2017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #26
Posted on 1 July 2017 by John Hartz
Editor's Pick
Mission 2020: A new global strategy to ‘rapidly’ reduce carbon emissions
Figure from Figueres et al. (2017)
In April, a new global initiative called Mission 2020 was launched by Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief who oversaw the signing of the Paris Agreement on climate change in late 2015.
The aim of Mission 2020 is to bring “new urgency” to the “global climate conversation” with a call to begin “rapidly declining” global greenhouse gas emissions by 2020.
Today, in a co-authored commentary published in the journal Nature, Figueres sets out further details about Mission 2020’s six central calls to action. The commentary is endorsed by 61 signatories, which include climate scientists as well as a range of NGO, religious, political and business leaders.
Mission 2020: A new global strategy to ‘rapidly’ reduce carbon emissions by Zeke Hausfather, Carbon Brief, June 28, 2017
Links posted on Facebook
Sun June 25 2017
- Coral Reefs Could Be Gone in 30 Years by Laura Parker & Craig Welch, National Geographic, June 23, 2017
- Summary of the Great Southwest U.S. Heat Wave of 2017 by Jeff Masters, Category 6, Wunderblog, June 24, 2017
- Why is China suddenly leading the climate change effort? It’s a business decision. , Analysis by Roselyn Hsueh, Monkey Business, Washington Post, June 23, 2017
- International Science Group Decries Trump Climate Pact Exit by Randy Showstack, Eos.org, June 21, 2017
- The Challenge of Fighting Mistrust in Science by Julie Beck, 2017 Ideas Report, The Atlantic, June 24, 2017
- Attention Scott Pruitt: Red teams and blue teams are no way to conduct climate science, Commentary by Benjamin Santer, Kerry Emanuel & Naomi Oreskes, Capital Weather Gang, Washington Post, June 21, 2017
- Energy wonks have a meltdown over the US going 100 percent renewable. Why? by Joshua D. Rhodes, The Conversation US, June 22, 2017
- The fact is: Facts don’t matter to climate deniers by Eric Holthaus, Grist, June 23, 2017
Mon June 26 2017
- Climate Change Drives Lakes Toward Ecological Tipping Points by Bob Berwyn, InsideClimate News, June 23, 2017
- Meet the horsemen of our environmental apocalypse by Robet F Kennedy Jr, Salon, June 25, 2017
- New Orleans mayor: US climate change policy cannot wait for Trump, AP/Guardian, June 24, 2017
- Extreme Heat Scorches Southern Arizona by Jonah Engel Bromwich, New York Times, June 25, 2017
- Macron teams up with Schwarzenegger to troll Trump in climate change video by Adam Rosenberg, Mashable, June 25, 2017
- New study confirms the oceans are warming rapidly by John Abraham, Climae Consensus - the 97%, Guardian, June 26, 2017
- Sea level rise isn’t just happening, it’s getting faster by Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, June 26, 2017
- Carbon in Atmosphere Is Rising, Even as Emissions Stabilize by Justin Gillis, Climate, New York Times, June 26, 2017
Tue June 27 2017
- The Southwest U.S. heat wave broke dozens of temperature records, giving us a glimpse at our climate future by Andrew Freedman, Mashable, June 23, 2017
- Hail of a forecast: Climate change means fewer hailstorms but bigger hail by Judson Jones, CNN, June 26, 2017
- Mayors, Sidestepping Trump, Vow to Fill Void on Climate Change by Lizette Alvaraz, New York Times, June 26, 2017
- Scientists just proved that wildfires dumped a huge amount of soot atop Greenland’s ice sheet by Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, June 26, 2017
- Trump and Modi Wrap Climate Change Differences in Shroud of Silence by Nicholas Kusnetz, InsideClimate News, June 26, 2017
- Lightning-Caused Fires Rise in Arctic as the Region Warms by Scott Waldman, E&E News/Scientific American, June 27, 2017
- Antarctic sea ice levels have shrunk to record low levels for late June by Jason Samenow, Capital Weather Gang, June 26, 2017
- World’s Largest Wind Turbine Would Be Taller Than the Empire State Building by Annie Sneed, Scientific American, June 26, 2017
Wed June 28 2017
- Tropical viruses: coming soon to Europe? Researchers in Bayreuth are investigating the impact of climate change University of Bayreuth, Press Release June 20, 2017
- The world’s tropical zone is expanding, and Australia should be worried by Steve Tuten, The Conversation AU, June 28, 2017
- Europe Doesn’t Need American Climate Scientists. It Needs American Climate Data by Jennifer Duggan, Bloomberg News, June 26, 2017
- Climate scientists just debunked deniers' favorite argument by Dana Nuccitelli, Climate Consenus - the 9&%, Guardian, June 28, 2017
- Three years to safeguard our climate by Christiana Figueres, Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Gail Whiteman, Johan Rockstr, Anthony Hobley & Stefan Rahmstorf, Nature, June 28, 2017
- The 'debate' Rick Perry wants to hold on global warming is total BS by Andrew Freedman, Mashable, June 27, 2017
- G20 stage set for climate change battle by Ruby Russell, Deutsche Welle (DW), June 28, 2017
- West On Fire: More Than 20 Wildfires Blazing by Pam Wright, Weather Underground, June 28, 2017
Thu June 29 2017
- Overlooked Water Loss in Plants Could Throw Off Climate Models by Heidi Ledford, Nature, June 28, 2017
- Lightning-Caused Fires on the Rise in the World’s Largest Forest by Laura Parker, National Geographic, June 26, 2017
- How climate change helped Lyme disease invade America by Julia Belluz, Energy & Environment, Vox, June 26, 2017
- CCC: A plan to fill the UK’s climate policy gap is ‘urgently’ needed by Jocelyn, Carbon Brief, June 29, 2017
- China and the EU could issue a formal climate change statement by next week, ex-UN official says by Zhenua Lu, South China Morning Post, June 29, 2017
- Trump’s ‘Energy Dominance’ Push Ignores Some Important Realities by Marianne Lavelle & John H Cushman Jr, InsideClimate News, June 29, 2017
- One fifth of the world's population could be a refugee by 2100 by Blaine Friedlander, World Economic Forum, June 26, 2017
- The American South Will Bear the Worst of Climate Change’s Costs by Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic, June 29, 2017
Fri June 30 2017
- The Rising Tide of Evidence Against Blaming Wind and Solar for Grid Instability by Jeff St John, Greentech Media (GTM), June 28, 2017
- Trump’s ‘energy dominance’ week is dominated by misleading claims by Steven Mufson & Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, June 29, 2017
- Merkel issues warning to Trump ahead of G20 summit by Noah Barkin & Roberta Rampton, Reuters, June 29, 2019
- Mission 2020: A new global strategy to ‘rapidly’ reduce carbon emissions by Zeke Hausfather, Carbon Brief, June 28, 2017
- SkS Analogy 9 - The greenhouse effect is a stack of blankets by Evan, Skeptical Science, Jan 29, 2017
- Trump fact check: Climate policy benefits vastly exceed costs by Dana Nuccitelli, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, June, 29, 2017
- Climate Change Will Hit Southern Poor Hardest, U.S. Economic Analysis Shows by Phil McKenna, InsideClimate News, June 29, 2017
Sat July 1 2017
- Iranian city soars to record 129 degrees: Near hottest on Earth in modern measurements by Jason Samenow, Capital Weather Gang, Washington Post, June 29, 2017
- The President’s ‘Energy Week’ is an Ode to Fossil Fuel Addiction by Rachel Cleetus, Union of Concerned Scientists, June 28, 2017
- Reality Check: The End of Growth in the Tar Sands. So Now What? by Hannah McKinnon, Oil Change International, June 29, 2017
- Europe's extreme June heat clearly linked to climate change, research shows by Damian Carrington, Climate Change, Guardian, June 30, 2017
- Climate Change Could Spark Another Great Recession. This Time, It May Be Permanent by Justin Worland, Time Magazine, June 29, 2017
- Antarctica's expanding ice-free areas threaten animals and plants, study says by Doyle Rice, USA Today, June 28, 2017
- Drought in Northern China Is Worst on Record, Officials Say by Edward Wong, New York Times, June 29, 2017
- ExxonMobil Talks A Good Game, But It’s Still Funding Climate Science Deniers by Elliot Negin, HuffPost, June 30, 2017
I recently ran across a very exciting paper purporting to describe a new technique which appears to have the enormous potential.
This paper is about a technique to remove very large amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere very quickly and in a cost-effective way. It describes a way to accelerate the natural process of CO2 sequestration - natural rock weathering. Simply put, it gives evidence that by grinding olivine rocks into a powder, and spreading that powder along river basins, we can quickly sequester enough CO2 to lower atmospheric concentrations back to safe levels while simultaneously addressing ocean acidity issues.
This paper seems legitimate to me, although I am not scientifically-qualified to judge it properly. What do you all think? :
[LINK]
[RH] Shortened link.
Gingerbaker,
The proposal to use olivine to soak up CO2 has been aroud for a while. Here is a more recent summary of some issues relating to the proposal. I doubt that the readership of SkS has a consensus on proposals of this type, but I think that it is generally good to look at any possibilities that might help deal with carbon pollution.
Most Geoengineering proposals fall over because the amount of CO2 that is emitted is so immense that it is not practical to mine the amount of olivine necessary [or other geoengineering method] to have a significannt effect.
A kilogram of olivine is needed to absorb a kilogram of CO2. The fossil fuel industry is one of the largest industries in the world. Approximately 30 Gigatons of CO2 are emitted per year. That is a lot to mine. You make no money spreading olivine so it must be paid for from general taxes. Olivine contains some toxic metals that are released as it binds the CO2. Olivine might help but it is not a magic bullet to cure AGW.
T-man (or his chief denier - EPA destroyer - Pruitt) has just invented new nonsense called "red team-blue team" whose job is to question climate sicence. Whatever that silly "team building excercise" may exactly bring, no one has any idea as they did not said any specifics. Remarkable is the fact that all WH officials talk about it in the condition of anonymity - surely if you want to be at least a bit honnest about that silly excercise, you rick being fired from your post. One anonymous EPA official ventured to characterise that excercise accurately:
Thank you, Mr Anonymous, you took it from my mouth.
chriskoz @3, Eli rabbet has an excellent discussion of this concept, including a discussion of how the proceedure worked in a past instance in a non-climate related field. The upshot is that in past examples, administrations have used this concept as a cover to appoint panels of ideologically driven "experts" who are then used to drive policy in complete disregard to the actual evidence.
chriskoz@3: I thought of an analogy to what Pruitt is doing with his 'red team-blue team' nonsense:
"Magic mirror in my hand, who is the fairest in the land?"
"Queen Coal, you are fairest here in town, but Princess Green's beauty is now renown."
"Magic chamber pot so true, perhaps I should be asking you?"
Trump and Pruit will be burning climate science text books next. People come up with convoluted analysis of Trump's ideas and policies, but just apply occams razor and you are left with pure idiocy.
Sorry if this is not the right place to ask this. A recent WaPo article by Chris Mooney (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/06/19/a-bitter-scientific-debate-just-erupted-over-the-future-of-the-u-s-electric-grid/?utm_term=.a7a28986bd37) discusses a recent PNAS paper by Christopher Clack and 20 other scientists that take Mark Jacobson to task on his water-wind-solar 100% energy generation by 2055. Do you have anyone who can do a post on this debate that can evaluate the arguments in detail?
Jacobson's papers always seemed too optimistic to me, but I can't properly evaluate the details of the arguments. It seems to me that the outcomeof this debate is immensely important for the credibility of the renewable energy community as it tries to influence the course of US/world energy decarbonization.
tcflood @7
www.citylab.com/solutions/2017/06/the-heated-politics-of-renewable-energy/530766/
www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/06/19/a-bitter-scientific-debate-just-erupted-over-the-future-of-the-u-s-electric-grid/?utm_term=.1473c3cd9e73
I havent read any of the research, but the articles above are good commentary on the Jacobsen versus Clack debate.
They have now also engaged in a heated and detailed internet exchange of criticisms of each others work. It's not clear who is correct, and nobody has done to total review of their debate as yet that I'm aware of. Doing this would be a big task.
But certain things do stand out already:
Jacobsen proposes a 100% renewable grid. His work is very respected and detailed, and has been thoroughly checked, so I would not be too quick to dismiss any of it.
Clack acknowledges a 100% renewable grid is technically possible. His real criticism is cost and practicality, and that Jacobsen has some assumptions too optimistic etc. But Clack accepts a need for a large renewable component anyway, and simply wants more nuclear, biofuels and carbon capture etc. This is the key point in his research.
But people on his team have vested commercial interests in this technology.
The main point is they both agree on a large role for renewable energy, so the debate does not undermine renewable energy in principle. Therefore theres no particular reason not to proceed. Its about the ultimate mix of things.
I suspect that getting a grid 75% renewable grid would be easy enough, but the last 25% will get harder due to intermittency issues. It may be that for the last 20% nuclear is cheaper than a large surplus of wind power to cope with intermiitency problems, but this is just a guess on my poart. I dont particularly like nuclear and it has its own issues, but I cant absolutely rule it out either.
But its very hard to generalise about ideal solutions because every country has different resources. My country already has over 80% renewable and we have been told getting to 100% is feasible and affordable, but we are fortunate to have a big range of renewable options. For countries with poor sunlight and not much wind, and isolated from neighbours, or not wanting to be dependent on them, what do you do? You have to consider nuclear, carbon capture, or biofuels, etc. So Clack may have a point.
Michael Sweet
The link study addresses many of the issues listed in your review paper. 1 Kg olivine sequesters 1.25 kg Co2. When ground up into powder, it works very fast, and also produces carbonate which will address ocean acidification. To sequester 1 year's worth of our current CO2 emissions, it would require 7 cubic kilometers worth of stone. This would be a large operation - making olivine the 3rd largest mining product. It would cost $250 billion a year.
We would obviously need to stop burning carbon. But this would be a relatively inexpensive way to reduce atmospheric CO2 levels quickly. Quite a bargain, really.
tcflood
1) Jacobson & Delucchi reply to Clack:
http://web.stanford.edu/group/efmh/jacobson/Articles/I/CombiningRenew/Line-by-line-Clack.pdf
2) Clack responds to J&D'd response:
http://www.vibrantcleanenergy.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/ReplyResponse.pdf
[PS] Link fixed. Please learn how to do this yourself in the Link tool.
Gingerbaker
Just some comments.
So all in all a huge undertaking.
Next, I would want to see a lot more research into consequences in the oceans, that paper is rather light on that topic but it may be the make or break issue. Although they are right about the basic chemistry there is a lot of scope for unintended consequences for the biosphere in the ocean.
Imagine we have spread a couple of 100 billion tonnes, then we discover some unexpected bad consequence in the oceans. Once the dust is scattered that is one very hard Genie to put back ino that bottle.
So I think this idea needs to be explored very strongly, but it is very preliminary at this stage.
About Olivine.
Indeed there is NO silver bullet. So we need to reduce CO2 emissions, but also remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
-1- So solely counteracting all of the global CO2 emissions with solely olivine is not a good idea.
-2- There is more and more research available. See i.e. this open access article from Francesc Montserrat (and myself ;-) )
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.6b05942
Best regards,
Pol Knops
tcflood @7, nigelj @8, gingerbaker @10:
Here is an interesting pass at evaluating the debate that also has useful references/links within.
https://theconversation.com/energy-wonks-have-a-meltdown-over-the-us-going-100-percent-renewable-why-79834
[PS] Fixed link. Pleas learn how to do this yourself with the link tool in the comment editor.