Sunday, August 19, 2012

CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS FOR AUG. 2012


CC NEWS FOR AUGUST 2012

Here is some climate news you can use!  ClimateCounts.org has developed a scorecard to compare companies on their commitment to reduce global warming  The higher the score on a scale of 0 to 100, the greater the commitment. Climate Counts use a 0-to-100 point scale and 22 criteria to determine if companies have:

  • MEASURED their climate "footprint"
  • REDUCED their impact on global warming
  • SUPPORTED (or suggest intent to block) progressive climate legislation
  • Publicly DISCLOSED their climate actions clearly and comprehensively”

Now you can:

  • Support high-ranked companies when you shop and invest
  • Let businesses know that climate does count. Want them to do better? Tell them. Excited about their leadership? Let them know that, too.
  • Tell your friends, colleagues, and family to join you in supporting companies that are taking responsibility for climate change.

Find the ratings and print pocket guides to take with you when you shot.  At: 

Chemical and Engineering News for July 16 had an article by Jeff Johnson titled, Stumbling on the Path to ‘Clean Coal’: Carbon capture and sequestration appears stuck, dashing hopes of cutting CO2 while burning coal.  It points out that the future of coal use for electricity generation in the U.S. may depend on the development of carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) technology, which can capture CO2 from power plants, compress it, and pump it underground for long-term storage (sequestration).  Although the Dept. of Energy (DOE) has provided nearly $7 billion since 2005 to support development of the technology, it has not led to the demonstration of economic viability at scale.  (A typical coal-burning 1000 MW power plant produces about 1000 tons of CO2 per hour!)  It is estimated that CCS would increase the cost of electricity from a coal plant by 75%.  Future funding for CCS development is in doubt - especially in view of falling prices for natural gas and renewable energy. 

On July 19 Bill McKibben posted a compelling article at Rolling Stone Politics titled, Global Warming's Terrible New Math.  In it he writes about three important numbers:
2 degrees C, 565 Gt (gigatons, or billions of metric tons) and 2795 Gt.

The Washington Post for July 23 had an article by Peter Brennan titled, Offshore wind farms will be encouraged in tracts along the East Coast.  It described a coming auction by the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) to lease 2,434 square miles of the continental shelf in the Atlantic Ocean for wind farms about 10 miles off the shores of six states from Massachusetts to Virginia.  The article shows a map of the areas to be auctioned.  Full development of the wind resource off the East Coast would permit generation of about 1000 GW of electrical power - the total now used by the United States.  At: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/offshore-wind-farms-will-be-encouraged-in-tracts-along-the-east-coast/2012/07/23/gJQAD2Pu4W_story.html

On July 24 the Earth Policy Institute issued an article by Lester Brown titled, World in Serious Trouble on Food Front.  In it Brown pointed out that corn, by far the world’s largest grain crop, started out looking very promising in the spring, with a record number of acres planted, but is now suffering from a severe drought in the major U.S. corn producing states.   On May 21st, 77% of the U.S. corn crop was rated as good to excellent. In the following two months, that dropped to 26% -  one of the lowest ratings on record.  The high prices expected from a poor harvest will affect food prices around the world.  Brown wrote, “Time is running out. The world may be much closer to an unmanageable food shortage – replete with soaring food prices, spreading food unrest, and ultimately political instability – than most people realize.” At:

InterPress Serice (IPS) has an article dated July 24 by Stephen Leahy titled, Scientists Discover New Threats to Corals.  It points out that most corals grow only in shallow water, where there is enough light for them to grow; however those that cannot grow fast enough to keep up with accelerating sea level rise (now 3.3 mm/yr) may die.  Carbon dioxide, which is responsible for most of the sea level rise, also threatens corals by increasing the sea surface temperature and by dissolving in seawater to form carbonic acid, making the water more acidic.  If enough dissolves, as has happened before in Earth’s history, the calcium carbonate that supports the coral dissolves.
The article says, “Overall, some one billion people depend directly or indirectly on reefs for their livelihoods, and more than two billion depend on seafood as a major source of protein.”  At: 
Many fish spend at least part of their life cycle in reefs.

BloombergBusinessweek News for July 24 ran an article by Seth Borenstein titled, NASA: Strange and sudden massive melt in Greenland.  NASA found from satellite observations that the surface of the Greenland ice sheet went from 40% melted to 97% in the course of four days - starting on July 8.  Until then, the largest extent of surface melt seen by satellite was 55%.  At: http://www.businessweek.com/ap/2012-07-24/nasa. 
You can see NASA images at:
It’s hard to tell if this is a one-off event, or will become commonplace.  It could herald a greater acceleration of ice loss.  Loss of all Greenland ice would raise global sea level by 7 m (23 ft).  

On July 25 the Union of Concerned Scientists posted a description of a report titled, Heat in the Heartland: 60 Years of Warming in the Midwest.  It describes studies of temperature and humidity in five major Midwestern urban areas - Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Minneapolis, and St. Louis.  Findings include:
  • Heat waves lasting three days or more have become more common over the last six decades.
  • Hot humid days have increased in frequency, while hot dry days have higher temperatures.
  • Hot air masses have become hotter and more humid during nighttime hours.
The Executive Summary, the full report, and Fact Sheets about each major city studies can be downloaded from the site.  There are also links to a number of other sites, including Global Warming 101, Global Warming Impacts, and What You Can Do about Global Warming .  At: http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science_and_impacts/impacts/global-warming-and-heat-waves.html?utm_source=SP&utm_medium=head&utm_campaign=heat%2Breport

Guest blogger Peter Anderson posted an article July 26 in ThinkProgress titled, Why We Need To Pay More Attention To The Role Of Landfills In Global WarmingIn it he pointed out that, while it sounds good to capture methane from landfills to produce electricity, the typical landfill releases about 80% of the methane produced into the atmosphere, where it acts as a very powerful greenhouse gas.  The contribution of landfill gas to global warming has been seriously underestimated.  At: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/07/26/516575/why-we-need-to-pay-more-attention-to-the-role-of-landfills-in-global-warming/
When cellulosic materials - like paper, cardboard, wood or yard waste - are left under anaerobic (oxygen-starved) conditions, such as in a landfill or marsh, methanogenic bacteria convert the carbohydrate molecules to a 1:1 mixture of methane and carbon dioxide.  A good compost box allows air in, so that only CO2 is produced.


Paul Gipe had an article on July 26 in Wind-Works.org titled, Britain Powered by FITs Surpasses US in 2011 Small Wind Capacity, describing the role that Feed-in Tariffs (FITs) have played in the rapid growth of electrical generation from small wind turbines in Britain.  FITs usually have a power distribution company pay a fee (tariff) above the grid price of electricity to small scale (distributed) generators  that use renewable energy sources, recovering their cost from other users.   At: http://www.wind-works.org/SmallTurbines/BritainPoweredbyFITsSurpassesUSin2011SmallWindCapacity.html
This kind of policy has been very successful in promoting the development of  distributed solar PV in Germany.

On July 26 Common Dreams published an article titled, Study: At Least 70% of Arctic Sea Ice Loss 'Man-Made' - Scientists fear the impact of feedback loops as dramatic ice loss begets further melting.  It was prompted by the recent reports that an ice berg twice the size of Manhattan had broken off Greenland and that scientists were astounded to find that nearly all of the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet had melted for a time - the first time that had been observed.  A new study by climate scientists at the National Centre for Atmospheric Science at the University of Reading, “found that the loss of sea ice around the Arctic is at least 70% due to human-induced climate change -- much higher than previously thought -- and that the number could possibly be as high as 95%.”  “Most concerning to the scientists is the possibility that 'feedback loops' have already begun in which loss of ice begets increased future loss.”  As sea ice is lost less solar energy is reflected and more is absorbed, causing more rapid warming of water and air.  At: 
It has been known for some time that the Arctic is warming twice as fast as the global average - consistent with positive feedback.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) announced on July 27 that it expects that electricity generators will lose 27 GW of coal-fired power during the next 5 years - considerably more than the 6.5 GW retired during the past 5.  The 27 GW of retiring capacity is 8.5% of total 2011 coal-fired capacity of 318 GW at the end of 2011.  At: http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=7290.
No reason for the increase in retirement rates was given, but my bet is that it’s a combination of the low price of natural gas and the costs involved in expanding coal capacity in the face of EPA requirements for emission reductions for new power plants or major capacity increases for existing plants.

On July 31 Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute released a report titled, We Can Reforest the Earth.  In it he  points out that the shrinkage of forests - primarily in the tropics exceeds reforestation, resulting in an net addition to the atmosphere of about 1.5 billions tons of carbon - about a quarter of what we release from the burning of fossil fuels.  He points out the importance of reforestation, especially in the tropics, where trees grow much more rapidly.  One hectare (about 2.5 acres) of forest plantation produces 4 cubic meters of wood per year in eastern Canada, 10 cubic meters in the southeastern United States, and 40 cubic meters in Brazil. At: 

D.C. Dennison of the Boston Globe has an article on Aug. 1 titled, New Bedford sees opportunity in wind farms.

The National Academies Press has issued a 250-page report, Sea-Level Rise for the Coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington: Past, Present, and Future.  The full report is available online or can be purchased as a book.  The Key Findings of the report can be read, and committee member Gary Griggs shares key findings about sea-level rise projections in a short Video.  Gauge measurements showed that global sea level rose by about 7 inches in the 20th Century.  Recent satellite measurements show that sea level rise is accelerating.

If you want to have a good laugh or cry, Grist has posted a short videoclip of a recent hearing by the U.S. Senate Energy and Public Works Committee.  The Aug.  2 article is titled, Senators Fiddle While Nation. Burns.  At: http://grist.org/climate-energy/senators-fiddle-while-nation-burns/

Democracy Now has a short video interview with Bill McKibben of 350.org titled, Even Industry-Funded Climate Change Deniers Can’t Ignore Planet’s Warming.  It’s well worth watching.  McKibben tells it like it is.  At:

On Aug.3 James Hansen published an Opinion piece in the Washington Post titled, Climate change is here — and worse than we thought.  In it he described a study, recently published by the National Academy of Sciences, making clear that while the global average temperature has been slowly rising due to a warming climate (1.5 degrees F in the past century - mostly in the last 30 years), extremes are becoming much more frequent and more intense.  Droughts and floods that were once very rare are now becoming almost commonplace.  At: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/climate-change-is-here--and-worse-than-we-thought/2012/08/03/6ae604c2-dd90-11e1-8e43-4a3c4375504a_story.html
You can watch a 5-minute video on PSBNewsHour with Hari Sreenivasan interviewing Hansen on his new findings at:


The following items are from the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI), Carol Werner, Executive Director. Past issues of its newsletter are posted on its website under "publications"
 at http://www.eesi.org/publications/Newsletters/CCNews/ccnews.htm
 
EESI’s newsletter is intended for all interested parties, particularly the policymaker community. 


Bipartisan Support for Carbon Tax; Disagreement over Proposed Tax Swaps

Organizations, activists and policy experts from across the political spectrum show increasing support for inclusion of a carbon tax during the expected tax reform package in the next session of Congress. There is disagreement, however, on whether the tax should be used to raise revenue or cut other taxes. Conservatives who support a carbon tax, including economist Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute, former Rep. Bob Inglis (R-SC), and former President Reagan's Secretary of State George Shultz, favor a revenue-neutral system that will cut corporate or income taxes. While some organizations argue for "consumer-centric" cuts to payroll and dividend taxes as a method to offset higher consumer prices caused by the carbon tax, other organizations refuse to support a revenue-neutral carbon tax. Instead, these organizations favor using the carbon tax to reduce the deficit. In related news, aides of House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said neither official would support a carbon tax.
For additional information see: E&E News, The Hill, The Energy Collective



Conservatives Launch Climate Change Initiative

On July 10 George Mason University announced the launch of the Energy and Enterprise Initiative (E&EI) which promotes conservative solutions to America's energy and climate problems. Former Rep. Bob Inglis (R-SC), who called his belief in climate change his "most enduring heresy" in an interview with Grist writer David Roberts, will lead E&EI. “Conservatives have the answer to our energy and climate challenge," said Inglis. "It’s about correcting market distortions and setting the economics right. We need to stop retreating in denial and start stepping forward in the competition of ideas.” E&EI supports pairing a carbon tax with an income tax reduction as a revenue-neutral way to tackle climate change. The initiative has support from Gregory Mankiw, economic advisor to the Romney campaign; Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former head of Bush's Council on Economic Advisers; Arthur Laffer, conservative economist and former senior adviser to President Reagan; and George Shultz, former Secretary of State to President Reagan.



Climate Change Forces Businesses to Adapt

A recent study by Oxfam and several companies found that businesses worldwide incurred upwards of $60 billion in weather-related insurance losses in 2011. As stated by Dr. Juan José Daboub, CEO of the Global Adaptation Institute, “People have started to realize there are water shortages and droughts. . . Not only are their businesses in jeopardy, but there is a business opportunity to provide solutions.” Entergy Corp., a Louisiana electric utility, spent nearly $2 billion rebuilding following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. In the aftermath, the utility relocated its offices and mobilized the local business community towards adaptation. Jeff Williams, director of climate consulting for Entergy, said, “All too often, we use the uncertainty of climate change to ask ourselves, 'Is it happening or isn't it?' I think the uncertainty isn't that. It's how big the impact is going to be."
For additional information see: E&E News, Oxfam Study



Greenland Glacier Calves Ice Island

On July 16 researchers at the University of Delaware and the Canadian Ice Service reported that an ice island had broken off from Greenland’s Petermann glacier. Andres Muenchow, University of Delaware associate professor of physical ocean science and engineering, said, “The Greenland ice sheet as a whole is shrinking, melting and reducing in size as the result of globally changing air and ocean temperatures and associated changes in circulation patterns in both the ocean and atmosphere.” The Petermann glacier shed a large ice island in 2010, and Monday’s 46-square mile ice island is twice the size of Manhattan. Continued Muenchow, “The fact that it follows so closely to the 2010 event brings the glacier’s terminus to a location where it has not been for at least 150 years.”

In related news, a record amount of Arctic sea ice melted during the month of June. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration records show that the Arctic lost 1.1 million square miles of ice in June, the most on record. While Arctic sea ice melting is normal during the Northern hemisphere summer, the magnitude of the loss means that the Arctic sea ice extent is 9.8 percent below average, the second lowest on record since 1979.



China’s Carbon Emissions Now Similar to Europe’s on a Per Capita Basis

On July 18 PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency and the European Commission's Joint Research Centre published a study which found that the average Chinese person’s carbon emissions are on par with an average European’s. The study reports that China’s emissions increased 9 percent in 2011 to 7.2 tonnes per person, only slightly less than the European average of 7.5 tonnes per person. Chinese per capita emissions are still less than half of the average American at 17.3 tonnes per person. When import and export of goods and international travel are accounted for, the developed world emits more carbon per capita than China, since it is estimated that one-fifth of goods produced in China are for export.
For additional information see: Guardian



Annual Global Carbon Emissions Increase in 2011

Global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions rose to 34 billion tons in 2011, up three percent from the previous year, according to a report from the European Union’s Joint Research Center. Global emissions must be less than 1,500 trillion tons of CO2 between 2000 and 2050, in order to limit global temperature increase to the United Nation’s goal of 2 degrees Celsius by 2050. "If the current global trend of increasing CO2 emissions continues, cumulative emissions will surpass this limit within the next two decades," said the report. As reported last week, China’s emissions increased nine percent in 2011 (see July 23 Issue), while the United States cut its emissions by two percent.  [Emphasis added]
For additional information see: Scientific American, Report



Environmental Group Targets Republicans who Question Climate Change

The League of Conservation Voters (LCV) launched a $1.5 million campaign July 24 aimed at preventing the re-election of five House Republicans who question the connection between climate change and human activity. The LCV, an environmental group that tracks politicians’ environmental voting records, is targeting to defeat Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle (R-NY), Rep. Dan Benishek (R-MI) and three other yet-unnamed House Republicans because of their stance on global warming. Both Rep. Buerkle and Rep. Benishek have questioned whether anthropogenic emissions have contributed to climate change in the past. “There’s still a debate about how to address these issues, but Americans expect their politicians to be informed and to accept basic science,” said Navin Nayak, LCV Senior Vice President for Campaigns. “Independents are with us. All of these members are in places where they have to win a majority of independent voters to win reelection.”
For additional information see: Washington Post, Press Release



Pulling Carbon Directly from the Air May Become Economically Feasible

Researchers from Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a technique for extracting carbon dioxide (CO2) directly from the air using newly-developed adsorbent materials. In a series of papers published this month, the researchers detailed how a CO2 removal unit about the size of a shipping container could extract 1,000 tons of CO2 per year at a cost of $100 per ton. This technique could initially be used to collect carbon for use in biofuels production or advanced oil recovery, but it could eventually be applied on a wider scale to help lower CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere. Georgia Tech professor Christopher Jones is collaborating with a startup company to establish a pilot plant to demonstrate the direct air capture technique.
In a related story, a new paper from Columbia University’s Earth Institute argues that direct air capture techniques may become important tools to combat global warming. The authors say methods of capturing carbon from stationary sources, such as factories and power plants, do not address emissions from airplanes, vehicles, and other small emissions sources – which account for almost half of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Therefore, direct air capture techniques could be the best way to stabilize atmospheric carbon levels in the future.

For additional information see: Science Daily Article 1, Science Daily Article 2



American Opinions about Climate Change Unchanged from 2011

The most recent “Global Warming’s Six Americas” study concludes that opinions are relatively unchanged since May 2011. The ongoing study by researchers at Yale University and George Mason University, seeks to understand American opinions toward climate change. The researchers separate respondents in to six groups—alarmed, concerned, cautious, disengaged, doubtful, and dismissive—representing the spectrum of climate change views. The July 18th update which includes polling results from November 2011 and March 2012, finds that 13 percent of Americans are alarmed, 26 percent are concerned, 29 percent are cautious, 6 percent are disengaged, 15 percent are doubtful and 10 percent are dismissive. Overall, the attitudes are mostly unchanged, but the number of “cautious” increased from 24 percent in May 2011 and the number of “disengaged” decreased from 10 percent. The majority of respondents believe that climate change is affecting the weather in the United States, including 93 percent of the “alarmed” group and 92 percent of the “concerned” group. More than half of the study participants (60 percent) said they would vote for a candidate who supports a revenue-neutral carbon tax in which the returns from a carbon tax are used to offset the federal income tax. The March 2012 survey included 1008 adults, the margin of error is plus or minus three percent.
For additional information see: Study Summary, Full Study



Climate Change Would Displace Millions

In a recent interview on National Public Radio, researchers discussed the danger of forced displacement due to lasting effects of climate change. Celia McMichael, research fellow at Australia’s La Trobe University, and Jon Barnett, political geographer at Australia’s University of Melbourne, discussed the need for global policy to counteract climate change-induced forced displacement, planned resettlement, and urban migration. Celia McMichael said, “Any climate change–related migration is going to be along the lines of existing migratory patterns, and they are typically within developing regions. So I think at a policy level the point is to look at migration not as a problem that needs to be managed, including by undeveloped countries, but [as] part of an adaptation portfolio, with this issue in mind that migration can have adverse outcomes, including health outcomes.”
In related news, a study published on June 12 in Global Change Biology found that climate change, particularly rising sea levels, would turn millions of Southeast Asian and Pacific islanders into climate change refugees. Lead author Florian Wetzel said, "Sea level rise will lead to the permanent inundation and erosion of coastal areas,” displacing anywhere from 8 to 52 million people.




Drought Emphasizes India’s Vulnerability to Climate Change

Because of a late-arriving monsoon, India is suffering its second drought in four years. Rainfall across the nation is down an average of 20 percent, but in India’s northern agricultural regions the drought is much worse. "We know that the rainfall in August will not be able to fill the gap, and the problem is getting really serious," said Harjeet Singh, an international climate justice coordinator at ActionAid. "The impacts on the ground in terms of food security are yet to be seen. Unless the government prepares, it could be really tragic." Low precipitation levels are also reducing India’s ability to generate hydroelectric power, which contributed to last week’s blackouts that left over 600 million people without power. "With climate change, wetter regions may get wetter; dry ones may become drier," said Andrew Robertson, a scientist at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society at Columbia University. "With the monsoon season, some rainfall may be distributed less evenly. We may see larger extremes, more intensity. That's what the models suggest.”
For additional information see: E&E News



Climate Change Altering Way of Life in Alaskan Villages

Melting permafrost, receding Arctic ice and more severe storms are threatening the way of life of many Alaskan villages. Point Hope, a coastal village north of the Arctic Circle, is struggling to cope with these changes. “So much of our culture is being washed away in the ocean,” said Point Hope Mayor Steve Oomittuk. “We live this cycle of life, which we know because it’s been passed from generation to generation. We see that cycle breaking.” Native Inuits, like Oomittuk, have stored whale meat in ice cellars under their houses for thousands of years, but melting permafrost is causing these cellars to disintegrate. Villagers rely on hunting and fishing for a substantial portion of their diet, but receding sea ice is making it much more difficult to hunt seals than in years past. The biggest threat, however, comes from soil erosion as the Alaskan soil heats up and begins to thaw. The town of Kotzebue constructed a $34 million sea wall, primarily funded by the federal government, to protect its beach from rising seas and erosion, but many villages have given up and are trying to relocate to higher ground. The U.S. Department of the Interior is launching an effort to evaluate the environmental, social and economic impact of climate change on the Arctic infrastructure.
For additional information see: Washington Post



Shellfish Vulnerable to Ocean Acidification

A study published in the journal Global Change Biology, finds that ocean acidification is impacting the ability of crustaceans to produce shells, which could leave them exposed to predators. The study analyzed clams, sea snails, lamp shells and sea urchins at 12 sites from the North Pole to the South Pole. “The results suggest that increased acidity is affecting the size and weight of shells and skeletons, and the trend is widespread across marine species,” said study co-authors from the British Antarctic Survey in a written statement. The ocean is a major sink of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) (see August 6 issue). Dissolved CO2 forms carbonic acid which inhibits the formation of calcium carbonate-based shells and skeletons, a phenomenon especially pronounced in cold water. "Where it gets colder and the calcium carbonate is harder to get out of the seawater the animals have thinner skeletons ... we think that the polar regions, and especially Antarctica, are likely to be the first places where animals reach these critical problems for making skeletons," said Professor Lloyd Peck of the British Antarctic Survey. Historically, animals have adapted by forming lighter skeletons, and according to study co-author Dr. Sue-Ann Watson of James Cook University, “Given enough time and a slow enough rate of change, evolution may again help these animals survive in our acidifying oceans.”
For additional information see: Sydney Morning Herald, Science Daily



Severe Drought May Become the New Normal in American West

A study published on July 29 in Nature Geoscience has found that, in the coming century, the climate in western North America will be similar to conditions during the long-term drought that hit the area from 2000 to 2004. The study warns that conditions will be closer to the "wet end" of a drier hydroclimate during the latter half of the 21st century. "Climatic extremes such as this will cause more large-scale droughts and forest mortality, and the ability of vegetation to sequester carbon is going to decline," said co-author Beverly Law, a professor of global change biology and terrestrial systems science at Oregon State University. The 2000 to 2004 drought, the worst in 800 years, severely reduced carbon absorption in western forests, and the area’s ability to sequester carbon will decrease even further in the future, according to the study.

For additional information see: Environmental News Network


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Coalition for Climate Change Study and Action

Friday, July 20, 2012

CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS FOR JULY 2012


CC NEWS FOR JULY 2012
The Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media has a June 28 article titled, National Academy, USGS See Above Normal U.S. Sea Level Rises.  The report cites findings by the National Academy of Sciences about the U.S. Pacific Coast and by the U.S. Geological Survey about the Atlantic Coast.  In both cases sea level rise relative to the land will be greater than the global average for a number of reasons, including subsidence of the land and a decrease in water density in some areas due to fresh water from melting ice.  USGS quoted its study’s principal author, Asbury Sallenger, saying, “Cities in the hotspot, like Norfolk, New York, and Boston already experience damaging floods during relatively low intensity storms.” “Ongoing accelerated sea level rise in the hotspot will make coastal cities and surrounding areas increasingly vulnerable to flooding by adding to the height that storm surge and breaking waves reach on the coast.”  At: http://www.yaleclimatemediaforum.org/2012/06/national-academy-usgs-see-above-normal-u-s-sea-level-rises/
GreenFaith - Interfaith Partners for the Environment has posted a piece titled, 6 Steps for Getting Started in Your House of Worship.  It gives practical ideas for organizing for the environment in your faith community, educating members of your congregation, and saving money while helping to protect God’s Creation.  At: http://greenfaith.org/getting-started/houses-of-worship/6-steps-for-getting-started-in-your-house-of-worshipI believe that faith communities can provide a powerful witness.  Climate change is, after all, one of the most profound moral and ethical issues of our time.
On July 12 The Yale Forum on Climate Change & the Media described a report titled, Americans’ Actions to Conserve Energy, Reduce Waste, and Limit Global Warming March 2012.  Here are some highlights:
  • In the past year, more than half of Americans (56%) say they have attempted to reduce their family’s energy consumption.
  • Over the next 12 months, 52% intend to reward or punish companies for their global warming-related behaviors by either buying or boycotting their products.
  • 15% of Americans say they have volunteered or donated money to an organization working to reduce global warming. One in ten Americans (11%) has written a letter, email, or phoned a government official about global warming. Of these, 77% urged officials to take action to reduce global warming; 19% urged them not to take action.
The full report can be downloaded in pdf format.  At: 
Ramit  Plushnick-Mastii posted an item o MSNBC News on July 12 titled, Texas judge rules atmosphere, air is public trust.  In it he reported that a Texas District Court Judge Gisela Triana has ruled that the atmosphere, like water, must be protected for public use.  “The lawsuit was brought by the Texas Environmental Law Center, and is part of a court campaign in a dozen states by an Oregon-based nonprofit, Our Children's Trust. The group is using children and young adults as plaintiffs in the lawsuits — some state and some federal — filed in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas and Washington.”  This is an important and potentially historic decision.  At: 
Our Children’s Trust (http://ourchildrenstrust.org) has produced a 7-minute video - very well done - featuring an 11-year old girl in Colorado.  At: http://vimeo.com/41747411
The July 13 issue of Science had an article by A. Dutton and K. Lambeck titled, Ice Volume and Sea Level During the Last Interglacial.  The last interglacial was a period about 125,000 years ago when the global average temperature was 1-2 degrees C warmer than now and sea level was several meters (5.5 to 9 m) higher, much more than previously assumed.  (A meter is about 40 inches).  This means that sea level is much more sensitive to average temperature than people thought.  At: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/337/6091/216.short
With the current 400 ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere we already have enough to raise global average temperature between 1.5 and 3 degrees C. 
On July 13 Moni Basu of CNN posted an article titled, Drought stretches across America, threatens crops.  It said that 1016 counties in 26 states are considered natural disaster areas.  A county is considered a natural disaster area if it has suffered severe drought for eight consecutive weeks. As of July 10,  61% of land in the lower 48 states was experiencing drought conditions -- stretching from Nevada to South Carolina -- the highest percentage in the 12-year record of the U.S. Drought Monitor.  30% of the corn in the 18 primary corn-growing states is now in poor or very poor condition,  Corn prices have already climbed 45% in expectation of low yields.  In the past three weeks 3.1 million acres  - mostly in the West - have been scorched by wildfires.  At: 
Dr. Lawrence Kalkstein is the Director of the Synoptic Climatology Laboratory of the Department of Geology and Regional Studies at the University of Miami.  The laboratory focuses on how climate affects humans and other organisms around the world.  His web site includes links to a number of studies, including health/health warning systems and the relationship between climate change and heat deaths.  At: 
The NY Times for July 14 had an op-ed by Roger Bradbury titled, A World Without Coral Reefs.  In it he points out that a combination of ocean acidification - by uptake of carbon dioxide from its increasing concentration in the atmosphere - overfishing and pollution is destroying the world’s coral reefs, which now provide an important source of food for many of the world’s poor people.  Coral reefs have been called the rain forests of the sea, because of their rich biological diversity.  As seems typical, we are ignoring the value of this wonderful resource and not planning ahead for the suffering and loss to come.  At: 
The July 15 issue of Nation of Change has an article by Zo Casey titled, Wind Turbines Waste Much Less Energy Than Fossil Fuels.  Casey points out that electricity generation by burning fossil fuels wastes a large fraction of the chemical energy in the fuel as waste heat.  Losses are 54% for natural gas, 65% for nuclear, 66% for coal, and 77% for oil.  Wind energy is said to lose only about 1% in its conversion to electricity.  It also has the advantage of avoiding the emission of pollutants or the long term storage of coal ash or nuclear waste.  At:
The following items are from the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI), Carol Werner, Executive Director. Past issues of its newsletter are posted on its website under "publications"
 at http://www.eesi.org/publications/Newsletters/CCNews/ccnews.htm
 
EESI’s newsletter is intended for all interested parties, particularly the policymaker community. 

Court Strikes Down Challenge to New York Cap and Trade Program
On June 13, the New York State Supreme Court dismissed a lawsuit aimed at blocking the state’s participation in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) cap and trade program. The lawsuit was filed by two New York business executives and backed by the Competitive Enterprise Institute and Americans for Prosperity, arguing that the state joined RGGI without the support of the state legislature. The court ruled that the plaintiffs had no grounds to challenge the program. "This is a significant victory for those of us who take the threat of climate change seriously, and want to mitigate its harmful effects," said New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. "I applaud the court for soundly rejecting this attempt—backed by out-of-state political interests—to stop New York from protecting its own citizens against the potentially devastating impacts of climate change.” RGGI, formed in 2005 by a group of northeastern and mid-Atlantic states, establishes a cap and trade system for fuel-burning power plants. The New York RGGI regulations aim to reduce overall CO2 emissions in the power sector to 10 percent below 1990 levels by 2018.
For additional information see: Chicago Tribune, Reuters, Energy Biz
Note:  In Delaware an effort to get a bill through the legislature that would pull the state out of RGGI - probably funded by fossil fuel interests outside the state - failed to gain traction.  Although the goal of RGGI is modest, it seems to threaten the financial interests of those who profit from the burning of fossil fuels.

States Differ on Use of Sea Level Rise Data
The Virginia state legislature recently commissioned a study on coastal flooding, but only after all references to climate change were removed from the funding proposal. Republican state lawmakers objected to the proposal’s original language, which referred to global warming and sea level rise, forcing the proposal to be modified with phrases such as “increased flooding risk”. This comes a week after the North Carolina state senate passed a bill banning the use of peer-reviewed sea level rise projections for planning purposes. In contrast, a survey of 600 California coastal planners and resource managers found that a majority of them believe in the threats posed by climate change. The survey, conducted by Stanford University, also showed an increase in city planning and adaptive measures to combat climate change in the six years since the last such survey.

In a related story, rising sea levels are becoming a major threat to Norfolk, Virginia. Built on sinking ground and surrounded by waterways, Norfolk has experienced frequent flooding in recent years from storm surges, high tides and heavy rains. The floods have already forced the city to buy and condemn about 20 homes in a particularly vulnerable neighborhood. Scientists say that Chesapeake Bay has risen a few inches around Norfolk every year, and the spring high tide is sometimes a foot or more above normal levels. To combat the problem, the city has brought in planners, engineers, and a Netherlands-based firm to develop ways to hold back the rising waters. Aware that they may soon face a similar crisis, other cities in Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina and Florida are closely following Norfolk’s adaptation efforts.

Arctic Sea Ice on Pace for Record-Low Year
Arctic sea ice coverage is dropping rapidly this month, indicating that the Arctic may soon experience its lowest ice levels on record. The record was set in September 2007, with 1.65 million square miles of sea ice. The Arctic is on pace to break this record. The region currently has 4.0 million square miles of sea ice coverage; the same period in 2007 saw 4.3 million square miles of sea ice. The baseline, or average for 1979-2000, for mid-June is 4.6 million square miles. "We are seeing a lot of areas opening up within the Arctic Ocean, and along coastlines that normally are still ice covered," said Walt Meier of the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center. The Arctic is almost certain to experience a low-ice year, but several factors will determine whether the record will be broken this September, when the annual sea ice cycle historically reaches its lowest point. Regional cloud cover, wind patterns, snowfall totals, soot levels, the flow of water through the Bering Strait all influence the rate of sea ice melt. Lower ice coverage this early in the summer will amplify melting, as dark open water absorbs more solar energy than the reflective ice. This year continues the recent trend of reduced sea ice in the Arctic, which scientists attribute to a combination of climate change and natural weather fluctuations.

In related news, last week The Economist published a special report on the Arctic entitled “The Melting North.” The report discusses the geopolitical, economic and environmental impacts of an increasingly warmer and ice-free Arctic. Arctic nations are largely working together to pursue new economic opportunities, such as northward expansion of fossil fuel extraction and new shipping lanes. Last August, a Russian tanker delivered its cargo from the northwest corner of Russia to Thailand in seven days, one of 34 ships to use the Northern Sea Route along Russia’s northern shore and through the Bering Strait. This route, made possible by reduced sea ice, cut the ship’s travel time and distance nearly in half from the traditional route through the Suez Canal. The report notes that such opportunities are largely the result of climate change and come at additional environmental cost.
For additional information see: Discovery News, The Economist

Study Analyzes Climate Change Impacts in Southwestern United States
At the recent Southwest Climate Summit, conference organizers released the executive summary of the upcoming report, Assessment of Climate Change in the Southwest United States. The conference and report were both overseen by the Southwest Climate Science Center of the University of Arizona. Developed as a regional-scale companion to the climate change reports released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the 800 page report includes contributions from over 100 researchers. The study finds that the second half of the 20th century was the region’s warmest period in 600 years and predicts increased periods of severe drought that will further decline river flows and soil moisture. Said lead author Jonathan Overpeck, “We need to be worried about climate change because it’s clearly already affecting our region in ways that impact many areas—we’re seeing landscapes burning, dying because of heat and dryness.” The report includes a section on the region’s Native American tribes, which finds that tribal lands and culture will be disproportionately impacted by climate change. The report explains that tribes are at particular risk due to marginalized lands, limited water rights, minimal political influence, and endangered cultural practices. The full report will be released in August.
For additional information see: Arizona Daily Star, Indian Country Today

International Network to Monitor Ocean Acidification
The new International Coordinating Office for Ocean Acidification was launched this weekend at the Rio+20 Earth Summit. The monitoring network will be the first international entity to track the effects of ocean acidification. The world’s oceans absorb 20 to 30 percent of carbon dioxide (CO2) released into the atmosphere, and increased CO2 levels in the water have lowered the average pH by 0.1, making the ocean 30 percent more acidic compared to preindustrial levels. The impacts of this acidification on marine animals and ecosystems are still largely unknown. “We really need to get probes into the water and see what’s going on,” Lisa Suatoni, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said. “This will help to acknowledge that ocean acidification is a major global threat to ocean resources.” The office will be part of the Environment Laboratories in the International Atomic Energy Agency in Monaco. The United States has pledged $1 million to the network over the next three years.

In related news, a new study has concluded that rising ocean temperatures are largely due to increased greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere. The study, published in Nature Climate Change, found that natural variations in currents and volcanic activity could account for 10 percent of the temperature increase, but the primary cause was greenhouse gas emissions from human activity. “We can actually say that we're virtually certain that the oceans have warmed, and that warming is caused not by natural processes but by rising greenhouse gases primarily," said Nathan Bindoff of the Institute for Marine and Arctic Studies. "Ninety per cent of the temperature change stored in the whole of the Earth's system is stored in the ocean, so global warming is really an ocean warming problem."
For additional information see: Washington Post, ABC News Australia

Court Upholds EPA Emission Rules
On June 26, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit declared that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was “unambiguously correct” using its authority to limit emissions from power plants and automobiles in order to reduce the level of greenhouse gas released into the atmosphere. The ruling upheld four aspects of the rules, including the “tailoring rule” and the “endangerment finding” rule. Fourteen states, including Virginia and Texas, challenged the EPA’s ruling, stating that the EPA overstepped its authority when it declared that carbon emissions endangered human health and that it intended to regulate these emissions under the Clean Air Act. Manufacturing, oil, and gas industry groups also challenged the ruling, claiming that regulating greenhouse gases is “complex and burdensome.” Fifteen states, including California, New York, and Massachusetts, testified in court in support of the EPA ruling. Numerous automakers also supported the decision, stating that car companies across the nation have made great strides in improving fuel economy standards, and that reducing carbon dioxide emissions were one of their top priorities. The appeals court wrote that the Clean Air Act "speaks in terms of endangerment, not in terms of policy, and EPA has complied with the statute."
For additional information see: New York Times, Miami Herald, E & E Publishing, National Journal

Exxon Chief Says Elimination of Fossil Fuels not Solution to Climate Change
In a speech Wednesday, Exxon Mobile CEO Rex Tillerson said that global efforts to address climate change should focus on adapting to rising sea levels and shifting weather patterns, not the elimination of fossil fuels. "Changes to weather patterns that move crop production areas around - we'll adapt to that. It's an engineering problem and it has engineering solutions," Tillerson said in his speech to the Council on Foreign Relations. Under Tillman, Exxon has acknowledged that human emissions are contributing to warming temperatures, a break from the company’s longstanding policy of climate change denial. He did, however, express doubts over the ability of climate models to accurately project future impacts. Tillerson also argued that fear over climate change should not keep governments from allowing new oil and gas explorations, as energy from fossil fuels raises the quality of life for people around the globe. He also addressed public concerns over new drilling techniques, and said the risks involved are small and manageable.
For additional information see: Associated Press, Reuters

Minnesota City Looks to Build Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
Recent flash floods have left Duluth, Minnesota with the task of repairing and upgrading its storm water removal system. However, the city wants to be sure that any upgrades to the 400 miles of pipes and drains incorporate climate change forecasts that predict more precipitation and more severe thunderstorms in the Midwest. This requires city planners to make expensive guesses on Duluth’s future weather patterns to ensure a resilient infrastructure. Minnesota experienced twice as many two-inch rainfalls between 1991 to 2010 over the historical average. One recent storm totaled up to ten inches of rain in 24 hours – twice the city’s threshold for a 100-year storm. "The big question is: Do you build it the same way, or build it to somehow manage for bigger events, like we seem to be seeing more and more often?" said Jesse Schomberg of the Minnesota Sea Grant. "But then the question is: How much bigger? That's something we don't really know yet." The communities of the Duluth metro area have commissioned a study to come up with new storm water management strategies, including larger pipes and underground precipitation storage, to handle larger and more frequent storms.
For additional information see: Minneapolis Star Tribune

Canadian Bird Species on the Decline
A new study entitled “The State of Canada’s Birds 2012” reports a 12 percent drop in Canadian bird populations since 1970. According to the study, 44 percent of the country’s more than 460 bird species have experienced declines. Sixty-six species have suffered enough losses to warrant consideration for endangered protections. The study cites climate change and habitat loss as likely reasons for the declines, especially for birds classified as aerial insectivores (birds that catch insects in the air). Warming temperatures may be causing insect populations to peak earlier in the year, before migratory birds return to Canada. These species now arrive too late to take full advantage of their main food source. The report also finds that conservation efforts and regulations on DDT and other hazardous chemicals have been successful in sustaining some of Canada’s bird populations, but that the pervasive threat posed by climate change will be difficult to manage through such traditional means. Furthermore, the general decline in bird populations may demonstrate danger to the country’s wildlife as a whole, as birds often serve as indicators of widespread environmental decline.
For additional information see: CBC

Scientists Argue Extreme Weather Is Result of Climate Change
This year has already seen record-breaking temperatures, devastating wildfires, massive storms and widespread drought. While it is difficult to link individual weather events to climate change, scientists submit that recent weather offers a proof of theworld’s changing weather patterns. “It’s really dramatic how many of the patterns that we’ve talked about as the expression of the extremes are hitting the U.S. right now,” said Dr. Chris Field of Stanford University, lead author of a recent special report on extreme events and disasters by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). "What we're seeing now is the future. We're going to be seeing a lot more weather like this, a lot more impacts like we're seeing from this series of heat waves, fires and storms," added Dr. Jeff Masters, Director of Meteorology at the Weather Underground. The United States already has set 40,000 heat-related temperature records this year. More than two-thirds of the country is under a severe drought, contributing to wildfires in Colorado and New Mexico that have ravaged millions of acres. A devastating derecho storm, with five times the energy of a normal thunderstorm, was linked to more than 20 deaths and left millions without power from Chicago to Washington, DC.
For additional information see: Guardian, Washington Post

Cost Reduction Efforts on Carbon Capture and Storage Ineffective
A new report by the U.S. Congressional Budget Office concludes that government efforts to drive down the cost of carbon capture and storage (CCS) have not been effective and the technology is still too expensive to be commercially viable. Since 2005, the U.S. government has spent $6.9 billion developing several large-scale CCS demonstration projects, with little effect on the cost of CCS. The report says that without emissions restrictions or a price on carbon emissions, utilities have little incentive to invest in CCS. Electricity from coal plants using CCS currently costs about 75 percent more than power from conventional power plants. The report says that federal money would be better spent on basic research and development of CCS, in hopes of generating cost-reducing technological breakthroughs.
For additional information see: Washington Post, Bloomberg

Greenland Ice Sheet Could Reach Melting Threshold
Scientists have concluded in a recent report that the Greenland Ice Sheet will continue to melt at record levels this summer. Rising land and ocean temperatures are causing more of Greenland’s terrain to show through the remaining ice sheet, causing the remaining ice to lose some of its reflective properties and melt at a faster rate than expected. Scientists have also found that the snow crystals in the ice pack lose their shape and reflective properties as they heat and cool over long periods of time, absorbing more sunlight and in turn warming the area around them. Lead author Dr. Jason Box of Ohio State University explains, “It appears that we’re about to cross a threshold in summer . . . you might even call it a tipping point as we go into a net energy absorption [of the higher elevations.] Then we’ll see the melt area expanding abruptly and potentially covering the entire ice sheet in summer for the first time in observations.”
For additional information see: Climate Central, NOAA, Report

Last 12 Months the Hottest on Record in United States
The 12-month period from July 2011 to June 2012 was the hottest in US recorded history, according to statistics released last week by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Every state in the contiguous United States, except Washington, experienced higher than average temperatures during that period. The record-breaking temperatures coincide with a drought that now covers 56 percent of the continental United States, which NOAA says is the largest drought footprint of the 21st century. In Colorado, these extremely hot and dry conditions led to the outbreak of several devastating wildfires, including the Waldo Canyon fire near Colorado Springs that blazed uncontrolled for weeks, and destroyed several hundred homes. Across the country, wildfires burned more than 1.3 million acres during June.

In other news, drought conditions across the Midwest have driven up the price of some commodities, such as corn and soybeans, to near record levels. The National Weather Service predicts the drought will continue or even intensify over the next three months in much of the lower Midwest. However, not all of the Midwest is under drought conditions, with Duluth, Minnesota, experiencing a storm last week that brought 7.2 inches of rain in a 24-hour period and caused over $100 million of damage due to flooding.
For additional information see: Forbes, Reuters, Climate Central, Wall Street Journal

Rocky Mountain National Park’s Landscape Affected by Climate Change
Drought and climate change are altering the landscape of Rocky Mountain National Park. Mountain slopes that are normally covered in snow are currently barren. Wildflower numbers are down due to lack of rain and snowmelt. But the most dramatic change is the vast numbers of pine trees that have been killed by bark beetles. Snow and below-freezing temperatures historically keep bark beetles out of the northern parts of the Rocky Mountain range, but warming temperatures over the past 70 years are allowing the invasive bark beetle to devastate forests that were previously unreachable. “The fact that the trees are several hundred years old and dying of bark beetles, yes, I’d say that’s climate change,” said Judy Visty, Director of Rocky Mountain National Park’s Research Learning Center. “Those forests, at least for me, won’t look like they did in my lifetime ever again. I’ve lost that.” The Kawuneeche Valley in Rocky Mountain National Park has gradually become warmer with more than 300 days of above freezing temperatures recorded in 2010. Compared to temperature records in 1940, Rocky Mountain National Park has seen an annual increase of 50 additional days above freezing levels.
For additional information see: Coloradoan
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Chad A. Tolman
chadtolman@verizon.net
Coalition for Climate Change Study and Action