A
New Year message
SeemorerocksNew Year's Day is a good day to reflect on what's important - and what's not.
There are a lot of people who are chasing after stories that I can only all peripheral.
I can only recommend that they listen to these words of the late Mike Ruppert from last New Year. If you have heard this before, I suggest you listen again and really internalise what is being said.
As time goes on and it becomes more and more evident that we are locked into a spiral of abrupt and castastrophic climate change; the collapse of the infinite growth myth and of human civilisation; of a human species that is moving to destroy itself through the release of nuclear ionising radiation and war.
This has made me less tolerant of debate about peripheral issues and more and more understanding of Mike Ruppert's shortness and irritation at people who refused to see the wood for the trees.
Just today I have had someone say that they INSIST on a discussion of geoengineering (in particular HAARP, which they think is being used to melt the Arctic.
Well, it doesn't really matter any more, does it?
Anthropogenic climate change has now triggered processes that are self-feeding, so that climate change is no longer purely anthropogenic any more. If we stopped putting greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere (which is a bit like hoping the cow's going to jump over the mean) it will be to little avail.
The genie's out of the bottle.
So, I am saying - I will not engage in such discussion any more.
I am quite capable of looking at distractions (and, indeed, post them on this blog) but I do not - even for a single moment - lose иsight what is important.
----Seemorerocks
I will leave you with these comments on Facebook from climate scientist Jason Box, expressing his own irritation with the nonsense that goes down at sites like Climate Change Discussion
It's pretty clear to me as a professional scientist there are a lot of folk in this Facebook group:
It's pretty clear to me as a professional scientist there are a lot of folk in this Facebook group:
a.) grasping scientifically lame reasons
there is no human induced climate problem. I mean denying elevated
CO2 causes warming is pretty ignorant of basic physics;
b.)
ideologically against regulation in any form and through that lens
grasping pseudoskepticism;
c.) sadists who take joy from throwing
verbal daggers;
d.) invoking conspiracy theories to brush aside
difficult truths. meanwhile, outside of this smelly back alley of the
internet, people are actually making the world better for our kids
and more prosperous through energy technology that does not choke the
air, give cancer, burn the Gulf of Mexico, etc.
---Jason
Box
Here are a few more articles and bits and pieces.
More records go down....
Seventeen
U.S. Cities on Track for Hottest Year
30
December, 2014
The
globe is on track for its warmest
year on record.
But global average temperature watchers won't be the only ones feting
record heat when the clock strikes midnight on Wednesday. A number
of U.S. urban areas will also join in the record-setting festivities
while not a single major urban area will be raising a glass to record
cold. In fact, it's been nearly 30 years since a major U.S. city had
a record cold year.
Climate
Central conducted analysis of the 125 largest metropolitan areas in
the U.S. (though 11 were weeded out due to insufficient data), which
showed that 17 are slated to have their hottest year on record.
Every metro area primed for a record warm year sits to the west of
the Rockies. The heat follows Interstate 5 from Seattle down through
Portland, Sacramento and San Diego with detours to San Francisco,
Fresno and Modesto before heading east to Las Vegas, Phoenix,
Reno and Tucson. Salt Lake City, Los Angeles and El Paso are among
other western metro areas also in line for one of their top 5 warmest
years.
Perhaps
not surprisingly, the five states with record-setting cities —
Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington — are all on
track for one of their top 5 warmest years. Of those five states,
California has 10 of the 17 hottest cities, in part because it's such
a huge urban state, but also because the heat there has been so
extreme this year.
As of November, the state was running about 2°F above its previous
hottest year, a surprisingly high margin in a world where temperature
records are usually set by tenths or hundredths of degrees. Some
Californian metro areas such as Bakersfield and Vallejo also beat
their previous high records by about 2°F while the Santa Maria-Santa
Barbara area is set to beat its old record by nearly 3°F.
The
heat in the western U.S. come courtesy of a big ridge of high
pressure that's been in parked in place for a chunk of the year,
trapping warm weather. That pattern has turbocharged
California's drought and
some research has tied the development and longevity of that
ridge to climate change.
THE
HOT 17
Click each metro area to see how 2014 stacks up |
Arizona: Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, Tucson
California: Bakersfield, Fresno, Modesto, Sacramento-Roseville-Arden-Arcade, Salinas,San Diego-Carlsbad, San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, Santa Maria-Santa Barbara, Stockton-Lodi,Vallejo-Fairfield, Visalia-Porterville Nevada: Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, Reno Oregon: Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro Washington: Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue |
The
17 metro areas that will set records in 2014 have a population of
28.5 million, or about 9 percent of the U.S. population. In
comparison, the metro areas that set a cold record this year are home
to a population of exactly zero.
Not
a single urban area in the U.S. experienced record cold, despite
the cold
air outbreaks that
froze much of the East for the first few months of the year. Some
metro areas, such Kansas City, Mo., and Fayetville, Ark., are headed
for a top 10 coldest year, but most major cities east of the
Mississippi had just cool or near-average temperatures.
It's
been 29 years since any urban area in the U.S. has notched a record
cold year. The last metro area to feel the big chill? That would be a
three-way tie between Kansas City, Mo., Spokane, Wash., and Boise
City, Idaho, in 1985. That year, incidentally, is also the last time
the globe experienced a colder-than-average month, with February
1985 taking
the honors.
And
when it comes to global record coldest year, you'd have to go back
even further. Way further in fact. It's been over a century since the
world's coldest
year on record with
1909 setting the record and 1911 tying it.
Going
back to 1880 — the year recordkeeping began — the global average
temperature has risen by 1.5°F. In the U.S., temperatures have risen
about 2°F since 1895 with a large portion of that rise coming since
1970. That rise in temperatures has also helped increase the number
of daily record highs set compared
to record lows.
If greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated, the U.S. average
temperature could climb up to another 10°F by the end of the 21st
century.
The ocean is swallowing up parts of Virginia....
The
ocean is swallowing up Virginia so rapidly that its leaders are
forgetting to bicker about climate change
31
December, 2014
The
usual US partisan divisions over climate change were absent
today in the state of Virginia, where Republican and Democratic
officials met to discuss what to do about the threat of rising
sea levels to the state. The proposals include the launch of a
climate-change task force, which Virginia’s Democratic governor
will announce tomorrow. Christina DeConcini, government affairs
director at the World Resources Institute, a research organization,
told Quartz this is the first time to her knowledge that
Republican leaders (very
few of whom accept global
warming is both real and man-made) and Democratic ones have come
together to craft a policy on global warming.
That’s
probably because Virginia is more vulnerable to storm-surge
destruction than anywhere else on the US’s east coast.
Problems are particularly acute in Norfolk, Virginia’s
second-biggest city and home to the world’s largest naval
base; sea levels there are now 14.5 inches (37 cm) higher than
they were in 1930—so high that parts of Norfolk
flood when
the moon is full.
Sea levels are rising faster there than anywhere else along the
coast, due to the vagaries of ocean currents:
Sewells
Point is a peninsula off Norfolk."(Natural Resources Defense Council)
“A
severe Category 2 or a Category 3 storm—if we were to receive a
direct hit, almost all of the city would be underwater,” Paul
Fraim, Norfolk’s mayor, told
National Public Radio in
2012.
This
doesn’t mean that high tide is lapping at Virginians’ front
doors. The main danger comes when storms pummel the coasts with huge
waves, which are amplified by tidal forces. Here’s an
illustration of how high tides and storm surges, as they’re called,
differ:
("Virginia Hurricane Evacuation
Guide")
As
you can see in the chart below, huge storm surges are becoming more
frequent. (Also not shown here is the 5.17
foot surge from Hurricane Sandy in
2012):
(Natural Resources Defense Council)
Worse,
scientists expect sea levels in southern Virginia to rise at
least a foot (30 cm) and perhaps as much as three feet by
2060. Moreover, that’s only accounting for the sea-level rise.
Factoring in subsidence—sinking land—Virginia’s
tides could be eight
feet higher by
2100 in some areas, according to a study by Virginia Institute
of Marine Science, with about six of those feet from sea-level alone.
This
is a big problem for coastal Virginia given that the military,
tourism and its ports generate a hefty share of the state’s
economic output, as well as hundreds of thousands of jobs. Homeowners
and insurers, however, are likely to sustain the biggest blow. A
three-foot rise in sea-levels would inundate the homes of
between 59,000 and 176,000 Virginia residents, according to WRI.
(Hampton Roads Planning District
Commission\
But
these nightmare scenarios aren’t confined to Virginia alone;
they’re very much a national-level threat. Coastal
counties generate just under half of US GDP and support
tens of millions of jobs. In the 18 states that abut the Atlantic,
the insured value of residential and commercial property
totals $10.6 trillion; New
York and Florida account for $2.9 trillion apiece. Whether
leaders in other states can put aside partisan differences and follow
Virginia’s lead, however, is another question.
Glaciers are disappearing.....
And lakes....
Thanks for reminding me :=(. We are all f...ked!
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