2017New study finds that climate change costs will hit Trump country hardest
scaddenp @ 77
Thanks. So is "primary energy" the potential energy at the top of the waterfall?
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