2018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #1
Posted on 6 January 2018 by John Hartz
Editor's Pick
Show this cartoon to anyone who doubts we need huge action on climate change
This story focuses on a scenario from climate scientist Joeri Rogelj, which would give us a 66 percent chance at limiting warming to 2 degrees, which would requires no emissions by 2065, followed by negative emissions. But a previous version of this story said we would need to reach no emissions by 2050, which is part of a scenario in which we give ourselves a 50 percent chance at staying under 1.5 degrees warming — a far less realistic goal.
Show this cartoon to anyone who doubts we need huge action on climate change by Alvin Chang and David Roberts, Energy & Environment, Vox, Jan 5, 2018
Links posted on Facebook
Sun Dec 31, 2017
- A great year for clean energy in Australia ends, while bad news for coal continues, Opinion by Simon Holmes à Court, Energy, Guardian, Dec 30, 2017
- One appliance could determine whether India, and the world, meet climate change targets by Shashank Bengali, Los Angeles Times, Dec 29, 2017
- The Political Responsibility in the Collapse of Our Planet, Robert Savio, Inter Press Service (IPS), Dec 27, 2017
- Climate Change 2017: What Happened and What It Means, Analysis by Bruce Melton, Truthout, Dec 30, 2017
- It Doesn’t Matter How Cold it is Today. Global Warming is Killing People. by Lou Del Bello, Earth & Energy, Futurism, Dec 29, 2017
- Hurricanes and heatwaves: stark signs of climate change 'new normal' by Oliver Milman, Climte Change, Guardian, Dec 28, 2017
- Experts Say We Should Tax Meat Eaters the Same Way We Tax Smokers by Lou Del Bello, Earth & Energy, Futurie Society, Futurism, Dec 26, 2017
- Hans Rosling On Why Rich Countries Need To Tackle Climate Change Differently by Heather Farmbrough, Forbes, Dec 31, 2017
Mon Jan 1, 2018
- Cabinet papers: Keating MPs considered carbon tax to tackle climate change by Anne Davis, Guardian, Dec 31, 2017
- Scientists find that a saltier sea is a warning of floods to come by Samantha Harrington, Yale Climate Connection, Dec 28, 2017
- Can agriculture and the climate fix their 'unhappy marriage' in 2018?, Analyis by Thin Lei Win, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 28, 2017
- Vehicles are now America's biggest CO2 source but EPA is tearing up regulations by Oliver Milman, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Guardian, Jan 1, 2018
- Resilience in 2017: Five communities looking after their own future by Adela Suliman, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 29, 2017
- To round out a year of rollbacks, the Trump administration just repealed key regulations on fracking by Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, Dec 29, 2017
- Climate Change Places a Major Economic Burden on Future Generations by Brad Bergan & Chelsea Gohd, Future of Society, Furturism, Jan 1, 2018
- Taking the human response into account in climate change, Discoveries, ASU Now, Jan 1, 2018
Tue Jan 2, 2018
- Climate change: Lack of coordination, unimplemented policies put environment at risk by Shahzad Anwar. The Express Tribune, Jan 1, 2018
- New report on January 10: Climate Change Web Content Under Trump, Press Release, Environmental Data & Governance Initiative (EDGI), Dec 31, 2017
- On its hundredth birthday in 1959, Edward Teller warned the oil industry about global warming by Benjamin Franta, Climate Consenus - the 97%, Guardian, Jan 1, 2018
- How Scott Pruitt turned the EPA into one of Trump’s most powerful tools by Brady Dennis & Brady Eilperin, Health & Sciences, Washington Post, Dec 31, 2017
- Eight energy and climate issues to watch in 2018 by Amy Harder, Axios, Jan 2, 2018
- 2017 was the hottest year on record without an El Niño, thanks to global warming by Dana Nuccitelli, Climate Consenus - the 97%, Guardian, Jan 2, 2018
- What rolling back the Clean Power Plan means for the US climate fight by Umair Infran, Energy & Environment, Vice, Dec 29, 2017
- Keep global warming under 1.5C or 'quarter of planet could become arid' by Hannah Devlin, Climate Change, Guardian, Jan 2, 2017
Wed Jan 3, 2018
- Scientists Can Now Blame Individual Natural Disasters on Climate Change by Chelsea Harvey, ClimateWire/Scientific America, Jan 2, 2018
- Survey: Finns increasingly concerned about climate change, Yle News, Jan 2, 2018
- The most consequential environmental stories of 2017 by Brady Dennis & Darryl Fears, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, Jan 1, 2018
- It’s Not Too Late: A Climate Change New Year’s Resolution by Nicholas Kusnetz, InsideClimate News, Jan 2, 2018
- Science Says: Why there's a big chill in a warmer world by Seth Borenstein, AP News, Jan 3, 2018
- Linking extreme weather to climate change could help curb carbon emissions by Sarah DeWeerdt, Anthropocene, Jan 2, 2018
- Large Antarctic snowfall increases could counter sea level rise, scientists say by Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, Jan 3, 2018
- 2017 in Review: looking back at 10 years of SkS and more by BaerbelW, Skeptical Science, Jan 3, 2018
Thu Jan 4, 2018
- Suzuki's list of climate actions to protect our 'imperilled biosphere' in 2018, Opinion by David Suzuki, National Observer, Jan 3, 2018
- What Will It Really Take to Avoid Collapse? by Jeremy Lent, MAHB, Jan 2, 2018
- Is Chocolate 'On Track To Go Extinct' in 40 Years? by Alex Kasprak, Snopes, Jan 2, 2018
- As Temperatures Dip, Some Wonder How Global Warming Exists by Lauren Casey, CBS Philly, Jan 3, 2018
- The Year Climate Change Began to Spin Out of Control by James Temple, MIT Technology Review, Jan 4, 2018
- NASA-led study solves a methane puzzle by Carol Rasmussen, NASA Global Climate Change, Jan 2, 2018
- Climate Advisory Panel Disbanded by Trump Is Revived—But Not By the Feds, State of the Planet, Earth Institute, Columbia University, Jan 3, 2018
- Baked Alaska and 2017 in review, Arctic Sea Ice News & Analysis, NSIDC, Jan 3, 2018
Fri Jan 5, 2018
- As an EPA intern, I was barred from mentioning climate change by Katie Miller, Outlook, Washington Post, Jan 3, 2018
- Scientists Find Surprising Evidence Of Rapid Changes in the Arctic, News Release, Woods Hole Oceanographic, Jan 3, 2018
- Analysis: Low-carbon sources generated more UK electricity than fossil fuels in 2017 by Simon Evans, Carbon Brief, Jan 3, 2018
- U.S. Fails to Submit Reports on 1 January as Required Under U.N. Climate Treaty by Nicky Sundt, Climate Science & Policy Watch, Jan 4, 2018
- Severe coral reef bleaching now ‘five times more frequent’ than 40 years ago by Daisy Dunne, Carbon Brief, Jan 4, 2018
- Show this cartoon to anyone who doubts we need huge action on climate change by Alvin Chang and David Roberts, Energy & Environment, Vox, Jan 5, 2018
- How climate change could counterintuitively feed winter storms by Chris Mooney, Energy & Environment, Washington Post, Jan 4, 2018
- Winter storm 2018: almost the entire East Coast is covered in snow by Brian Resnick, Science & Health, Vox, Jan 5, 2018
Sat Jan 6, 2018
- New research, December 25-31, 2017 by Ari Jokimäki, Skeptical Science, Jan 5, 2018
- Low oxygen levels, coral bleaching getting worse in oceans by Seth Borenstein, AP News, Jan 4, 2018
- Trump’s Disdain for Science, Opinion by Neal F. Lane & Michael Riordan, New York Times, Jan 4, 2018
- Empowering Women Could Reduce Climate Change by Jessica Williamson, Vice Impact, Jan 4, 2018
- Erosion May Transform the Arctic Food Chain by Chelsea Harvey, ClimateWire/Scientific American, Jan 4, 2018
- Trump Administration Proposes Massive Expansion of Offshore Drilling by Alexander C Kaufman & Chris D'Angelo, HuffPost, Jan 4, 2018
- Environmental Justice Grabs a Megaphone in the Climate Movement by Phil McKenna, InsideClimate News, Jan 5, 2018
- 'All happening very quickly': Tesla battery sends a jolt through energy markets by Peter Hannam, The Sydney Morning Herald, January 6, 2018
An recent additional item:
'All happening very quickly': Tesla battery sends a jolt through energy markets by Peter Hannam, The Sydney Morning Herald, January 6, 2018
[JH] Muchas gracias!
No one is trying to limit warming to 2C!
bozzza,
I partially agree.
The trend of global awareness and understanding is increased acceptance of the stated objectives of the Paris Agreement to keep warming below 2.0 C, with the desire to limit the accumulated human im-pacts to 1.5 C warming (That is why the Paris Agreement was agreed to and is supported by responsible global leaders).
The related understanding is that climate science is the basis for understanding the limits of human activity related to those increases of global average surface temperature, because once those increases have actually been observed 'it is too late'.
That has lead to increased efforts to better understand the relationship between increased CO2 and ultimate rebalanced global average surface temperature. It is understood that things are currently not completely adjusted to increases of CO2 that have already occurred.
It has also lead to 'pursuers of Private Interest in benefiting more from the undeniably unsustainable and definitely damaging burning of fossil fuels' to fight to win any way they can get away with. They are the ones who creating the incorrect generalized impression that 'No one is trying to limit warming to 2C!".
A related growing awareness and understanding is that there are many other armful results of the pursuits of benefit from the burning of fossil fuels, not just increased CO2. So there are many Good Reasons to rapidly terminate the undeservingly popular and profitable activity.
Good Responsible Aware People already understand the need for that change. Others can learn to be Good/Helpful. And some people will not Personally limit their Pursuits of Private Interest, and they will fight against any 'imposed limit on their freedom to believe what they want and do as they please'. That is all to be expected, with the last group clearly becoming understood to need help, to be kept from impacting others (to be kept out of competitions for popularity and profitability - or be removed from positions of already occurred but clearly undeserved Winning) until they learn to change their minds.
The dynamics are not correct at all. The relationship of Co2 to degrees C is not 1 to 1. Once the greenhouse is in place it will continue to warm even without additional Co2 until Co2 begins to drop. That and the fact that the effects of the Co2 currently in the atmosphere has yet to kick in as there is a lag. Also keep in mind that we have released as much Co2 since Al Gores presentation than all Co2 released prior to that. The warming that we are experiencing now, between 1.2 and 1.6 depending on the metric, is from Co2 released prior to 1980's. If we stop all Co2 right now the planet will continue to warm for another 50 years or more just considering Co2 and no other feedback mechs.
Don't get me wrong, I really appreciate the work that SS does but please be real.
We need to act now with the biggest global wide project ever known to man if we seriously want to have a livable planet left.
[JH] Please calrify what "dynamics" you are referring to in the first sentence of your post. Also explain where SkS is being unreal about manmade climate change.
Do you think the mitigation in Australia is progressing according to Paris goal? Think twice:
Cooking the books on climate change policy
We are dealing with a classic denier strategy here: denial that something inconvenient exists, aka "heads in the sand". Emissions started increasing when the carbon tax was removed and replaced by doubtful policy of rewarding polluters for their efforts, that are often symbolic efforts, like tree planting or other "offsets". What govs are saying about it?
Correct analysis. History of this gov has shown, they would not hesitate doing that. Prime example: the Turnbull government's best attempts to prevent the closure of inefficient, coal-fired Liddell power station.
So do you think AUS gov is better than US because they do not reject Paris? Not really. They just want to look "smarter" but avoid talking about it when incomvenient. We know that attitude for more than decade since Gore's movie. I think the end result of both types of science denial is the same.
OPOF,
Dr David Mills from Ausra acknowledged years ago that it was impossible to keep carbon emissions below 440ppm no matter what happens!
Whether that can be taken back under 440ppm after the fact he said was still under scientific debate but the fact the world can‘t help but breach that level of CO2 was realised many moons ago.
Governments have done nothing because democracies are largely two parties preaching the one shared message.
It always ends in Oligarchy...
jef, could you please clarify your third sentence?
I thought I explained the dynamics in my second and third sentences.
The point is that even if the Co2 ppm were to somehow stop and stay right where they are now the earth will continue to warm, the greenhouse effect will continue to "work" as a greenhouse. There is obviously an upper limit to the heating when using this hypothetical which makes using it not very useful but the point is that Co2 ppm does not equate to a global temperature degree c that can be stated as done in the cartoon. No one knows for instance, what the high end global temperature of say 400 ppm is mostly because we have not reached that temperature yet. We can not state the high end of any ppm because we have continually added more ppm.
Also we are not accounting for feedback mechanisms which are numerous, many of which kick in even at lower levels of ppm and vary widely due to other variables.
I realize that SkS didn’t do this cartoon but I do believe it is disingenuous to promote talk about Co2 ppm and degrees C as if they are connected on a 1 to 1 basis. Also talking about 2050 or 2065 is less than useless as we are already committed/locked in to at least 2 to 3 degrees right now and again that is without all the feedbacks.
Also methane doesn’t go away as depicted in the cartoon. I starts out in the atmosphere at 85 to 100 times more potent than Co2 then gradually diminishes and becomes Co2, small amounts but still adding to Co2 ppm.
bozzza@6,
I will counter the claim you are banking on that was made by Dr. David Mills 'the venture capitalist pursuer of Private Interest who would want to induce governments to do more to fund his Private Interest pursuits' (he can be seen to be a bit of a misleading alarmist marketer), with the simple fact that in 1960 lots of wealthy people pursuing Private Interests would have told you Man was not going to be landing on the moon in less than 10 years because their Private Interest would not benefit from such a pursuit.
The technology for all of humanity to live without burning fossil fuels already exists, as does the technology to reduce CO2 in the atmosphere. The only thing missing is the 'powerful charitable desire' to do it (charitable because many people who incorrectly benefited from development in the wrong direction have to give up some of their perceived prosperity and opportunity). But that powerful desire is developing, and may develop far faster than 'the ones who have a Private Interest in not seeing those changes happen' will want/expect it to happen. Many of them thought/hoped the Paris Agreement would never be Agreed to. And many of them thought/hoped the Trump Win would cripple the global collective effort for Good Sustainable Change. They continue to be wrong. If anything the Trump Win has stepped up the rate of change globally as more people more clearly see how unsustainably damaging Winners like Trump are (albeit with a core of faithful Private Interest pursuers who will stubbornly resist better understanding what is going on and changing their minds to become helpful rather than harmful).
The current damaging fatally flawed economics may indeed push CO2 beyond the Paris Agreement limit, but that would be the fault of the flawed damaging system not being corrected quickly enough, with 'everyone who fought in any way against the changes being achieved - anyone who did not properly raise awareness and understanding' clearly understood to have been damaging the future of humanity for unacceptable Private Interests. And that awareness of who the trouble-makers are could develop so rapidly that the trouble-makers actually get significantly penalized in their lifetime, not just posthumously in the better understood corrected record of what was going on.
The developing awareness and understanding is that some Winners are Helpful, but many Winners are getting an undeserved competitive advantage by getting away with behaving less acceptably.
What will actually happen is hard to predict, but the Trend is clear.
bozzza@6,
Your initial claim "No one is trying to limit warming to 2C!" is not defended by you comment @6. Your comment @6 just attempted to change the subject.
Regarding the 440 ppm number (with the recommended safer value of 350 ppm). It is like a speed limit. The fact that some people are pushing to go faster does not justify 'accepting an upping of the speed limit'. And when the limit is exceeded everyone in the vehicle will not just say, seems OK since we exceeded the limit so we can go even faster. More and more people in the vehicle will be demanding the vehicle slow down, taking firmer and firmer action against whoever they understand is pushing the accelerator, including keeping them at the back of the bus or locking them in the biffy if that is what is needed to reduce the harmful impact of the pushers.