Month: February 2017

20 New Papers Affirm Modern Climate Is In Phase With Natural Variability

20 New Papers Affirm Modern Climate Is In Phase With Natural Variability

via Climate Change Dispatchhttp://climatechangedispatch.com

Last week, the newly published Gagné et al. (2017) paper received some attention  because the authors pointed out that Arctic sea ice grew substantially between 1950 and 1975, consistent with the in-phase cooling trend during that period. Gagné et al., 2017  “Updated observational datasets without climatological infilling show that there was an increase in sea ice […]

via Climate Change Dispatch http://ift.tt/2jXMFWN

February 27, 2017 at 11:16PM

Britain’s Shale Revolution Faces Final Hurdles

Britain’s Shale Revolution Faces Final Hurdles

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)http://www.thegwpf.com

The UK is on the verge of becoming the only European country to pump shale gas and tap into potentially huge amounts of home-grown energy.

If, that is, it can get past an increasingly vocal band of anti-fracking activists.

The European shale gas revolution largely ended before it began. Protesters, armed with stories and expertise gathered in the United States, quickly rose up to block the controversial oil and gas drilling technique just as countries such as France, Germany, Poland and Bulgaria were starting to think about how to build on initial estimates of big new resources.

Britain refused to bend.

Grappling with fast-declining natural gas production in the British North Sea and the impending closure of dirty coal-fired power plants and old nuclear reactors, the Conservative government has remained steadfast in its support for shale gas — so much so that it unveiled a plan last summer to buy off local resistance with tax benefits and funding.

The push from London hasn’t stopped protesters in Kirby Misperton, a small village in the northern English county of Yorkshire, where the oil and gas company Third Energy plans to begin work to develop shale gas later this year. The demonstrators are building a tent city in a farmer’s field near the village, which they say will house hundreds by the time Third Energy moves onto the site.

Protests are already underway at England’s only other approved fracking location at Preston New Road in the northwest county of Lancashire, where demonstrators delay the energy firm Cuadrilla’s trucks as they try to drive onto the site each day.

Protesters gather near a fracking site in Great Plumpton near Blackpool, England | Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Protesters gather near a fracking site in Great Plumpton near Blackpool, England | Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
The bubbling opposition has given hope to the otherwise deeply unpopular Labour Party.

“There is a fairly solid resistance to fracking up here, not just from environmentalists, but from people worried about earth tremors and the value of their homes decreasing,” said Cat Smith, a Lancashire Labour MP and shadow minister for voter engagement and youth affairs. “If there are votes in it for Labour, then great.”

Local governments tend to be similarly wary of the ecological risks of fracking, where drillers inject water deep underground at high pressure to fracture the rock and release trapped gas. The Lancashire County Council, for instance, tried to block the Preston New Road project in 2015, but was overturned by the U.K.’s Communities Secretary Sajid Javid.

London sees shale gas as a potential bonanza that could replace fading gas output in the North Sea. The country needs to shore up new and existing energy sources to protect it from blackouts over the next decade. Brexit adds to that urgency, throwing new doubts over planned electricity and gas links with other EU countries and potentially adding new tariffs to energy imports from the bloc.

So Javid’s decision on Preston New Road is unlikely to be unique. The government is poised to overturn another planning decision for Lancashire later this year, and will also have a final say over four other planning decisions now before local councils.

To ease the blow, Prime Minister Theresa May unveiled new sweeteners last summer, promising councils that they can keep business taxes raised from fracking and creating a new shale fund that sets aside 10 percent of the tax proceeds from fracking to benefit local people.

“It’s about making sure people personally benefit from economic decisions that are taken,” May said when the decision was announced.

Full story

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

February 27, 2017 at 11:00PM

Leo flew eyebrow artist 7,500 miles to do his brows for the Oscars

Leo flew eyebrow artist 7,500 miles to do his brows for the Oscars

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAThttps://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Joe Public

 

 

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http://ift.tt/2l3eD9b

 

Even the failed Independent sees the hypocrisy!

 

How much effort do you put into the appearance of your eyebrows? Tinting? Threading? Pencilling in? Plucking the strays? Or perhaps nothing at all?

Well if you’re an A-lister with the eyes of the world watching, it seems no length is too extreme to ensure your brows are perfect.

Australian eyebrow-artist to the stars Sharon-Lee Hamilton was flown from Sydney to Los Angeles to tend to a select few celebrities’ brows before the 2017 Oscars.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire are reportedly two members of the Hollywood elite who insisted on Hamilton flying the 7,500 across the Pacific Ocean, despite DiCaprio’s environmental stance.

Hamilton has previously revealed that when travelling on request, her costs are covered.

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Words fail me!

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT http://ift.tt/16C5B6P

February 27, 2017 at 09:57PM

Weather Forecasters Predict El Niño May Return By Summer

Weather Forecasters Predict El Niño May Return By Summer

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF)http://www.thegwpf.com

The path to another round of El Niño in 2017 appears to be shortening, as tropical Pacific Ocean waters have been warming at a substantial rate. Several models suggest that El Niño could be comfortably in place as early as May.

ENSO-predictions

Weather forecasters have been eyeing for a couple of months a possible return this year of El Niño, which normally comes around every two to seven years and last occurred in 2015/16.

The El Niño-Southern Oscillation is one of the most widely followed long-term indicators of climate, as both its warm and cool phases can trigger varying effects on weather patterns globally.

El Niño, which is associated with warmer-than-normal sea surface temperatures (SSTs) along the equatorial Pacific, is known to bring volatile weather to some parts of the world and is closely watched by agricultural and energy markets. Some notable impacts include droughts in Southeast Asia and heavy rains and erosion along the Pacific coasts of North and South America.

La Niña, the cool phase of ENSO, just concluded its six-month run last month. In the last several weeks, remnants of the colder waters have been all but eliminated.

In the week centered on Feb. 22, the SST anomaly was positive 2.3 degrees Celsius in the Niño 1+2 region, the easternmost of the four Niño regions, directly off the coast of Peru. Warming in this region sometimes precedes the onset of El Niño.

elnino-2017

To put this into perspective, since weekly record-keeping began in 1990, the only other instances that featured warmer SST anomalies in this region occurred during the mega-El Niños of 2015/16 and 1997/98, as well as the moderate-to-strong El Niño in early 1992.

The week centered on Jan. 25, 2017, also recorded a 2-degree anomaly, so the latest value is not necessarily an outlier. But if this trend eventually translates into a full-on El Niño later in the year, the outcome would be unprecedented.

A record-breaking El Niño surfaced in mid-2015 and lasted through early 2016, after which SSTs dropped off and gave way to the relatively weaker La Niña event to cap off the year.

But following the previous occurrences of strong El Niño – 1997/98, 1982/83, 1972/73 – the warm cycle did not appear again until three or four years later. So the possible return of El Niño this year would present a unique situation against which there is not much comparable data.

FORECASTS IN FAVOR

This month for the first time, El Niño is the most favored scenario over neutral or La Niña conditions starting in July or August, according to the International Research Institute and the U.S. Climate Prediction Center. The probability for El Niño between August and October stands at 51 percent, while the chance of neutral is at 38 percent.

ENSO-forecast-2017

But some models are calling for El Niño’s arrival a bit earlier based on the progression of the SSTs in recent weeks.

Monday’s run of the CFS version 2 model, maintained by the U.S. National Centers for Environmental Prediction, shows steady El Niño conditions – SST anomalies of at least 0.5 degree Celsius – for most of the Northern Hemispheric spring and then a moderate to strong event in place by the summer.

The projections of the CFSv2 should be considered with caution, however, as the models are run each day with a shifting 10-day period of initial model conditions, meaning the output can be highly dependent on a small segment of time. However, other models have been increasingly leaning toward both El Niño and its earlier onset.

The latest chart of international ENSO forecast models compiled by IRI and CPC has shifted in a warmer direction compared with the previous update, and several models suggest that El Niño could be comfortably in place as early as May.

Full story

via The Global Warming Policy Forum (GWPF) http://www.thegwpf.com

February 27, 2017 at 09:28PM