15 climate change
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Announcements – March 16, 2011
New York TimesOctober 1, 2004
With Russia's Nod, Treaty on Emissions Clears Last Hurdle The long-delayed Kyoto Protocol on global warming overcame its last critical hurdle to taking effect around the world on Thursday when Russia's cabinet endorsed the treaty and sent it to Parliament. The treaty is the first to require cuts in emissions linked to global warming. The United States has rejected the treaty and will not be bound by its restrictions. But the treaty, which has already been ratified by 120 countries will take effect if supporters include nations accounting for at least 55 percent of all industrialized countries' 1990-level emissions. The only way for it to cross that threshold was with ratification by Russia. In 1990, the United States accounted for 36.1 percent of emissions from industrialized countries, and Russia 17.4 percent.
CNNNov. 10, 2004Climate report leaves U.S. policy unchanged -Climate treaty considered threat to U.S. jobs and economic growth WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush is holding fast to his rejection of mandatory curbs on greenhouse gases that are blamed for global warming, despite a fresh report from 300 scientists in the United States and seven other nations that shows Arctic temperatures are rising. Critics say Bush's opposition is ironic because the treaty was modeled after the market-based U.S. program for cutting acid rain created in 1990 by Bush's father and often pointed to by the current administration as a success story.
26 September 2006World 'warmest for 12,000 years
The world is the warmest it has been in the last 12,000 years as a result of rapid warming over the past 30 years, a study has suggested. Nasa climatologists said the Earth had warmed by about 0.2C (0.4F) in each of the last three decades.
As a result, plant and animal species were struggling to migrate fast enough to cooler regions, they said.
2 April 2010
More than 90 record-high temperatures were recorded in the Midwest and Great Lakes yesterday.
And perhaps an even better record came for the residents of Minneapolis-St. Paul in Minnesota - for only the third time in recorded history there was no snow measured during the month of March. (Records date back to 1859).
Rochester, Minnesota, shattered its old record high of 71 degrees when the temperature soared to 83 degrees yesterday. Chicago also recorded a record high temperature for April 1 of 83.
November 24, 2009
Why You Should Be Hot and Bothered About 'Climate-gate'By John Lott
A coordinated campaign to hide scientific information about climate change appears unprecedented. Could it wind up costing us trillions?
“Agenda-driven scientists want to push the U.S. into a costly climate pact”Sarah Palin - www.ajc.com
Air Quality I
Lecture Objectives:
1. What is the greenhouse effect?
2. Is global climate change/warming real?
3. What are the worst-case scenarios under global climate change?
What are Greenhouse Gases?
Gases that are transparent to light, but absorb infrared radiation
Mainly CO2, but also chlorofluorocarbons, methane, nitrous oxide
General Causes:
Burning coal, oil, gas: releases CO2
Deforestation: releases stored CO2, reduces CO2 storage
More CO2 emitted than can be absorbed
Industrialized nations
What do we know?
Data show: current rapid build-up of ‘greenhouse’ gases (eg. CO2)
But how do we know past climates?
What do we know?
Polar ice caps record history of recent pollution and historical climate change in build-up of ice layers
What do we know?
What do we know?
The Controversy
Debate: 1. Are the increasing levels of CO2 due to natural climate cycles or human-generated?
2 .Can increasing levels of CO2 really change the climate? Does it matter?
Opponents argue that reducing emissions will hurt the economy
Supporters argue that not reducing emissions may have catastrophic effects, so isn’t it better to be safe than sorry?
What do we know?
Human activities are changing the composition of Earth's atmosphere.
Human activities are strengthening Earth's natural greenhouse effect.
A warming trend of about 1°F (0.6 C) has been recorded since the late 19th century.
http://epa.gov/climatechange/index.html
National Academies of the USA National report 2008
What do we know?
What do we know?
What is likely but not certain?
Rising levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere will increase global warming
to what extent is difficult to determine.
Average global temperatures will continue to rise. By how much and how fast remain uncertain
Could be 2.2 - 10°F
What are the big unknowns?
Exact local impacts on health, agriculture, water resources, forests, wildlife and coastal areas
Large-scale predictions easier to make than small-scale predictions
Will local rainfall increase or decrease? Will hurricanes be more frequent or severe? Will ocean currents change?
Evidence for Global Climate Change
IPCC –Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Appointed by the United Nations in 1988 Mission: To study the issue and make recommendations First Assessment published 1990 Second Assessment published in 1996 Third Assessment published in 2001 http://www.ipcc.ch/
Scientific Basis, Impacts Adaptation and Vulnerability, Mitigation, Synthesis
IPCC conclusions1. CO2 and temperature correlated
2. 0.6C (1.0F) ave. temperature increase since 1861
3. Declines in snow and ice cover since 1960s
4. 10-20 cm sea-level increase in last 100 years
5. human activity is the cause
Near unanimity of scientific opinion
National Research Council (U.S.) agrees
Evidence for Global Climate Change
1. 1.0F (0.6C) average temperature increase since 1861
Climatic records indicate a correlation between CO2 concentration and global temperatures over the past 400,000 years
2. CO2 and temperature are correlated
Nature 2002 419:188-190
www.isgs.illinois.edu
3. Declines in snow and ice cover
South Cascade Glacier, Washington State
Mount Kilimanjaro, one of the few places in the world where ice and snow can be found on the equator, could lose its entire ice field by 2020 because of climate change.
The ice fields Ernest Hemingway once described as "wide as all the world, great, high, and unbelievably white in the sun" have lost 82 percent of their ice since 1912—the year their full extent was first measured.
4. Increases in sea level (10-20 cm)
http://www.umac.org/ocp/paradise/outlook.htm
Rising sea levels coastal flooding
5. Human activity is the cause
www.ipcc.ch
Effects of Global Climate Change
Not uniform; regional differencessome areas hotter, some colder, some wetter, dryer
Local and regional changes are difficult to predict
Worsening Health Effects
Direct heat stress: 2003 heat wave in France killed 15,000
Diseases: cold weather kills many diseases, especially mosquito-borne diseases:
malaria, dengue fever, yellow fever, encephalitis
Ozone: pollutant near the ground
Cholera: – ENSO link
Animals and Plants
Shift northward in species distribution
Flowers bloom earlier asUK warmsBy Richard Black7 April 2010
British plants are flowering earlier now than at any time in the last 250 years, according to new analysis. Flowers are now emerging about five days earlier than 30-40 years ago.
Researchers stitched together nearly 400,000 first flowering records covering 405 species across the nation. They show that the average first flowering date has been earlier in the last 25 years than in any other period.
Flowering dates are closely linked to temperatures recorded in the Central England Temperature Record.
This is the longest continuous instrumental record of temperatures anywhere in the world, dating back to measurements made in 1659.
Agriculture and Food Supply
Increase yields for some crops, but not uniformly
World food supply may be unaltered, but problems in poor countries will likely get worse
Increase pest populations
Increase need for irrigation
Disruption of Water & Weather Cycles?
Major changes to hydrological cycle Increased evaporation will dry some areas
Exacerbate problems in Middle East & Africa
Increased precipitation will flood some areas
Increased intensity of storms Problems with flood control
23 September 2005Hurricanes and global warming - a link?
The most recent study on the issue, found that while the incidence of hurricanes and tropical storms has remained roughly constant over the last 30 years, there has been a rise in the number of intense hurricanes with wind speeds above 211km/h (131mph). The leader of that research project, Dr Peter Webster, believes there may be a link to climate change.
Is there anything we can do?
Reduce Greenhouse Gases by:1. Reducing emissions
2. Increasing CO2 uptake
Political and economic issues – need effective policy!
Annual US per capita contribution = 22 tons of CO2 emissions per year
World average per capita = 6 tons
How to reduce greenhouse gases?
Improve energy efficiency Current & future buildings using available, cost-effective
technologies Increase investments in renewable and longer-term
technologies.
Carbon tax: stimulate development of increased efficiency, alternative energy sources
Removal of CO2 from atmosphere plant trees Stop deforestation Increase CO2 storage in the ocean
EPA Announces Landmark Greenhouse Gas Regulations Plan For Nation's Biggest Polluters 12/23/10
A press release from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that new standards granted under the Clean Air Act will be implemented in 2012 to regulate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the Unites States.
The EPA's new plan will establish standards specifically for fossil fuel power plants and petroleum refineries, both of which combine to represent roughly 40 percent of GHG pollution in the United States.
House votes to block funding for EPA's greenhouse gas regulationsFeb 18, 2011
The House approved a GOP amendment to federal spending legislation Friday that would block fiscal year 2011 funding for EPA’s implementation of greenhouse gas regulations.
Side Benefits of Reducing Emissions
1) Reduced air pollution
2) Increased human health = lower health care costs & increased productivity
3) Improved energy efficiency- Reduced dependence on foreign oil
- Reduced need for expensive new power plants
4) Increased investment in alternative energy technologies (renewable resources)!
Who reaps benefits and who pays costs?
Points to know
1. What is the greenhouse effect? What are the greenhouse gases?
2. What do we know for sure in the controversy over global climate change? What are the big unknowns?
3. What is the IPCC? What conclusions did it reach regarding global warming? Did the National Research Council of the U.S. agree with their findings?
4. Will global warming be felt evenly across the earth? Can we predict what will happen in a given region?
5. How can we reduce greenhouse gases? What are some side benefits of emission reduction?
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