This page contains links to articles and news about Earth's climate and environment.
The links may be temporary, so there can be no guarantee about their future availability. Links to
government and other institutional sites are more likely to be available for longer periods of time.
It should be noted
that, especially regarding information available online about global/regional warming and
other climate changes that
are generally regarded as negative, not everyone agrees that the underlying data are
reliable. Self-proclaimed climate skeptics and outright
deniers, in particular, regularly and loudly argue that data produced and interpreted by government agencies
and academic researchers should not be trusted.
IESRE believes these sources to be reliable, but can accept
no responsibility for content
linked from this document. Some links may require online subscriptions
to access them. IESRE president David Brooks takes responsibility
for the contents of this page.
August 13, 2022: The White Ibis moves to New Jersey.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that in 2019 a dozen distinctive white
ibises were observed at New Jesey's Ocean City Welcome Center. These birds
normanormally live in Florida and the southeast. The number increased year-
by-year and it's now estimated that at least 350 of thes bids live in
the salt marshes of New Jersey.
Although there may be several reasons for this expansion, climate
change is likely the major driving factor, resulting from warming air
and water in coastal new Jersey. These birds are photogenic and very
easy to identify, so they are popular with birders. But they may
be detrimental to other smaller traditionally native birds that share the same food
sources and habitat needs. So, the adoption of this new
white ibis home may not be entirely without some negative ecological consequences.
February 18, 2022: EPA Report on U.S. Power Plant Emissions
THIS DOCUMENT gives data about emissions of SO2,
NOx and CO2 emission from U.S. power plants.
Emissions of the greenhouse gas CO2 have
decreased by only 21% from 1995 to 2021. The drop in those emissions
due to COVID-19 shutdowns in 2020 were reversed in 2021. The
overall downward trend seen from about 2007 is encouraging, but
nowhere as large as it should be to bring global warming under control.
Drops in SO2 and
NOx emissions are much larger. From this site, you can
download Excel files containing data used to generate the charts and maps
in the report.
February 10, 2022: "Natural Gas" – what's in a name??
THIS ARTICLE from Vox.com describes how a fossil fuel known as
"natural gas" has distorted the negative environmental impact of this fuel.
So-called natural gas is essentially methane, 80 times
more powerful as a greenhouse (heat-trapping) gas than CO2.
Although the oil and gas industry didn't invent this name, given since
its discovery in the early 19th century, it has taken
advantage of the willingness of people to associate "natural" with
"good." Because one source of methane is by the "natural" decomposition
of trash in landfills, natural gas is even touted as a "renewable" resource. While
technically true, this grossly misrepresents the negative effects of a
rapidly rising concentration of methane in the atmosphere.
The oil and gas industry has also promoted natural gas as a vast
improvement over using coal for power production and they have described
it as a necessary "bridge" fuel in the process of eliminating fossil
fuel sources from our energy economy. The validity of these claims is
a reasonable topic for debate, but that debate is seriously skewed by
a conscious misuse of two little words: "natural gas."
February 9, 2022: Raising grains for meat production
A
RECENT ARTICLE from the Union of Concerned Scientists explored
the huge impact of food production for meat products. Tyson Foods is
one of the largest food companies in the world. They use over
9,000,000 acres of land to produce food for their meat products
– an area roughly twice the size of New Jersey. Only about 5%
of this land uses sustainable farming practices that minimize
negative environmental and health effects of monoculture agriculture
that is prevalent in the U.S. This graph breaks down corn and soybean production.
January 27, 2022: EPA document about airborne particulates
It's well established that airborne particulates, especially those less than
about 10 microns
in diameter, pose significant environmental and health problems
(e.g., making lakes and streams more acidic, aggravating asthma). Not surprisingly,
negative health effects are more likely to be encountered in economically depressed and
minority communities because they are more likely to be near sources of airborne
particulates.
HERE is a link to a nice web page about particulates from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
See HERE
for information about Brooks' book, Monitoring Your Environment with Arduino
Microcontrollers, for information about environmental monitoring in general
and, in particular, about inexpensive systems for measuring
airborne particulates.
January 20, 2022: Coal Mining in Pennsylvania
Using coal for generating electricity is one of the most significant
sources of greenhouse gases leading to global warming. Coal mining in Pennsylvania
dates back to the 18th
century and remains a major industry. Why? The
map below from Pennsylvania's Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
(DCNR) provides
the answer: Southwestern Pennsylvania is essentially one giant bituminous ("soft")
coal field and higher
quality ("hard") anthracite coal fields are found in the northeast.
Although mining activity
peaked in the early 20th century, there are still around 40
active underground mines
in Pennsylvania and altogether about 240 active mining sites, including surface mines. Details about these ongoing
activities can be found here, for
bituminous and
anthracite coal. Although all of these mining activities have shown decreases
between 2019 and 2020, there are
still more than 4600 employees in the coal extraction business in Pennsylvania
and mining is still a major economic driver in parts of the commonwealth.
In addition to coal's huge contribution to CO2 emissions into Earth's atmosphere,
hazardous
waste from active and inactive mining operations is a major source of pollution,
especially of Pennsylvania's waterways. There are very active and politically
influential organizations
(Pennsyvania Coal Alliance, American Coal Council,
National Mining Association, National Coal Council) that
lobby in support of coal mining in the U.S. and Pennsylvania.
See HERE
for links to these organizations and more information about this industry.
January 13, 2022: Global Temperatures in 2021
An
online paper by James Hansen, Makiko Sato, and Reto Ruedy provides
an extensive analysis of global temperatures during 2021. One interesting
point is that the effects of a changing climate are becoming more noticeable
because warming over land is much larger than warming over oceans. A possible
cause for this is decreasing atmospheric aerosols due to an increased use
of cleaner cars and power generation plants.
January 12, 2022: High and low U.S. temperature records in 2021
Anyone paying even the slightest attention to the weather
already knows that there were many extreme weather events in the U.S during 2021.
These include more hot
and cold records than any year since 1994. There were more heat records
set, almost all west of the Mississippi, than in any year since digitally
recorded temperature data were recorded nationwide syarting
in 1948. In some places, hot and cold temperature records eclipsed values extending back
into the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In June, Salem, Oregon,
recorded a temperature of 117° –
a place where the normal June high is only in the mid 70's. In February,
the temperature fell to -6° in Jacksonville, Texas, where the normal
low would be about 40°. In some places there were abnormally large numbers of
temperature-related deaths.
This graphic is from a
NY Times article, which may be accessible only with an online account.
November 18: Defining "Waters of the United States"
The Clean Water Act of 1972 prohibits the discharge of
pollutants from any point source to "navigable waters"
defined as "the waters of the United States, including
the territorial seas." This critical phrase isn't defined by
the Act, but rather by the EPA and the Army (Corps of Engineers?).
Clarifying the definition of waters of the United States is critical
to protecting all users of this critical resource and others who depend
on having this resource protected.
See HERE for an EPA document
with more information.
November 16, 2021: about the future of nuclear power
The role of nuclear power in a fossil fuel-free energy future has been hotly
debated for many years. There is a growing understanding of the basic
reality that integrating variable
power sources like wind and solar into an electricity-generating system requires
continuously reliable and predictable outputs from "baseload" plants. That reality
currently includes both fossil-fueled and nuclear power plants. Eliminating
the fossil-fueled plants, including even natural gas-powered plants, requires alternatives
that do not yet exist.
Progress is being made on energy storage systems that will allow
solar and wind sources to provide the input/output stability that a working power grid
requires. Building new solar and wind generation is already cost-competitive or
cheaper per megawatt than building
new fossil fuel generation, but there is growing concern that
energy storage solutions for intermittent sources are not developing
fast enough to transition to a power grid that no
longer generates the greenhouse gases that produce climate-changing global
warming.
In fact, the only currently feasible solution to the challenging problems with
integrating intermittent power generation into a power grid without fossil fuels
appears to be continuing to use existing
nuclear power plants and construct new ones. But, large scale nuclear plants, which a couple
of generations ago were hyped as generating electricity "too cheap to meter,"
(see, for example,
HERE) still have major "growing pains" with serious safety,
environmental, and cost issues.
Some countries are working to solve these problems (including just by ignoring the
very real problems with nuclear power generation and radioactive waste disposal)
and some countries are simply giving
up on nuclear power. In the U.S., there are currently only 55 commercial nuclear
power plants with a total of 93 working reactors.
There are only two new reactors under construction, at a
plant in Georgia.
(See HERE.)
Several companies are working on smaller nuclear generation plants
based on allegedly fail-safe designs that eliminate the potential
for "run away" disasters such as occurred at Chernobyl (Ukraine), Fukushima (Japan),
and Three Mile Island (U.S.).
HERE is an
interesting article that explores the current state of some of these efforts.
HERE
is another article about SMRs (small modular reactors). In principle,
these SMRs may ultimately (but not yet) be more cost-effective
to build and safer to operate than larger plants. Nobody yet knows when or even
whether these
newer designs will be successful in helping the world move toward a fossil fuel-free
energy production environment!
November 14, 2021: Methane gets attention at COP26
Although anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, primarily from
the burning of fossil fuels, is the most widely researched and discussed source
of greenhouse gas, the COP26
conference also focused for the first time on methane. There's a lot of online information
about methane:
See
HERE
and
HERE, for example.
Methane is a primary component of natural gas and also comes from
a variety of other anthropogenic and natural sources. (Methane from ruminant animals
such as cattle have recently received some attention.)
It's more than 25 times more powerful than CO2 as a greenhouse gas (as
an absorber of infrared radiation in Earth's atmosphere). It stays
in the atmosphere for about 12 years, whereas CO2 stays for hundreds of
years, so reducing methane sources can have a very significant short-term impact on global
warming. Fossil fuel extraction facilities (including even coal mines) are
major sources of methane gas. It's by itself
an efficient fuel and it's therefore
potentially profitable to capture this gas rather than venting it to the atmosphere.
(See
HERE,
for example.}
At COP26, more than 100 countries agreed to cut methane emissions by 30 percent
by the end of the decade. The U.S. and China signed a separate joint agreement
to develop a methane reduction plan. Although all these agreements lack enforcement
mechanisms and timelines, recognizing the importance of reducing methane
emissions is at least a significant positive development.
November 13, 2021: Final agreement from COP26
HERE is an annotated version of the final COP26 agreement.
Negotiations continued into "overtime,"
with a final agreement reached today.
A previous version calling for the "the phasing-out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuels"
has been watered down at the insistence of negotiators from China and India, both
heavily dependent on coal production and use. The final
relevant section replaces "phaseout" with phase-down," and now reads:
Calls upon Parties to accelerate the development, deployment
and dissemination of technologies, and the adoption of policies,
to transition towards low-emission energy systems,
including by rapidly scaling up the deployment of clean power
generation and energy efficiency measures, including
accelerating efforts towards the phase-down
of unabated coal power and inefficient fossil fuel subsidies,
recognizing the need for support towards a just transition;
Some observers have expressed surprise that this section survived at all in the
final ducument, but this very significant change in just one word, which
still has no time line associated with it,
allows considerably more "wiggle room"
to continue using fossil fuels. "Unabated coal power and... inefficient subsidies..."
will be taken to allow the continued
use and construction of, coal-fueled and other fossil-fueled power plants that have some
degree of carbon capture technology. The definition of "inefficient" subsidies will no
doubt be debated ad infinitum!
The widely held belief among climate scientists
is that this agreement, and in particular the section on coal and fossil fuel use and the
lack of enforceable time-related targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions,
does not come even close to meeting the goal of no more than a 1.5°C global
temperature rise above pre-industrial levels
believed necessary to prevent the most serious and irreversible effects of
changing Earth's climate through human activities.
November 10, 2021: Draft agreement from COP26
HERE is the draft agreement from the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.
(Note that the date, 10/11/2021, uses
the European convention for specifying day/month/year rather than month/day/year as is done
in the U.S.) As just a draft it is of course subject to change. For the first time, such a
document has called
specifically for "the phasing-out of coal and subsidies for fossil fuels." Even if this wording remains
in the final document, it is highly unlikely that countries such as China and India, which still rely
heavily on coal for electricity production and are, in fact, planning to increase rather than
decrease coal production and consumption at least in the near-term, will respond to this call.
November 2, 2021: Extremely high UV index values during heat wave in La Paz, Bolivia
THIS LINK describes UV index values as high as 21 during a heat wave
in La Paz, the administrative capital of Bolivia.
December and January, summer months in the southern hemisphere, typically have the
highest UV values, but a prolonged heatwave and abnormally low cloud cover have
produced these high levels. At an elevation of 3,600 meters (11,800 feet),
La Paz often records summer UV index
values in the 11-17 range. Some climate scientists believe climate change is
responsible for changes in rainfall patterns, low cloud cover, and intense heat
in La Paz, all of which are responsible for these high UV levels.
UV index values as high as 40 have been recorded at sites in the high Andes
mountains. Any value above 10 is considered to be "extreme" and humans are advised
to avoid exposure to direct sunlight under these conditions.
It's not known how long the URL cited above will be accessible.
October 18, 2021: Sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.
This "Fast Facts" publication from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Administration shows sources of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions as of 2019. Nearly
30 percent of all U.S. emissions come from the transportation
sector, with "light-duty vehicles" – automobiles, essentially –
contributing almost 60% of transportation emissions.
This document also includes links to previous versions of these data, back to 2015,
that may show how emissions sources are changing over time.
September 8, 2021: Rising temperatures are the world's greatest public health threat
An editorial simultaneously published worldwide in more than 200
scientific journals has called rising temperature the world's greatest public
health threat. You can see this editorial
HERE in the British medical journal The Lancet, along with links to
downloadable
supplementary material.
THE LANCET is one of the world's most respected and prestigious medical journals.
The conclusions in this editorial about the negative consequences of
unchecked climate change and global warming aren't new, and all have
been expressed previously in multiple outlets over many years.
What is striking about this editorial
is the urgency of the message and the coordination among so many scientific outlets.
September 7, 2021: Climate change skepticism and denial
I've been thinking recently about the relationship between "climate
skepticism" and "climate denial." A basic issue is the extent to which
climate change skepticism almost exclusively lands on the side of considering
that climate change proponents, at best, overestimate the role of
anthropogenic influences on climate and its negative impacts in both
the present and the future or, at worst, that
climate change proponents deliberately "cherry pick" data and
promote negative impacts
for ideological or financial reasons, or both – "Of course,
climate
scientists want us to believe that X bad things will happen because their
grant funding and professional status depend on it." or because those
beliefs are
consistent with their political positions on a variety of topics.
Of course, analyses and projections about current and future
climate can be wrong in either direction, minimizing or over-estimating
their negative impacts. Climate skeptics tend to be politically and
religiously conservative on a variety of topics. And, it's true that climate skeptics and deniers
can also "cherry pick" data.
But, climate science skeptics invariably assume
that climate change proponents always over-estimate negative impacts.
In fact (see July 20 posting, below), there is growing evidence that some
past models and predictions about climate change are now proving to
underestimate rather than overestimate the speed and extent of
negative climate changes. Where are the skeptics here?
There is some literature available online about the relationship
between skepticism and denial.
THIS ARTICLE
was published in 2015, but its analysis does not seem outdated in any
way. It's a scholarly article, and not a quick or easy read. But it is
suggested reading for anyone who wants to understand climate skeptics!
September 5, 2021: EPA report on the links between climate change and "social vulnerability"
Not surprisingly, there are significant differences in how climate change affects different
population groups. This September, 2021, EPA report
Climate Change and Social Vulnerability in the United States,
"improves our understanding of the degree to which four
socially vulnerable populations — defined based on income, educational
attainment, race and ethnicity, and age...may be more exposed
to the highest impacts of climate change." The report has been written
in response to the Biden Administration's Executive Order 14008,
Attacking the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.
August 26, 2021: U.S. electricity generation
Here's an interesting graphic from
THIS SOURCE, taken from the U.S. Energy Information Administration's
Monthly Energy Review. The graphic shows clearly the precipitous drop in coal-produced
electricity and the rapid increase of natural gas. Renewables are just starting what looks
like an exponential increase in the 21st century.
August 21, 2021: Rainfall at the summit of Greenland
If you think of Greenland as a place just for ice and snow, you can now broaden
that perspective.
Air temperatures at the summit of Greenland's ice sheet rose above freezing for the third
time in less than a decade. For the first time on record, precipitation fell
as rain rather than snow, resulting
in dumping an estimated
7 billion tons of rainwater on the ice sheet. This will have serious
short- and long-term effects on how the ice sheet melts, increasing runoff that raises
sea levels. Read more
about this event online, including
HERE.
August 9, 2021: Sixth Assessment Report from the IPCC released
The most recent report from the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is available online
HERE.
A "headline"
summary of the report's major findings can be downloaded
HERE.
Certainly one of the most striking conclusions is that the
attribution of global warming to human activities has evolved to
the point that the report now states that (emphasis added)
"It is unequivocal that human influence has warmed the
atmosphere, ocean and land." And, that (emphasis added)
"Global surface temperature will continue to increase until at least the mid-century under all
emissions scenarios considered." Most strikingly, the report
concludes that
"Many changes due to past and future greenhouse gas emissions
are irreversible for
centuries to millennia, especially changes in the ocean,
ice sheets and global sea level."
No doubt, climate skeptics and deniers will continue to dismiss
this IPCC report, as they have all past IPCC reports, as scientifically
unsound, biased, and unjustifiably alarmist. However, some recent studies
(see the entry below for July 20, 2021) have concluded that
some IPCC predictions have been too conservative and that negative effects of climate change are,
in fact, occurring sooner than predicted.
Whether 2021's incredible ongoing string of catastrophic weather events
can be associated specifically with anthropogenic climate changes
will continue to be debated. But this report makes compelling cases
for moving rapidly toward a post-fossil-fuel,
carbon-neutral economy and finding new ways to prevent
minimize emissions of other greenhouse gases such as methane.
August 3, 2021: Site with information about Arctic sea ice
THIS SITE from the Danish "Polar Portal" contains a LOT of information
about conditions in the Arctic and,
particularly, the state of the Greenland Ice Sheet and sea ice in the Arctic. The
rate of melting
of the Greenland Ice Sheet is increasing dramatically, leading to an increasing
rate of sea level rise. Data show that the extent of summer Arctic
sea ice is 30% smaller than in the early 1980s. Sea ice is highly reflective.
Decreasing sea ice allows more sunlight
to be absorbed in dark ocean waters, which further reduces ice formation and retention.
This "positive feedback" effect has profound implications for climate changes
in other parts of the world.
July 20, 2021: IPCC climate predictions too conservative
Future climate predictions published by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) are often targeted by climate change deniers and skeptics
as being too "alarmist." It is true that some specific IPCC predictions based
on climate models have proven not to be reliable. But, with the recent onslaught
of horrific and unprecedented weather conditions around the globe, many
climate scientists are now pointing out that IPCC predictions, especially about
climate-change exacerbated extreme weather events, have been too conservative
rather than too alarmist.
This isn't even a new idea. A 2012(!) article in
Scientific American
states that "Checking 20 years worth of
[climate] projections shows that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
has consistently underestimated the pace and impacts of global warming."
A
2019 article in Science Daily states that A new study
has revealed that the language used by the global climate change watch-dog,
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is overly
conservative and therefore the threats are much greater than the Panel's
reports suggest.
Even the
"Skeptical Science" website has an article entitled
"How the IPCC is more likely to underestimate the climate response" to
human activity.
It is, of course, always possible to "cherry pick" data to
"prove" that IPCC predictions are too alarmist or too conservative. However,
weather conditions in 2021, such as unprecedented high temperatures in the Arctic,
an early start to the fire season in the U.S. west,
record heat waves and drought conditions in the U.S. Pacific
and southwestern Canada, all of which are believed by most climate scientists to be
exacerbated by climate change, make the "alarmist" position increasingly difficult to
maintain.
July 12, 2021: BP's Statistical Review of World Energy 2021
You might not think of looking to a large global petroleum company –
BP, formerly British Petroleum – for reliable information about world
energy use. But 2021 marked the 70th edition of
BP's Statistical Review of World Energy. This document contains
comprehensive information about energy production, generation, and consumption for fossil
and renewable fuels, information about "key minerals" required for various
energy sectors, and global CO2 emissions.
There are literally dozens of tables and graphs about all these topics. To pick
just one, consider the question of who is producing and using coal. This is a
critical issue for determining how the world can transition away from fossil fuels
to a newable energy future. A popular argument from some sides of this issue is
to note that we will never get to a renewable energy future as long as developing
countries continue to rely on coal, which is the worst contributor to CO2 emissions
of all fossil fuels.
This chart shows production and consumption of coal, by region, in units of
exajoules (1 exajoule = 1018 joules). The Asia Pacific is by far the
largest producer and consumer of coal of all regions. Perhaps as a result of the
2020 global pandemic, overall coal production and consumption
for the region decreased very slightly in 2020. But coal production
in China, which represents over half of all coal
production and consumption in the Asia Pacific region,
increased by
1.2% in 2020, over 2019, and 2.7% per annum between 2000 and 2019.
The case is often made that global transitioning to a renewable energy future depends
on finding ways to allow underdeveloped countries, many of which are in the Asia
Pacific region, to continue their economic development that now depends
overwhelmingly
on fossil fuels. However, a more pertinent and more narrowly drawn question is
how to convince China, with its rapid growth in an already relatively highly
developed economy, to greatly reduce its reliance on coal as a source of power.
July 11, 2021: Link to articles about warming in regions around the globe.
HERE is a link to some Washington Post articles about warming in various regions around the
globe. One article describes the 3°C rise in temperature from preindustrial times
in Siberia. Another describes how ice loss in the Arctic is accelerating coastal erosion
in places where sea ice formerly protected the land from heavy seas. Closer to
home, another article describes the 2°C rise in temperatures during the last
century at Lake Hopatcong in New
Jersey -- a place where, in the early 20th century, ice fishing and
ice boat racing were once popular winter sports and
the lake served as a
source of huge blocks of ice sent in refrigerated train cars for use in places like New York city
before electricity-powered refrigeration was possible or common; none
of these activites are feasible now. This year,
following one of the warmest springs of the last century, New Jersey's environmental agency
warned – just as the summer tourist season began – against
swimming or fishing in Lake Hopatcong "for weeks, if not longer" because of toxic
blue-green algae. In some New Jersey
counties, average winter temperatures now
exceed 0°C, with measurable effects on flora and fauna, such as the persistence of
agricultural
pests and disease-carrying mosquitoes that used to be eradicated or controlled by cold winters.
In this map, air temperatures in areas in red and darker have already increased by 2°C
since the industrial revolution – the amount deemed critical as a "tipping point" for
irreversible impacts of a changing climate. Some, but not all, of these
hot spots are near urban, developed, areas. It is often argued that rising temperatures in
such areas aren't caused by "real" climate change, but are a result of development-produced
"heat islands." This may be true, but is also not really the point, as the effects of
warming temperatures are real regardless of their cause. The article about Lake
Hopatcong includes a detailed section about
"How we [obtained and] analyzed the data."
It's popular among climate change skeptics or deniers to accuse media like
The Washington Post as being too biased to be trusted. However, for
articles like
this, the worst that can be said is that stories and supporting data
may sometimes be "cherry picked"
to make a point, rather than inaccurate.
July 8, 2021: Is record heat in the Pacific Northwest caused by climate change?
An
article published June 29, 2021,in the NY Times, by Michael Mann (of "hockey stick"
fame, and a controversial pawn in climate change politics) and Susan Joy Hassol answered the
question like this:
"Might a heat dome have developed out West this past week without climate change? Sure.
Might it have been as extreme as what we’re witnessing without climate change? Almost surely not."
The article was published several days before temperatures
rose even higher and more records were broken in the U.S. Northwest
and southwestern Canada. The article explains that the heat dome is caused by a high pressure system
locked in position over the
U.S. Northwest and southwest Canada, resulting from an "omega block pattern" in the jet stream caused
by rapid warming in the Arctic.
You may need a NY Times digital subscription to view this article. But
HERE is another freely available article from World Weather Attribution reaching the
same conclusion – that the
"Western North American extreme heat [is] virtually impossible without human-caused
climate change" That
same source reaches the same conclusion that the record breaking temperatures in Siberia
in 2020 were almost impossible without climate change" and that the record European heatwave
in 2019 "would have been extremely unlikely without climate change".
July 7, 2021: Record heat in the U.S.
This map, produced by a climate researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological
Institute, and
published by the NY Times,
shows the record-shattering temperatures in the U.S. and western
Canada during this week. More very high and record-high temperatures
from another "heat dome"
are forecast into next week (See, e.g.,
HERE.)
July 7, 2021: Droughts and civilization
HERE
is an interesting article about the effects of climate-induced droughts on
past civilizations and the implications of extended droughts in the western
U.S. The article posits that if current conditions in the West continue,
driven by ongoing anthropogenic impacts on global and regional climate,
agricultural and other activities are ultimately unsustainable.
You can find out who sponsors the U.S. Drought Monitor (including the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Adminsitration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture)
and more about the data used to generate the map
HERE
The author of the article is on the staff of Daily Kos, a very left-leaning
news source and media outlet. While it is important always to consider the source of articles
like this, the map of current drought conditions is simply factual and concerns
about the impact of the current drought and its long-lasting consequences are
legitimate and widely shared.
July 4, 2021: Surface temperatures in western Canada
It's been extensively reported that the Pacific Northwest –
western U.S. and Canada – has been trapped under
a massive "heat dome" for several days.
Daytime air temperatures above 110°F are now common in the
American West, and multiple locations have broken
long-standing heat records for several days in a row, often by several degrees. As of this date, relief is not yet in sight.
Here's an interesting map of ground surface temperatures
in Canada just north of the U.S. border. (See
HERE for source of this image, with data from the European Space
Agency's Sentinel-3 satellite.)
These values are typically higher than air temperatures. Ground temperatures as high as 145°F
(63°C) have been reported in Washington state – new records.
As air temperatures rise, the ground heats up and can hold
heat for a long time, due to "thermal inertia," which exacerbates and prolongs the effects of heat
waves. This is especially true in urban settings where materials like concrete and asphalt have
a much higher ability to retain heat than natural surfaces, creating the well-known heat island effect.
It can be (and is) argued that it's not currently possible to assign
"climate change" as the cause of this extreme heat event. But what is
well established is that rapid Arctic warming – clearly related to
a warming globe – has caused very significant changes
in the jet stream which, under some circumstances, can allow high pressure
centers like the current heat dome to remain in place for many days as is
happening now in the Pacific Northwest.
June 9, 2021: What do do with solar panels at their end of life?
THIS ARTICLE from wired.com discusses the environmental
problems caused by solar panels – a rapidly increasing
source of renewable energy. Current solar panels have estimated useful
lifetimes of around 25 years and major solar panel deployments
started in the early 2000s. So, questions about how to recyle solar
panels urgently need answers.
It's already well known that recycling of electronics
in general is very poorly developed. A lot of what we would
like to think of as recyclable is still just being sent to landfills.
The basic problem, described in this article, is that recycling
solar panels is a high-tech
undertaking for which the cost to recycle solar panels
FAR exceeds the market value of the recycled
materials.
June 5, 2021: Climate change influence on monsoons
The summer monsoon in South Asia begins in June. The
abstract in a
new study in the journal Science
Advances, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS),
opens with: "South Asian precipitation amount and extreme variability are predicted
to increase due to
thermodynamic effects of increased 21st-century greenhouse gasses..." Computer models of
how a changing climate will affect future monsoons have been validated by comparing climate
conditions obtained from sediment core samples taken in the Bay of Bengal. The data from the
sediment layers date back almost a million years. Observers agree that monsoons in India
are getting wetter (through more and more extreme precipitation), interspersed with
longer and more severe droughts. Building on theory and observations of past links between
climate and monsoons, computer models predict that this problem will continue to worsen in
the future.
May 31, 2021: Climate change and heat-related deaths
A posting earlier this month included a link to a webpage that discussed the debate over
whether extreme heat or extreme cold is responsible for more deaths; the consensus seems to
be that there is no definitive answer to this question. A different question is whether
extreme heat events, which are becoming more frequent and more severe in some parts of the world,
are increasing heat-related deaths. A May 31, 2021, article in Nature Climate Change,
summarized
HERE, states in the abstract that "37.0%... of warm-season heat-related
deaths can be attributed to anthropogenic climate change and that increased
mortality is evident on every continent."
The article abstract (but not the entire article) is available for viewing
HERE.
Although it is certain that some will quibble with the article's data sources and
methodology, as well as the numbers in the results, the journal is peer-reviewed and
widely respected within the science community.
May 28,2021: Solar Boom in Syria
From the viewpoint of how electricity is generated and used in western countries,
a personal commitment to solar power may seem to be an
"elitist" response to climate change, as a way to reduce our reliance on fossil
fuels. But in war-torn parts of Syria, the lack of a reliable electrical
grid, or any working grid at all, forced residents to depend on very dirty
locally refined oil to power noisy and air-polluting generators. Gasoline and diesel fuel
became very expensive. It was of such low quality that the generators
used to power everything from
single homes to entire apartment buildings and businesses required constant, costly maintenance.
The solution? Many local entrepreneurs who provided generators switched to
solar/battery systems, which are now widely distributed. This process is described in a
MAY 15 ARTICLE from the NY Times. Regardless of the
motivation involved, this remarkable "solar revolution" will probably spread and continue even in
situations where alternatives are less onerous.
May, 2021: Which kills more people: extreme heat or extreme cold?
Because global temperatures are rising, it's often claimed that deaths
from extreme heat are increasing due to "climate change."
That's true, but is that more of a
problem than deaths from extreme cold? Determining whether extreme heat
or extreme cold kills more people is complicated! The answer depends on
who's asking the question, where data come from, and how those data
are analyzed. In particular, the manner in which extreme weather
– hot or cold – is responsible for increased mortality rates
can make comparing heat deaths to cold deaths an
"apples to oranges" comparison. There are sources of weather
related deaths that are not necessarily directly due to temperature. For example,
should deaths in cold weather due to improper use of indoor heaters or sparks from
indoor or outdoor fires be accepted as "weather related"? Those deaths
aren't even necessarily related to "extreme" cold.
In the U.S., the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) have
given different answers to the "heat vs. cold" question.
HERE is a website from Weather Underground (a commercial weather forecasting
and reporting company) that summarizes some research
and findings on this question.
In any case, research generally shows
a "V-shaped" weather-related mortality curve with a minimum at some
optimum temperature for humans; that is, extreme cold or extreme hot weather
compared to "norms"
both cause increases in mortality.
An online search for "deaths from heat waves vs death from cold spells"
will produce many sources of more information about this topic.
May, 2021: EPA Climate Change Indicators website
THIS WEBSITE from the Environmental Protection Agency contains a huge amount of graphed data
about changing weather and climate in the U.S. and around the globe. Here's just one such graph,
dealing with "heat wave" frequency in the U.S.
The data on the website have been provided from "more than
50 data contributors" and details about each underlying data
set are available
HERE. In response to a question I posed to the EPA about the recent history of this site,
I got this response, from which you can reach your own conclusions:
"The climate change website first went up in 2011.
We have periodically updated it roughly once a year and upon
releasing EPA Climate Change indicators reports (2012, 2014, 2016) –
so the last website update was in 2016. While most other EPA climate
change webpages were archived, the climate change indicators website
remained live during the Trump administration;
however, it was not updated. This latest website refresh (or relaunch) occurred in
May 12, 2021 with the Biden Administration."
May 27, 2021: NY Times article about changes at fossil fuel companies
THIS NY TIMES ARTICLE summarizes some recent activities in fossil fuel companies. Large
activist shareholders in Exxon, including BlackRock, the world's largest
asset manager, have successfully backed changes in Exxon's board of directors, in
opposition to that company's own nominations. BlackRock's chief
executive has said that the coronavirus pandemic had "driven us to
confront the global threat of climate change more forcefully."
One could argue that that pandemic doesn't have anything directly to
do with climate change, but it's becoming clear that large shareholders in
fossil fuel companies are increasingly aware
of the extent to which continuing the current reliance on fossil fuels
carries downsides not just for the environment, but also for
shareholders.
ANOTHER NY TIMES ARTICLE describes a court ruling in the Netherlands,
requiring Royal Dutch Shell, Europe's largest oil company, to
reduce the carbon dioxide emissions of its activities in the Netherlands
by 45% compared to 2019 by the end of 2030.
(NY Times articles may not be viewable without a digital subscription to that paper.)
May 25, 2021, some climate science "takeaways" from John Holdren
This opinion piece found on
The Hill's website (and other online sources) is by John P. Holdren, described as follows at the end of the
piece:
John P. Holdren, Ph.D., is the Teresa and John Heinz professor of environmental
policy in the Kennedy School of Government, professor of environmental science
and policy in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, and affiliated
professor in the Environmental Science and Engineering Division of the John
A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Science, all at Harvard University.
From 2009 to 2017, he was the science advisor to President Obama and the
Senate-confirmed director of the White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy.
As it is by no means certain that links to
this piece will be available in the future,
here's a screen shot from the piece of "five key conclusions [about the current
state of climate science]
recognized by competent climate scientists around the world as true
beyond any reasonable doubt." Of course, climate
skeptics and deniers will dispute these conclusions. Although
it is too often the case that commentators like to describe anyone
who agrees with their positions as "prominent in their
field," Dr. Holdren seems indisputably to fit such a
description.
Losses from 2012 Hurricane Sandy due to rising sea levels
This May 21, 2021,
article from the Philadelphia Inquirer summarizes
results from
a May 18, 2021,
Open Access article published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature
Communications. The article concludes that about $8.1 billion of the
$62.7 billion losses in New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut attributed
to the 2012 Superstorm Sandy can be linked directly to climate change-induced sea
level rise. According to the article, a rise in sea level of about 4" in the
last century forced coastal flooding farther inland, reaching 36,000 more
homes than would have otherwise have been the case.
The article specifically explains that land subsidence along the eastern U.S. sea coast
exacerbates the effects of global sea level rise, which in any case isn't uniform around
the globe. This is important because climate change critics like to point out that the effects of land
subsidence are too
often ignored when talking about increased flooding risks due to the real effects of rising
sea levels. It is, of course, possible to disagree with the authors' analysis. But, the facts that the
work has been peer-reviewed and available for download at no charge
serves to promote high-quality climate science research.
Opinion Piece, May 14, 2021: "Ignoring Climate change hasn't made it go away"
This NY Times
opinion piece about
"ignoring climate change," is by Eugene Robinson, a well-known
liberal columnist for this paper. It's up to readers to assess articles like this.
Does it present an honest appraisal of the current situation or is it too "alarmist"?
Some of what is
stated as fact is more nuanced than that. For example, the relationship between a warming
climate and oceans and hurricane frequency and intensity is complex and a topic of
extensive research and modeling by climate scientists. Statements about apparent sea level rise
are often not clear enough about the combined effects of actual rising sea levels and the
ground-based effects of land subsidence that's well-documented especially along the
U.S. east coast.
Nonetheless, I find this opinion piece to be a mostly straightforward and fair
summary of some negative anthropogenic influences on Earth's climate,
overwhelmingly accepted in general by
the Earth science community. The basic "political"
message of the piece (Mr. Robinson is a political commentator and not a
scientist of any kind)
is that the Biden administration is
letting science agencies do their jobs to deal
with the consequences of a changing global climate instead of populating those agencies
with political hacks and sidelining or removing anyone
who tries to deal with reality.
Small modular (nuclear) reactors (SMRs):
In the debate about how to move toward a fossil fuel-independent energy future,
the pros and cons of nuclear reactors play an important role. There's a vigorous ongoing debate
about whether nuclear reactors should be included in a mix of renewable energy
sources. Current reactor designs are incredibly expensive to build and have not
solved the problems of long-term waste product storage and operational modes
that can lead to catastrophic failures. What to do?
One promising new technology involves "inherently safe" designs for small reactors.
These so-called "small modular reactors" (SMRs) are intended to produce powers at least an order of magnitude smaller
than conventional reactors. In principle, they can be "factory produced" at much lower cost than
current very large reactors. They could then be used in relatively large numbers to "decentralize" the power grid,
which may increase security for our energy infrastructure. Another important
scenario is that SMRs could be
used as the "baseload" power sources that are required when dealing with intermittent power
sources that depend on renewable sources like wind and sun.
Quickly available baseload power generators are required to stabilize any power grid
that includes variable sources.
Here are two online articles and a youtube video that present
some facts, pro and con, about the future of SMRs. You can find many other online sources for
information on this topic.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Energy Working Group
YouTube video
EPA webpage about airborne particulates:
This webpage provides information and links about the "Health and Environmental Effects
of Particulate Matter (PM)." Airborne particulates can have serious health consequences,
especially in minority and under-served communities where residents are too-often exposed to
higher particulate concentrations and other environmental pollutants than other
communities. IESRE has devoted considerable
time to developing Arduino-based particulate sensors. See
HERE,
HERE, and
HERE.
James Hansen article, May 13, 2021:
This article discusses global temperature anomalies observed during April 2021.
For many years, James
Hansen has been a prominent voice arguing for more urgent action to reduce anthropogenic impacts
on Earth's climate and global warming. Some people, not restricted just to climate
change skeptics and
deniers, believe that his views are too alarmist and extreme. However, his academic
and professional climate science credentials, backed up by a very large
number of articles in peer-reviewed mournals, makes it impossible
to dismiss his views out-of-hand.
You can find more from Dr. Hansen on his website HERE.
NY Times article, May 13, 2021:
This article discusses the newly released 3o-year climate normals from NOAA. See also the the discussion
of the May 4 Washington Post
article on the same topic.
Washington Post article, May 5, 2021:
This article discusses studies presented recently in the highly respected peer-reviewed journal
Nature. (Nature's articles aren't available online without an expensive subscription to the journal. Larger
libraries may have the print version.)
These studies show how limiting global warming may alleviate potentially large sea level
rise from melting ice sheets in Antarctica. They also show how complicated this issue is for climate
scientists. The studies are based primarily on models and simulations,
rather than in situ observations, although there have also been recent data collection
efforts around the Antarctic glacier/sea interface that are a cause for concern.
Climate science skeptics and deniers like to criticize
model simulations as too likely to offer, to what they perceive as a gullible public,
"doomsday" scenarios that have no relationship to reality. However it's important to note that
model simulations can both under- and over-predict negative outcomes for the future.
Washington Post article, May 4, 2021:
NOAA unveils new U.S. climate 'normals' that are warmer than ever.
"Climate Normals" are 30-year mean values for weather
data such as air temperature. The new climate normals are based on the 30-year period
from 1991 to 2020, which can be compared with normals from previous 30-year periods. The lead for this NOAA effort, Michael Palecki, has also been
the lead on NOAA's Climate Reference Network, a national network of weather stations in
places where conditions have been, and will remain, protected from manmade alterations of the
local conditions around the stations.
The Washington Post article is based on data found
HERE
and HERE.
It's important to understand that changes in 30-year normals are not necessarily an indicator of
"climate change" – see the cited NOAA websites for more information. NOAA's Climate Reference Network
(see HERE) is designed to use stable sites and consistent instrumentation to eliminate the observational
complications from using the much larger network of weather stations, with sometimes questionable site
locations and quality controls, upon which the climate normals are based.
April 2021: NASA site about global temperature anomalies
HERE
is a link to a NASA site about global temperatures.
April 2021: Winter temperatures in the European Alps
HERE is an example of a misleading posting on the
wattsupwiththat.com website. It links to a video by a "ski researcher" discussing the fact that
winter temperatures have not increased very much in the European alps in recent decades.
The headline for the
video link is "Alps Winter Warming "Not Significant"..."Astonishing Contrast Between
Official Measurements and Public Opinion" in big bold type. But the "public opinion"
to which the the headline refers is specifically just those people who might be concerned about
ski conditions – the video presenter says as much. So, it is very
misleading to imply that there is some general "public" astonished by these observations.
And more importantly, text in the video states that "This data analysis is not suitable for
questioning current global climate change" science that predicts and observes
global warming and significant
regional warming in some locations. Also, it is not even necessarily true that the small rise
in winter temperatures over several decades is actually insignificant based on
standard mathematical definitions of statistical significance.
All the data sources used in the video are specified.
Here is a graph of yearly mean temperatures downloaded from
Sonnblick Observatory high in the Autrian Alps. These
data show a significant temperature increase following the start of the Industrial Revolution,
at a site that has not been influenced by development and other anthropogenic actions that can
sometimes introduce a "warm bias" into air temperature measurements.