I just came upon a blog written by long-time climate experts Mark Trexler and Laura Kosloff that I really like: The Climatographer. I'm not sure why I haven't bumped into it earlier. With their many years of experience and knowledge, they bring what I think is a very realistic view of the magnitude of the climate problem.
I have bookmarked the blog, and you should, too.
Showing posts with label adaptation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adaptation. Show all posts
The Climatographers
Labels:
adaptation,
climate,
climatographer,
co2,
kosloff,
mitigation,
risk,
trexler
Clive Hamilton Says:
"In sum, the most important assumptions on which international negotiations and national policies are founded—that we can stabilise the climate at some level, that overshooting and returning to a lower target is feasible, and that we can accommodate 2 or more degrees of warming by adapting to it—have no foundation in the way the Earth’s climate system actually behaves. When one understands these facts, the state of political debate around the world takes on an air of unreality. Rich country policies—including cutting emissions by a few per cent and outsourcing most of the cuts to developing countries; waiting for carbon capture and storage technology to save the coal industry and continuing to pollute at high levels until that happens; planning the construction of new coal-fired power plants; and even, in Australia, entertaining the idea of exporting brown coal—are so at odds with the scale and urgency of the emission cuts demanded by the science as to be almost laughable. They reflect a child-like belief that climate change can be averted by ignoring the truth and hoping for the best, a form of wishful thinking whose costs will prove incalculable."
- Clive Hamilton
Clive Hamilton is Professor of Public Ethics at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics in Australia.
Labels:
adaptation,
australia,
carbon capture,
climate change,
clive hamilton,
coal
Monday What's on the Web: The Daily Climate
Each Monday I highlight other bloggers or web contributors who are making important or interesting contributions to climate, sustainability, transportation or market transformation. Check back each week for another installment.
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The Daily Climate does two things: it collects dozens of stories related to climate change from around the world, and it publishes some of its own reporting on its Newsroom page. Its collection of news from around the world is quite comprehensive, and its a great site to bookmark for the latest links to articles of all types. TDC categorizes stories into eleven different categories such as: energy, politics, solutions, acidification and others. It describes its mission as follows:
Its own reporting is less frequent, with new articles appearing every few days from its several climate writers. Recent articles include:
The Daily Climate does two things: it collects dozens of stories related to climate change from around the world, and it publishes some of its own reporting on its Newsroom page. Its collection of news from around the world is quite comprehensive, and its a great site to bookmark for the latest links to articles of all types. TDC categorizes stories into eleven different categories such as: energy, politics, solutions, acidification and others. It describes its mission as follows:
The Daily Climate works to increase public understanding of climate disruption, including its scope and scale, potential solutions and the political processes that impede or advance them.
The Daily Climate does not espouse a political point of view on the news but instead reports the truth to the best of our ability. Editorial integrity is the foundation of our mission.
Establishing the trust of our readers is a fundamental editorial objective; all of our reporting, editing and publishing adheres to the highest standards of journalism, including honesty, accuracy, balance and objectivity.
Towards that goal, the Daily Climate offers enterprise reporting on relevant topics alongside a unique daily aggregation of global journalism on climate science.
The Daily Climate's aggregation represents the news of the day, irrespective of the opinion or viewpoint expressed, or whether or not material in the article is consistent with our understanding of current science. We often publish several articles from different newspapers covering the same story, as well as multiple editorials and op-eds about the same subject. We take this approach based on the belief that readers who come to DailyClimate.org want to see a wide range of how issues are being covered by the mainstream press.I think it does a pretty good job of meeting this mission.
Its own reporting is less frequent, with new articles appearing every few days from its several climate writers. Recent articles include:
Fear and loathing in the warming world
Opinion: Feds fall short in pricing climate disruption
Climate adaptation: Adding to a tide of worry
You can subscribe to their daily email here.
Labels:
adaptation,
climate change,
What's on the Web
Bjorn Lomborg Both On- and Off-Target on Climate Change
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(from Wikipedia) |
"The process is called adaptation, and it's something we humans are very good at. That isn't surprising, since we've been doing it for millennia. As climate economist Richard Tol notes, our ability to adapt to widely varying climates explains how people live happily at both the equator and the poles. In the debate over global warming, in which some have argued that civilization as we know it is at stake, this is an important point. Humankind is not completely at the mercy of nature. To the contrary, when it comes to dealing with the impact of climate change, we've compiled a pretty impressive track record. While this doesn't mean we can afford to ignore climate change, it provides a powerful reason not to panic about it either."
Millennia he says. Not really. Although humans have been around for hundreds of thousands of years, civilization has only been around for about 10,000 years--a time period during which climate has been remarkably stable. Replacing "humans" with "civilizations" makes his statements false. Civilizations are not good at adapting to changes in climates. It's true that we have different civilizations in radically different climates, but they don't move from one to another. Read Jared Diamond's Collapse for a perspective on how making environmental changes can effect civilizations. (hint: they don't adapt well.)
He cites the example of Tokyo, which has subsided up to 15 feet in places, as an example of how we humans can adapt to rising sea levels. Also the Netherlands. Both of those countries, of course, are highly developed and wealthy. A counterexample of Vienna--from another developed country, to boot--might be brought forward as a likely lost cause, a place that will be unable to effectively adapt.
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(photo from Oxfam) |
"One of the most pernicious impacts of global warming is the extent to which it exacerbates the phenomenon known as the urban "heat island effect."
Hashem Akbari, a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who specializes in cost-effective methods of combating the effects of climate change in urban areas, has shown that by painting roofs white, covering asphalt roadways with concrete-colored surfaces and planting shade trees, local temperatures could be reduced by as much as 5 degrees Fahrenheit.
Painting streets and rooftops white may sound impractical, if not silly, but it's a realistic strategy - which is to say, it's effective and affordable."
Agreed. I might point out that this is not news. The idea of reducing the urban heat island effect has been around for at least a couple of decades. It's highly effective. It even helps with mitigation (.e. reducing greenhouse gases). We haven't done it. When does he suggest we start?
Also, it's local. Yes, it might be possible to reduce temperatures in LA or Beirut, but the Arctic is still going to warm just as much.
He ends with this statement:
"Obviously, whether it involves dikes or buckets of white paint, adaptation is not a long-term solution to global warming. Rather, it will enable us to get by while we figure out the best way to address the root causes of man-made climate change. This may not seem like much, but at a time when fears of a supposedly imminent apocalypse threaten to swamp rational debate about climate policy, it's worth noting that coping with climate change is something we know how to do."
We also know how to reduce greenhouse gases. We already have strategies that can address half or more of the "root causes" of man-made climate change. In many cases it's even easier and cheaper than adaptation. But every day we delay mitigation means even more adaptation. I agree that we need to adapt; we'll be forced to, since we're not acting fast enough on climate anyway. But starting yesterday, we really, really need to reduce.
I think Mr. Lomborg performs a disservice with this op-ed. By emphasizing the (false) "ease" with which we humans can adapt, he de-emphasizes the need for much more rapid and serious action on reducing greenhouse gases. In fact, he almost recommends further delay. Also, his contention that we still need to figure out the "best way to address the root causes" is just silly. We need to pursue ALL the ways to address the causes--not waste our time trying to find a silver bullet "best way."
Labels:
adaptation,
climate change,
tokyo,
washington post
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