Archive for June, 2008

Weaning from Fossil Fuels

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Very good, detailed article in the New Yorker by Elizabeth Kolbert about Samsø, an island in Denmark, which has gone to zero, in ten years, in its CO2 production.

quite deliberately, the residents of the island set about changing [their oil consumption. They formed energy coöperatives and organized seminars on wind power. They removed their furnaces and replaced them with heat pumps. By 2001, fossil-fuel use on Samsø had been cut in half. By 2003, instead of importing electricity, the island was exporting it, and by 2005 it was producing from renewable sources more energy than it was using.

Victory over CO2

China Algae Bloom

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Quite aside from the Olympics, this cannot be good news about China’s environment. It might be good for C02 draw-down, though the critters underneath will not fare well.

China Algae

“Water quality has been a concern for the sailing events, given that many coastal Chinese cities dump untreated sewage into the sea. At the same time, rivers and tributaries emptying into coastal waters are often contaminated with high levels of nitrates from agricultural and industrial runoff. These nitrates contribute to the red tides of algae that often bloom along sections of China’s coastline.

But officials in Qingdao said pollution and poor water quality did not have a “substantial link” to the current outbreak, according to Xinhua. Instead, scientists blamed the bloom on increased rainfall and warmer waters in the Yellow Sea. Algae are now blooming over more than 12,900 square kilometers, or 5,000 square miles, of the sea, according to Xinhua.”

IHT

More photos.

[thx Rob Egenolf]

Solar Salts

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Solar Sump

While adoption of solar energy steps up around the world, two key challenges remain: how to store the energy created during the day so it can be used through the night and how to dispatch the energy to where it is needed. Both of these problems may be solved by coupling molten salt with concentrating solar power (CSP), according to a June 26 article in Renewable Energy World.

CleanTechnica.Com

Iceless North Pole

Friday, June 27th, 2008

“It seems unthinkable, but for the first time in human history, ice is on course to disappear entirely from the North Pole this year.”

Independent UK

This isn’t quite the whole story, however. It’s headline science. The fuller story, with no decrease, or even possible slight increase, of ice in the Antarctic, is told by Andrew Revkin in the NY Times.

Climate of Plagues

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Perfect Storm of Perfect Plagues

Doktorschnabel_430px.jpg Guess what else global climate change can do? Create a perfect epidemiological storm with enough power to take heretofore innocuous diseases and turn them into perfect plagues. A new study in Plos ONE reveals how extreme climatic conditions can alter normal host-pathogen relationships, causing a “perfect storm” of multiple infectious outbreaks to trigger epidemics with catastrophic mortality.

Outbreaks of canine distemper virus (CDV) in lions in 1994 and 2001 resulted in unusually high mortality of lions in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park and Ngorongoro Crater. In the past, CDV epidemics caused little or no harm to the lions. But the outbreaks of 1994 and 2001 were preceded by extreme droughts that caused Cape buffalo to become heavily infested with ticks. When the lions ate the buffalo, they consumed unusually high levels of tick-borne blood parasites.

In the drought years, the CDV suppressed the lions’ immune systems and also combined with the heavy levels of blood parasites. The merger created a fatal synergy. In 1994 more than 35 percent of Serengeti lions died. About the same number perished in the Ngorongoro Crater in 2001.

See Julia Whitty at MoJo’s Blue Marble Blog

More and More Fires in CA

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

Wildfires were scattered around Northern California on Sunday in the heart of wine country and in remote forests, the latest in what has become an unusually destructive year.

State officials said lightning started more than 500 fires during the weekend.

One had spread across 5.5 square miles by early Sunday, after starting Saturday afternoon in Napa County and quickly moving into a mostly rural area of Solano County.

Califire

Speaking of Midwest Floods

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

“The monsoon splashed its way into the record books on Sunday, hitting Delhi a full two weeks before its”normal” date. This is the earliest arrival of the southwest monsoon in the capital. And, if the Met office is to be believed, it’s going to be a long and wet rainy season this year.

“We have records available since 1900 and this year’s monsoon arrival is the earliest ever,”


Monsoon Breaks Records

This is, as the news is beginning to creep out, what the climate change models predict: where it’s already wet, it will get wetter; where it’s dry will dry to bone….

More Fires in CA

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Just when the big Santa Cruz mountain fire died down, another further north started up. When it was under control another near Watsonville began. 500 people evacuated. Highway 5 shut down.

“A series of fires burned 300-500 acres north of Watsonville on Friday afternoon, chasing 400 people from their homes and closing a 5-mile stretch of northbound Highway 1 in a scene that one witness called apocalyptic. ”

Watsonville Fire

And of course, with so many able-bodied off fighting a war, the lack for fighting fires is getting close to pretty damned scary.

The number of employed Forest Service firefighters is 8.5 percent below the 4,432 seasonal workers authorized for Region 5, which includes California, Hawaii and the U.S.-affiliated Pacific Islands, according to Feinstein.

She [Senator Feinstein] also expressed concern that only 186 of the agency’s 276 engines were available to respond to fires and that a new C-130J aircraft will not be available this year for air tanker duty.

The vacancies come at a time when the economic impact of soaring gas prices is being felt throughout the economy, including the firefighting budget. There has been less money available for firefighter training in California, which is facing a budget deficit of some $15 billion.

Hire Everyone Qualified

Meeting At An Airport

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

by Tahah Muhammad Ali
translation Peter Cole, Yahya Hjazi & Gabriel Levin

You asked me once,
on our way back
from the midmorning
trip to the spring:
“What do you hate,
and who do you love?”

And I answered,
from behind the eyelashes
of my surprise,
my blood rushing
like the shadow
cast by a cloud of starlings:
“I hate departure…
I love the spring
and the path to the spring,
and I worship the middle hours of the morning.”
And you laughed…
and the almond tree blossomed
and the thicket grew loud with nightingales.

…A question
now four decades old:
I salute that question’s answer;
and an answer
as old as your departure;
I salute that answer’s question…

And today,
it’s preposterous,
here we are at a friendly airport
by the slimmest of chances,
and we meet.
Ah, Lord!
we meet.
And here you are again,
it’s absolutely preposterous–
I recognized you
but you didn’t recognize me.
“Is it you?!”
But you wouldn’t believe it.
And suddenly
you burst out and asked:
“If you’re really you,
What do you hate
and who do you love?”

And I answered–
my blood
fleeing the hall
rushing in me
like the shadow
cast by a cloud of starlings:
“I hate departure,
and I love the spring,
and the path to the spring,
and I worship the middle
hours of morning.”

And you wept,
and flowers bowed their heads,
and doves in the silk of their sorrow stumbled.

From: So What, Copper Canyon Press

Weather Reports are Missing the Story

Thursday, June 19th, 2008


by Amy Goodman

The floodwaters are rising, swamping cities, breaching levees. Tens of thousands are displaced. Many are dead. No, I am not talking about Hurricane Katrina, but about the Midwest United States. As the floodwaters head south along the Mississippi, devastating communities one after another, the media are overflowing with televised images of the destruction.

While the TV meteorologists document “extreme weather” with their increasingly sophisticated toolbox, from Doppler radar to 3-D animated maps, the two words rarely uttered are its cause: global warming. I asked former Energy Department official Joseph Romm, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, about the disconnect:

“Part of the reason is that the people who write about global warming for most newspapers and TV are not the same people as those who tend to cover weather. In general, the media is covering this as all sort of unconnected events, just regular weather maybe gone a little wacky. But, in fact, the scientific community has predicted for more than two decades now that as we pour more heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the planet will heat up, and that would redistribute water. If you heat up the planet … you evaporate more water, and areas that are wetter will tend to see more intense rainfall and deluges and earlier snowmelts, and all that will lead to flooding. So what we’re seeing is exactly what scientists have been telling us would happen because of human emissions.”

Perry Beeman is an award-winning investigative reporter for The Des Moines Register, and former president of the Society of Environmental Journalists. From his flood-racked city of Des Moines, he told me: “Not even a few weeks before this all happened, we were in the middle of doing a climate-change series that’s going to run over the year. We had two-page graphic talking about the different things that would happen [in Iowa as a result of climate change] and pointing out … that you would expect more torrential rains. What has happened here is consistent with many scientists’ view of what global warming will mean in the Midwest.”

So if the disasters that follow one another, from hurricanes to tornadoes to flooding, are consistent with global warming, why aren’t the networks, the weather reporters, making the link? Dr. Heidi Cullen, a climate expert on The Weather Channel, created a stir in late 2006 when she wrote in her Weather Channel blog: “If a meteorologist can’t speak to the fundamental science of climate change, then maybe the AMS [American Meteorological Society] shouldn’t give them a Seal of Approval. If a meteorologist has an AMS Seal of Approval, which is used to confer legitimacy to TV meteorologists, then meteorologists have a responsibility to truly educate themselves on the science of global warming.”

As reporters stood in waist-high water in the flooded downtowns of major American cities, President George Bush basked in the sunlight in Washington, D.C., urging Congress to lift the ban on offshore oil drilling and on oil shale drilling, and to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling. While regular people are getting hit in the wallet at the gas pump, paying now more than $4 per gallon for gasoline, the oil, coal and gas industries are reaping huge rewards, and applying pressure to open up protected spaces for resource extraction.

One of the candidates to replace Bush has a solution. When I asked Ralph Nader about global warming this week, he said: “We’ve got to have a national mission of converting our economy, and the example for the world is solar energy, 4 billion years of supply. It is environmentally benign, decentralized, makes us energy-independent and replaces the ExxonMobil/Peabody Coal/uranium complex. That is why we have got to go for economic, political, health and safety reasons.”

Nader understands how the levers of power and influence operate in Washington, but also how flooding can devastate a community. He grew up in Winsted, Conn., where the Mad River and Still River flooded in 1955, where another Nader confronted another Bush. Ralph Nader’s mother, Rose, shook the hand of Bush’s grandfather, Sen. Prescott Bush, R-Conn., and refused to let go until he agreed to build a dry dam. The dry dam got built, and Winsted hasn’t flooded since. A half-century later, our global problems have gotten far worse. Citizen activists need to shake not hands but the system, holding to account those with power and influence, from politicians to the personalities who report the weather on TV.

Denis Moynihan assisted on today’s column.

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 650 stations in North America

*
Jeff Masters of Weather Underground, confirms:


Climate change contributing to flooding?

The heaviest types of rains–those likely to cause flooding–have increased in recent years (see my February blog, “The future of flooding”, for more detail). According to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2007 report, “The frequency of heavy precipitation events has increased over most land areas”. Indeed, global warming theory has long predicted an increase in heavy precipitation events. As the climate warms, evaporation of moisture from the oceans increases, resulting in more water vapor in the air. According to the 2007 IPCC report, water vapor in the global atmosphere has increased by about 5% over the 20th century, and 4% since 1970.

Over the U.S., where we have very good precipitation records, annual average precipitation has increased 7% over the past century (Groisman et al., 2004). The same study also found a 14% increase in heavy (top 5%) and 20% increase in very heavy (top 1%) precipitation events over the U.S. in the past century. Kunkel et al.

Electric Car Network Ready to Roll

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Project Better Place, a Silicon Valley alternative fuels initiative is moving out into the big world. Shai Agassi, an Israel born high-tech entrepreneur left the software field several years ago to do what he wanted to do: create electric driven cars and the new infrastructure needed to make them real alternatives to internal combustion. He’s just got Israel to sign on to helping create the network, and Denmark, with wind produced electricity, may soon follow suite.

Agassi said that because most rides are less than 100 miles, drivers can recharge batteries at home, at work or at thousands of charging points throughout Israel. On longer trips, they can exchange batteries in a five-minute operation at about 200 “swap stations.”

“We have a second battery for every driver in the swap stations. It’s waiting for you in case you need it. You don’t need to carry it with you in the trunk,” Agassi said.

Moreover, Nissan’s global product planning chief, Tom Lane, has said his firm will soon announce a battery breakthrough, one that could increase driving range to around 200 miles per charge while recharging in as little as 20 minutes.

Electric Cars for Israel

Project Better Place has its own web site with photos of the cars as well as technical and business talk about the project.

Hydrogen Fuel Cell Almost Production Ready

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Hydrogen Fuel Cell from Honda On Monday, Honda Motor celebrated the start of production of its FCX Clarity, the world’s first hydrogen-powered fuel-cell vehicle intended for mass production. In a ceremony at a factory an hour north of Tokyo, the first assembly-line FCX Clarity rolled out to the applause of hundreds of Honda employees wearing white jump suits.

Honda will make just 200 of the futuristic vehicles over the next three years, but said it eventually planned to increase production volumes, especially as hydrogen filling stations became more common. On Monday, Honda announced its first five customers, who included the actress Jamie Lee Curtis.

Hydrogen Car

Now if I could just get a date with Jamie Lee Curtis I’d get to ride in one!

36,000 Homeless in Iowa

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

“About 36,000 Iowans in 11 counties are homeless, Gov. Chet Culver said Sunday. In Cedar Rapids, 25,000 people were forced from their homes. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is taking applications for disaster assistance.

“This is far over record flooding. It is of historic proportions,” David Miller, administrator of the Iowa Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, said at a briefing. Eighty-three of Iowa’s 99 counties have been declared state disaster areas. Three deaths were attributed to flooding.”

Iowa Homeless

“…the state’s worst damage to date was in Cedar Rapids, where early estimates put property damage at $736 million, said fire department spokesman Dave Koch. He said about 9.2 square miles of the city was affected by flooding.

The immediate concern there had switched from the water flowing in the streets to that flowing out of people’s taps.

Three of the city’s four drinking water collection wells were contaminated by murky, petroleum-laden floodwater, leaving only about 15 million gallons a day for the city of more than 120,000 and the suburbs that depend on its water system. Officials warned that if people didn’t cut back on nonessential uses, drinking water would run out within a couple of days.”

Incredible Destruction

China Leads as CO2 Polluter

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Green Noise

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Don’t know why this got put in the Style section, but what the heck. I think we can all relate.

Ms. Burnham, 35, recycles religiously, orders weekly from a community-supported farm, buys eco-friendly cleaning products and carries groceries in a canvas bag. But she admits to information overload on the environment — from friends, advice columns, news media, even government-issued reports. Much of the advice is conflicting.

“To say that you are confused and a little fed up with the often contradictory messages out there on how to live lightly on the earth is definitely not cool,” she said in an e-mail message. “But, heck, I’ll come out and say it. I’m a little overwhelmed.”

She is, in other words, a victim of “green noise” — static caused by urgent, sometimes vexing or even contradictory information played at too high a volume for too long.


Green Noise

Andrew Revkin, Science Editor for the Times, follows up in his blog.

Rainfall Anomolies

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Here is the place I’ve been looking for, and where I should have concentrated my search in the first place, to see the larger patterns of rainfall, temperature, tornadoes, as against the averages, place by place. This is just one of such anomalies maps available at the National Climactic Data Center (NCDC) at NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). Others show temperature anomalies, hurricanes, tornadoes. There are reports of all kinds - a treasure trove of real data and put into forms that most of us can understand, including an entire section called Climate Extemes Index

Precipitation Anomolies

You’ll notice the dark green of Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and the percent above normal that color represents.

*

I was led to these maps by a good blog called Climate Progress and particular by this posting about extreme weather and acknowledgment of climate change: the Chinese understand; the Brits understand. The US is head in the sand.

Solar + Manure

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

“A proposed Central Valley power plant will tap three potent sources of renewable energy at once - the sun, crop stubble and cow manure.

The plant, near the old oil-patch town of Coalinga in Fresno County, will combine a large solar farm with a generator that burns orchard trimmings, agricultural waste and, yes, excrement.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. will announce Thursday that it will buy electricity from the plant, which will be built by Martifer Renewables, a U.S. subsidiary of a Portuguese company. Terms of the deal have not been disclosed.

The plant’s design will allow it to do something not typically associated with solar power. It will keep running, and generating power, at night. ”

80,000 Homes

Cashew Chews

Friday, June 13th, 2008

Tests in Japan have show that oil produced from the shell of the cashew nut may slash by 90 percent the methane emissions from belching cattle when mixed as an additive to feed, a spokesman for oil refiner Idemitsu Kosan Co said on Wednesday.

Methane Reducer

Carbon Solution Stumbles

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

This article, Running Circles over Carbon, is about the lack of financial motivation for ramping back on CO2 production. It focuses on two older technologies: coal burning and the attempts to capture and sequester the emitted CO2, and nuclear energy. Both have start-up or reconfiguration costs that are substantial with substantial fear that the rewards won’t compensate.

While this inability for companies to jump in as solution-providers can be cast as troubling as the threat of CO2 effects grow, it may also mean that truly clean and innovative technologies such as wind and solar will draw more interest and capital — such as legendary oil man T. Boone Pickens major push into wind.

Plastic Bag Eater

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

This is why we need the young: to do what their elders can’t imagine.

Getting ordinary plastic bags to rot away like banana peels would be an environmental dream come true.

After all, we produce 500 billion of them a year worldwide, and they take up to 1,000 years to decompose. They take up space in landfills, litter our streets and parks, pollute the ocean and kill the animals that eat them.

Now a Waterloo teenager has found a way to make plastic bags degrade faster — in three months, he figures.

Sphingomonas & Pseudomonas

One will want to know what happens to the glutted bacteria when the banquet is over but it looks promising….