Category Archives: organic gardening

Dot Earth Blog: Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First

A new modeling study finds that by mid-century many places on Earth, starting in the tropics, will have a fundamentally warmer climate. Read this article: Dot Earth Blog: Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First Related Articles By 2047, Coldest Years May Be Warmer Than Hottest in Past By 2047, Coldest Years May Be Warmer Than Hottest in Past, Scientists Say Despite Climate Concern, Global Study Finds Fewer Carbon Capture Projects

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Dot Earth Blog: Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First

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India Ink: Oil Spills Becoming Frequent Hazard for Fishermen Near Mumbai

The livelihood of a fishing community in Uran region of Maharashtra is affected by frequent oil spills, the latest one caused by a pipeline burst on Monday. View original post here: India Ink: Oil Spills Becoming Frequent Hazard for Fishermen Near Mumbai Related Articles Dot Earth Blog: Your Dot: On Walking Dogs and Warming Trends Study Finds Setbacks in Carbon Capture Projects Fiscal Crisis: Shutdown Is Affecting Energy and Environmental Programs

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India Ink: Oil Spills Becoming Frequent Hazard for Fishermen Near Mumbai

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Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First

A new modeling study finds that by mid-century many places on Earth, starting in the tropics, will have a fundamentally warmer climate. View original article – Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First Related Articles Your Dot: On Walking Dogs and Warming Trends By 2047, Coldest Years May Be Warmer Than Hottest in Past, Scientists Say By 2047, Coldest Years May Be Warmer Than Hottest in Past

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Countdown to a Hotter Climate – Tropics First

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Industry Still Churns, Even as Cleanup Plan Proceeds for a Canal

A $500 million plan will focus on the decades-old toxic muck at the bottom of the canal, though nearby businesses are still being cited for sometimes treating the canal like a waste dump. Link:  Industry Still Churns, Even as Cleanup Plan Proceeds for a Canal ; ;Related ArticlesAs Cleanup Plan Is Set for Gowanus Canal, Violations ContinueAfter the Floods in Colorado, a Deluge of Worry About Leaking OilThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs. ;

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Industry Still Churns, Even as Cleanup Plan Proceeds for a Canal

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National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch

According to the rules, the Atlantic herring fleet can incidentally catch no more than 311.4 metric tons of river herring and shad. More here:   National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch ; ;Related ArticlesThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.Matter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal ExtinctionsAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil ;

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National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch

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World Scientists Put Finishing Touches on Major Climate Report

In Stockholm, top climate experts are fueling up on coffee as they work through the night to synthesize five years of science. Activists erect a tribute to melting ice outside the IPCC’s meeting hall in Stockholm. Tim McDonnell/Climate Desk Today, on a walkway above Stockholm’s Riddarfjärden bay, four activists in red jumpsuits wrestled with three 2,400-pound chunks of ice. The ice, which will melt onto the sidewalk over the next two days, is meant as a reminder of melting glaciers above the Arctic Circle some 700 miles north of here—although this particular ice was hand-delivered by the same company that maintains Sweden’s famous ice hotel. A few steps away, dozens of top climate scientists from across the globe were sealed in a conference room inside an imposing brick compound that was once one of the city’s largest breweries. They’ve come to hash out last-minute details of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report, the last day of a week of tweaks and edits to cap off over five years of work. “We want to show that the climate change is real,” one of the activists, Valentina Restrepo, said. She’s not likely to face much resistance to that argument from the women and men behind the report: A leaked draft stated that global warming is “extremely likely” (or 95 percent certain) to be caused by human activities. When the report is officially released tomorrow morning, it will be the IPCC’s first global assessment of the state of climate science since 2007, and it’s expected to include updates on everything from how long carbon dioxide hangs out in the atmosphere, to the dangers posed by sea level rise, to the alleged “slowdown” in warming many climate skeptics have trumpeted in recent weeks. Stockholm’s Münchenbryggeriet, a former brewery where dozens of the world’s top climate scientists gathered this week to put the finishing touches on the next IPCC report. Tim McDonnell/Climate Desk But one question we’ll be asking scientists tomorrow goes beyond the science itself: Is a report like this really necessary? A criticism voiced by many scientists, both within and outside of the IPCC, is that while early iterations of the report were essential tools for alerting policymakers to the dangers of climate change, this fifth report is unlikely to differ significantly from the last report six years ago (which won a Nobel Prize for laying “the foundation” for climate solutions), calling into question the value of dedicating time and resources to re-producing it in its current format. “If it were up to me, there would not be an AR6 (Sixth Assessment Report),” atmospheric scientist Andrew Dessler told our friends at Climate Central. There is no original science conducted for these reports; instead, scientists meticulously aggregate, review, and summarize existing literature. While that sounds like a worthwhile endeavor in theory, the amount of time required means that some science (like, as my colleague Chris Mooney reported, on the effects of warming on hurricanes) might be already obsolete by the time it comes out. Of course, the policymakers who rely on the IPCC to inform their practical approaches to climate change aren’t suggesting that the group disband, but rather break the massive report into more manageable and regularly-issued chunks, according to a survey of participating countries the IPCC conducted earlier this year. This way, the government bureaus that deal with, say, ocean issues, wouldn’t have to sift through a stack of papers on volcanoes to find what’s relevant for them. A new format is one thing that’ll be on the table when members of the group re-convene in Batumi, Georgia, next month. No matter what form the report takes in the future, its top-line findings tomorrow will form the backbone of climate talking points for at least the next five years, and in Stockholm the coffee is flowing as scientists gear up for a long night of finishing touches (into the “early a.m.,” one wrote to us). Climate Desk will be on the scene all day tomorrow, with live updates from IPCC scientists and other analysis, so stay tuned. Read this article:  World Scientists Put Finishing Touches on Major Climate Report ; ;Related ArticlesWTF is the IPCC?4 Climate Myths You’ll Hear This WeekWATCH: What’s Really Going on With Arctic Sea Ice? ;

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World Scientists Put Finishing Touches on Major Climate Report

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The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.

Texas ranchers are crucial to the protection of the declining lesser prairie chicken, but they must set aside their deep suspicion of government efforts. Source:  The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs. ; ;Related ArticlesNational Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring CatchMatter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal ExtinctionsAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil ;

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The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.

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After the Floods in Colorado, a Deluge of Worry About Leaking Oil

As waters recede from Colorado’s drilling epicenter, the sight of drowning oil wells has inflamed the debate over the environment. From:  After the Floods in Colorado, a Deluge of Worry About Leaking Oil ; ;Related ArticlesAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about OilThe Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.National Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring Catch ;

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After the Floods in Colorado, a Deluge of Worry About Leaking Oil

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After the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil

As waters recede from Colorado’s drilling epicenter, the sight of drowning oil wells has inflamed the debate over the environment. See the article here –  After the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil ; ;Related ArticlesFight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of IdahoMatter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal ExtinctionsOp-Ed Contributor: A Pause, Not an End, to Warming ;

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After the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil

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4 Climate Myths You’ll Hear This Week

‘Tis the season of climate denial. Be prepared.<!–more–> Your uncle, yelling at you about how global warming has stopped Jinga/Shutterstock and Jessica Robertson/USGS Leading into Friday’s upcoming release of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report, climate skeptics have gone into overdrive. They’re doing anything they can to undermine public acceptance of the dangers posed by global warming, which, at least according to a leaked draft of the report, is “extremely likely” (or, 95 percent certain) to be caused by human activities. Unfortunately, much of this glut of misinformation is likely to make its way to people in your life—whether it’s your congressman, your favorite talk radio host, or even your family. Heck, this stuff might even pop up in a heated conversation over your dinner table with your Uncle Larry (who always seems to be dying to argue about climate change). To prepare you, here’s the truth about four myths you’re likely to hear about climate science and the IPCC report: Myth 1: Global warming has stopped. Perhaps the most prominent attack on climate science right now centers on the claim that global warming is “slowing down,” sometimes followed by insinuations that scientists don’t understand why this is happening, or even that they have tried to cover it up. On occasion, this attack gets stretched into the assertion that global warming has stopped entirely over the past decade and a half, or even is just plain “over.” Possibly the strongest articulation yet of the meme came from Republican Rep. David McKinley of West Virginia, who said last week that there has been “almost no increase in temperature” in the last 40 years. Globally averaged surface temperatures, by decade (includes combined land and sea surface temperatures) World Meteorological Organization But that’s just incorrect, as the figure above from the World Meteorological Organization, marking global average temperatures by decade, clearly shows. Global warming hasn’t stopped at all. What’s actually happening is that the rate of surface warming has slowed somewhat over the past decade or more, probably because more heat has gone into the planet’s oceans. In other words, the excess heat is still here in the Earth system; it’s just not where we typically measure it. “Global warming is alive and well,” climate scientist Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research explained to me last month, “but about 30 percent of the heat is going deeper into the ocean.” At the same time, an increase in volcanic eruptions also seems to have generated a slight and temporary cooling influence that’s offsetting some of the warming effect of carbon dioxide, by reflecting some sunlight away from the planet. But none of this is a reason not to worry about climate change. Climate researchers say it’s likely that this temporary global warming slowdown will soon subside and warming will snap back, perhaps stronger than before. Myth 2: Arctic sea ice is recovering. One of the most dramatic indicators of global warming was last summer’s record low in the extent of Arctic sea ice—a drop that was 18 percent below the previous low in 2007. Since nothing about global warming suggests that you break a new record every successive year, it’s not surprising that the Arctic sea ice melt was less dramatic this year. This year’s seasonal low in ice extent was merely the sixth-lowest level on record. Somehow, global warming skeptics found a way to call this good news. In particular, the Mail on Sunday in the United Kingdom ran an article hailing a “rebound” in sea ice and pronouncing that “And now it’s global cooling!” Because 2013 did not beat 2012′s record, and was only the sixth-lowest sea ice extent on record, skeptics celebrated an “increase of 60 percent.” Actually, here’s what’s happening to Arctic sea ice when you include, er, context: The decline in Arctic sea ice extent. National Snow and Ice Data Center. No wonder political psychologists have recently found that ideology can wreck your ability to do math. For a thorough debunking of sea ice misinformation, see this video with astronomer and reality-based blogger extraordinaire, Phil Plait. Myth 3: Growing Antarctic ice undermines global-warming concerns. Lately skeptics have also been drawing attention Antarctic sea ice, which just hit a 35-year record high. Rush Limbaugh actually appears to have gotten confused over this, claiming recently on his show that Arctic ice was at a record extent, before correcting himself and realizing that he meant Antarctica—the place with, you know, the penguins rather the polar bears. Visualization of Antarctic temperature changes. NASA Earth Observatory That Antarctic sea ice has been growing of late is not in dispute, but again, this is no refutation of global warming. Scientists are currently trying to figure out why Antarctic sea ice is increasing, and one theory points to stronger winds due to a stronger polar vortex—a phenomenon apparently capable of overcoming a general warming of the Southern Ocean. Overall, it is important to understand that the Antarctic is very different from the Arctic. As Michael Lemonick of Climate Central puts it: The Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land, while the Antarctic is land surrounded by ocean. In the Arctic, moreover, you’ve got sea ice decreasing in the summer; at the opposite pole, you’ve got sea ice increasing in the winter. It’s not just an apples-and-oranges comparison: it’s more like comparing apple pie with orange juice. The IPCC’s leaked draft report says scientists have “low confidence” in their understanding of what’s going on with Antarctic sea ice. It also predicts, with “low confidence,” that this ice too will decline by the end of the century. In other words: Antarctica is complicated, remote, and little understood. All of which, incidentally, highlights why you should trust scientists on climate change: They know what they don’t know and are honest about it, as the Antarctica case shows. That’s why, when they express 95 percent confidence that humans are driving global warming (in the same report that confesses a relative lack of understanding of what’s happening with Antarctic sea ice), it is worth paying attention. Myth 4: Global warming won’t be a big deal; it might even be good for you. As usual, there are more- and less-nuanced climate skeptics. Among the former, one of the most popular arguments is that global warming won’t be as bad as previously thought. One recent version of this argument was articulated by British science writer Matt Ridley, who argued in the Wall Street Journal that the leaked IPCC report “dials back the alarm” on global warming. Similarly, climate change contrarian Bjorn Lomborg is now arguing that the new report will support a “moderate climate change message,” rendering “alarmist scenarios ever more implausible.” All of this is pretty hard to believe, given that IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri has recently stated that when it comes to the climate issue, it’s “five minutes before midnight.” But let’s consider the arguments for a more modest global warming, starting with Ridley’s. Matt Ridley, author of The Rational Optimist (2010), thinks global warming will be on the low end. Wikimedia Commons Ridley draws our attention to a small change to the low end scientific estimate of how sensitive the climate is likely to be to a doubling of carbon dioxide emissions. In 2007, the IPCC put the low end of this range at 2 degrees Celsius; now—at least according to the leaked draft report—it is 1.5 degrees. The upper end of the range has not changed: It is 4.5 degrees Celsius. Does this 0.5-degree shift matter? Although the rosiest scenario may have gotten slightly rosier, there’s no reason to assume we’ll be so lucky, or that global warming will be mild. Rebutting Ridley in the Wall Street Journal letters section, climate scientist John Abraham of the University of St. Thomas put it like this: Basically, he is arguing that the Earth may undergo a slow simmer, whereas most scientists think it will be a faster boil. Either way, the consequences are enormous. And there’s another problem with Ridley’s outlook. Much of his op-ed focused on how much warming we’ll see in the next 70 years or so—in fact, he argues that by 2083, the “benefits of climate change” may “still outweigh the harm.” Abraham counters that “we are already seeing economic and ecological damage, including increased precipitation in some regions, with consequent flooding, more severe drought in other regions, increased storms, heat waves and rising sea levels.” In any case, the IPCC draft report plainly says that global warming will continue well past the year 2100. That’s only the beginning. The draft report explains that we can expect some of the carbon that we’ve emitted to stay in the atmosphere for over 1,000 years and for warming to continue for “several centuries.” The report implies that over the long term, sea levels could eventually rise on the order 5 to 10 meters (other scientists have placed ithigher still). Lomborg, for his part, acknowledges that global warming is a “problem,” just a modest one. “The IPCC’s predictions do not support alarmist predictions of global temperature rise that are often in the order of 5ºC (9ºF) and 1-2 meters (3-6) feet of sea level rise—not to mention Al Gore’s 6 meters (20 feet),” he claims. Yet much of this may depend on your time frame, as we’ve seen. The upshot is that nobody can be absolutely certain which scenario for global warming in the 21st century will actually be realized. The question is, and has always been, about managing risks—risks not just for us, but risks to our children, grandchildren, and untold future generations if we leave them a badly damaged planet. Ridley and Lomborg could be right that global warming will still be relatively mild after 70 years, and will stay on the low end. But can we really take that chance? Link:  4 Climate Myths You’ll Hear This Week ; ;Related ArticlesWTF is the IPCC?WATCH: What’s Really Going on With Arctic Sea Ice?Watch: Congressman Makes “Completely Wrong” Claim About Temperature ;

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4 Climate Myths You’ll Hear This Week

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