Tag Archives: floods

How Top GOP Donors Got Jeb Bush to Facilitate a Hurricane Katrina Cruise-Ship Boondoggle

A quarter billion dollars later, the ships sat half empty. Then Florida Gov. Jeb Bush visits the Miami-Dade Emergency Operations Center the Friday after Hurricane Katrina passed through in August, 2005. Lannis Waters/Palm Beach Post/ZUMA Trailing Donald Trump in the polls by a widening margin, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is trying to use the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina on Saturday to highlight his successes in crisis response. On Tuesday, his presidential campaign released a two-minute ad promoting Bush’s handling of hurricanes as governor. Bush has been widely praised for his response to Katrina, in contrast with the criticism his brother, George W. Bush, faced as president in addressing the disaster. But one thing Jeb Bush is not likely to mention on the anniversary is how he helped Carnival Cruise Lines—via a major GOP donor—land a quarter-billion-dollar federal contract to house people displaced by the hurricane. The fast-tracked contract sent $236 million to the Florida-based cruise company, but the ships sat half empty for weeks, according to the Associated Press, which wrote in 2006 that the deal “has been criticized by lawmakers of both parties as a prime example of wasted spending in Hurricane Katrina-related contracts.” Read the rest at Mother Jones. Original link –  How Top GOP Donors Got Jeb Bush to Facilitate a Hurricane Katrina Cruise-Ship Boondoggle ; ; ;

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How Top GOP Donors Got Jeb Bush to Facilitate a Hurricane Katrina Cruise-Ship Boondoggle

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The forecast for the next century? Scary with a chance of dying

The forecast for the next century? Scary with a chance of dying

By on 23 Jun 2015commentsShare

Time for a quiz! Climate change will increase the size and frequency of which of the following?

A) Droughts B) Floods C) Hurricanes or D) Blizzards.

Sorry — trick question! A new study in medical journal The Lancet adds more credence to the theory that climate change will bring more of E) All of the above — and what’s more, that many more people will be directly endangered by these natural turbo-disasters. Since most climate assessments look at models averaged over the whole globe — including huge unpopulated swaths like, say, the Pacific Ocean (no shade to whales) — this study offers new insight by focusing on where (and how) actual humans are living.

The New York Times explains:

The report, published online Monday, analyzes the health effects of recent episodes of severe weather that scientists have linked to climate change. It provides estimates of the number of people who are likely to experience the effects of climate change in coming decades, based on projections of population and demographic changes.

The report estimates that the exposure of people to extreme rainfall will more than quadruple and the exposure of people to drought will triple compared to the 1990s. In the same time span, the exposure of the older people to heat waves is expected to go up by a factor of 12, according to Peter Cox, one of the authors, who is a professor of climate-system dynamics at the University of Exeter in Britain. …

Says Cox: “We are saying, let’s look at climate change from the perspective of what people are going to experience, rather than as averages across the globe,” he said. “We have to move away from thinking of this as a problem in atmospheric physics. It is a problem for people.”

Wait just one second: Is this a study that focuses on the actual, meaningful impacts that climate change will have on the lives of humans, as opposed to the parts per million of carbon in the atmosphere? Yes, please, scientists!

Source:
Risk of Extreme Weather From Climate Change to Rise Over Next Century, Report Says

, New York Times.

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The forecast for the next century? Scary with a chance of dying

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Shrinkage: Arctic ponds are the new George Costanzas

Shrinkage: Arctic ponds are the new George Costanzas

By on 12 Mar 2015commentsShare

It’s official: Climate change is making the world’s water its bitch. We’ve got droughts, floods, funky precipitation, melting glaciers — it’s H2O anarchy out there! And now, as if things weren’t bad enough, we’ve got shrinkage.

In a study published this week in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, researchers from the University of Texas at El Paso report that Arctic ponds are becoming smaller and fewer, thanks, at least in part, to rising temperatures (unlike the more familiar form of shrinkage that results from decreasing temperatures).

The researchers focused specifically on the upper Barrow Peninsula in Alaska, where temperatures during the long winters average about 10 degrees Fahrenheit and during the short summers about 40 degrees F. Comparing old black-and-white aerial photos from the military to newer satellite images and photos taken from a kite-bound camera, they found that, between 1948 and 2013, the ponds in this region shrank about 30 percent in area and about 17 percent in number.

Arctic pond shrinkage between 1948 and 2010Christian Andresen / UTEP

During that same time period, the average summer temperature in the Barrow Peninsula increased by about 3.6 degrees F. That rise, according to the researchers, could be causing more evaporation from the ponds. It could also be causing more thawing of the frozen, nutrient-rich soil known as permafrost, which, in turn, would cause more plants to encroach on the newly warm and nutrient-rich waters.

“Before you know it, boom, the pond is gone,” the study’s lead author, Christian Andresen, said in a press release.

The images below show how plants took over a pond between 1976 and 2012.

A scientists sampling one of the Arctic ponds in 1976. Christian Andresen / UTEP

Christian Andresen at the same spot, now covered in plants, in 2012. Christian Andresen / UTEP

Andresen also pointed out that this shrinkage could cause problems in the long run:

The role of ponds in the Arctic is extremely important. History tells us that ponds tend to enlarge over hundreds of years and eventually become lakes; ponds shape much of this landscape in the long run, and with no ponds there will be no lakes for this region.

Fewer and smaller ponds could also have impacts on local wildlife and the rate of carbon exchange between the land and atmosphere, Andresen and his colleague say.

So there you have it. Shrinkage. I have to admit, I feel relieved. I was worried that this was going to be awkward, but now that it’s out there, I think we can all agree that it’s just part of life and move on. And of course, by move on, I mean wait anxiously for the next bit of frightening news about what climate change is doing to our planet.

Source:
Ponds are disappearing in the Arctic

, newswise.

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Shrinkage: Arctic ponds are the new George Costanzas

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On the Environment: Flooding Risk From Climate Change, Country by Country

A new analysis of sea levels and flood risk around the world offers more evidence that the brunt of climate change will not be borne equally. Read this article: On the Environment: Flooding Risk From Climate Change, Country by Country ; ; ;

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On the Environment: Flooding Risk From Climate Change, Country by Country

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Catastrophic Floods Hit Balkans, Raising Fears for Land Mines and Power Plants

Torrential rains have fed flooding that has killed dozens in Serbia and Bosnia, with officials saying the region has not seen damage on the same scale since in the 1992-95 civil war. View this article:  Catastrophic Floods Hit Balkans, Raising Fears for Land Mines and Power Plants ; ;Related ArticlesCalifornia Wildfires Spread Across Hills, Leveling HomesMatter: When Predators Vanish, So Does the EcosystemThe Science Behind Forest Fires ;

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Catastrophic Floods Hit Balkans, Raising Fears for Land Mines and Power Plants

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Rising Seas + Dams + Aquifer Pumping = Delta Blues

Dams, water pumping and global warming are combining to threaten crowded delta regions. Source:   Rising Seas + Dams + Aquifer Pumping = Delta Blues ; ;Related ArticlesClimate Change Art: That Sinking FeelingFacing Rising Seas, Bangladesh Confronts the Consequences of Climate ChangeDot Earth Blog: Climate Change Art: That Sinking Feeling ;

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Rising Seas + Dams + Aquifer Pumping = Delta Blues

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Facing Rising Seas, Bangladesh Confronts the Consequences of Climate Change

Though countries like Bangladesh have contributed little to the industrial pollution driving climate change, they will suffer the most from the devastating consequences. See the original post:  Facing Rising Seas, Bangladesh Confronts the Consequences of Climate Change ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: Climate Change Art: That Sinking FeelingMost Chinese Cities Fail Pollution Standard, China SaysNew Mexico Reaps Pecan Bounty as Other States Struggle ;

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Facing Rising Seas, Bangladesh Confronts the Consequences of Climate Change

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Dot Earth Blog: Climate Change Art: That Sinking Feeling

A sculptor’s view of politicians yammering in the face of rising seas and a warming climate. View article: Dot Earth Blog: Climate Change Art: That Sinking Feeling ; ;Related ArticlesClimate Change Art: That Sinking FeelingDeadly Landslide in Washington StateObservatory: These Vultures Get First Dibs on the Good Parts ;

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Dot Earth Blog: Climate Change Art: That Sinking Feeling

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Which is more likely to drive people from their homes — floods or heat waves?

Which is more likely to drive people from their homes — floods or heat waves?

Anduze traveller

It’s mighty dry out there …

Floods get a lot of attention in our warming world. They can kill people and livestock, inundate crops, destroy infrastructure and homes — and they make great photo ops. Less attention — and less international aid — is directed to victims of intense heat waves that are also linked to climate change.

But it is these heat waves that are most responsible when Pakistanis leave their villages, new research suggests.

Pakistan is a depressing climate case study because its residents are so vulnerable to global warming. The country is poor, it floods easily, and it can be hotter than hell (if your idea of hell is, say, Afghanistan, just to Pakistan’s north).

Researchers analyzed weather records and 21 years worth of survey data of 522 households in rural Pakistan in an attempt to figure out which extreme weather phenomena might be driving villagers from their homes. Migration rates were rather low — about 1 or 2 percent of residents left their villages during the 21 years. But when they did leave, the reason for the migration was often linked to a heat wave. Heat waves are worsening in the region as the climate changes.

Women and men were found to respond to heat waves by leaving their villages, but men were more likely to move vast distances. From the scientists’ new paper, published last week in the journal Nature Climate Change:

Pakistan is highly vulnerable to climate change and involuntary displacement. …

Agricultural income suffers tremendously when temperatures are extremely hot — wiping out over a third of farming income. Non-farm income also experiences losses from heat stress, but to a lesser extent (16%). …

We find that flooding — a climate shock associated with large relief efforts — has modest to insignificant impacts on migration. Heat stress, however — which has attracted relatively little relief — consistently increases the long-term migration of men, driven by a negative effect on farm and non-farm income.

Floods play better than heat waves on television, but this research, combined with growing scientific alarm over skyrocketing numbers of deaths around the world linked to heat stress, highlights why we also need to be paying attention to some of the less photogenic symptoms of a warming globe.


Source
Heat stress increases long-term human migration in rural Pakistan, Nature Climate Change

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Which is more likely to drive people from their homes — floods or heat waves?

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Rising Tide Is a Mystery That Sinks Island Hopes

Lago Enriquillo in the Dominican Republic, the largest lake in the Caribbean, has been rising and rising, devouring tens of thousands of acres of farmland, ranches and whatever else stands in its way. Source –  Rising Tide Is a Mystery That Sinks Island Hopes ; ;Related ArticlesAppeals Court Upholds BP Oil Spill SettlementDefying Japan, Rancher Saves Fukushima’s Radioactive CowsThe Wait Continues for Safe Tap Water in West Virginia ;

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Rising Tide Is a Mystery That Sinks Island Hopes

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