Month: September 2017

Genius plan to save world by banning two-stroke lawn mowers, weed whackers, outboard boat motors.

Cory Bernardi outlines legislation that has just passed banning 2-stroke motors from 2019 — meaning lawn mowers, leaf blowers, chainsaws, weed whackers, and outboard boat motors. In Australia mowers and fishing tinnies are heritage material. It’s a new carbon tax by stealth, pretending to be about health.

h/t to  Tim Blair who adds a movie of Australians dancing with lawn mowers for the Sydney Olympic opening ceremony (just to give you foreigners some appreciation of how attached Australians are to them).

Stock up now. You may not be able to buy them (legally) after 2019. I predict a high black market value.

Bernardi argues that theoretically this ruling could be extended to farm machinery, quad bikes, and off road dirt bikes.

Why did One Nation vote for this?  Oops…

At Tim Blairs: Commenter Bruce there suggest this will apply to some model aircraft engines too.

Commenter P says:    Temperatures will plummet and we’ll be thrown back into an ice age. Election now.

 

 

Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

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September 14, 2017 at 11:52PM

Everything you know about climate comedy you learnt from me, and it was bollocks—Part I

  What a fool I’ve been. What a handsome, persuasive fool. Don’t feel too bad if I fooled you too, which I did. Heck, I’m so charismatic I even fooled myself. But first, some basic definitions. The Science is the myth that physical evidence exists for the urgent net dangerousness of man-caused climate change. If … Continue reading

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September 14, 2017 at 08:38PM

Study: Now we have to worry about climatic ‘existential’ threats

New climate risk classification created to account for potential ‘existential’ threats

Researchers identify a one-in-20 chance of temperature increase causing catastrophic damage or worse by 2050

From the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA – SAN DIEGO

A new study evaluating models of future climate scenarios has led to the creation of the new risk categories “catastrophic” and “unknown” to characterize the range of threats posed by rapid global warming. Researchers propose that unknown risks imply existential threats to the survival of humanity.

Researchers projected warming scenarios that vary based on what societal actions are taken to reduce emissions. CREDIT Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego

These categories describe two low-probability but statistically significant scenarios that could play out by century’s end, in a new study by Veerabhadran Ramanathan, a distinguished professor of climate and atmospheric sciences at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego, and his former Scripps graduate student Yangyang Xu, now an assistant professor at Texas A&M University.

The risk assessment stems from the objective stated in the 2015 Paris Agreement regarding climate change that society keep average global temperatures “well below” a 2°C (3.6°F) increase from what they were before the Industrial Revolution.

Even if that objective is met, a global temperature increase of 1.5°C (2.7°F) is still categorized as “dangerous,” meaning it could create substantial damage to human and natural systems. A temperature increase greater than 3°C (5.4°F) could lead to what the researchers term “catastrophic” effects, and an increase greater than 5°C (9°F) could lead to “unknown” consequences which they describe as beyond catastrophic including potentially existential threats. The specter of existential threats is raised to reflect the grave risks to human health and species extinction from warming beyond 5° C, which has not been experienced for at least the past 20 million years.

The scientists term warming probability of five percent or less as a “low-probability high-impact” scenario and assess such scenarios in the analysis “Well Below 2°C: Mitigation strategies for avoiding dangerous to catastrophic climate changes,” which will appear in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Sept. 14.

Ramanathan and Xu also describe three strategies for preventing the gravest threats from taking place.

“When we say five percent-probability high-impact event, people may dismiss it as small but it is equivalent to a one-in-20 chance the plane you are about to board will crash,” said Ramanathan. “We would never get on that plane with a one-in-20 chance of it coming down but we are willing to send our children and grandchildren on that plane.”

The researchers defined the risk categories based on guidelines established by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and previous independent studies. “Dangerous” global warming includes consequences such as increased risk of extreme weather and climate events ranging from more intense heat waves, hurricanes, and floods, to prolonged droughts. Planetary warming between 3°C and 5°C could trigger what scientists term “tipping points” such as the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and subsequent global sea-level rise, and the dieback of the Amazon rainforest. In human systems, catastrophic climate change is marked by deadly heat waves becoming commonplace, exposing over 7 billion people to heat related mortalities and famine becoming widespread. Furthermore, the changes will be too rapid for most to adapt to, particularly the less affluent, said Ramanathan.

Risk assessments of global temperature rise greater than 5°C have not been undertaken by the IPCC. Ramanathan and Xu named this category “unknown??” with the question marks acknowledging the “subjective nature of our deduction.” The existential threats could include species extinctions and major threats to human water and food supplies in addition to the health risks posed by exposing over 7 billion people worldwide to deadly heat.

With these scenarios in mind, the researchers identified what measures can be taken to slow the rate of global warming to avoid the worst consequences, particularly the low-probability high-impact events. Aggressive measures to curtail the use of fossil fuels and emissions of so-called short-lived climate pollutants such as soot, methane and HFCs would need to be accompanied by active efforts to extract CO2 from the air and sequester it before it can be emitted. It would take all three efforts to meet the Paris Agreement goal to which countries agreed at a landmark United Nations climate conference in Nov 2015.

Xu and Ramanathan point out that the goal is attainable. Global CO2 emissions had grown at a rate of 2.9 percent per year between 2000 and 2011, but had slowed to a near-zero growth rate by 2015. They credited drops in CO2 emissions from the United States and China as the primary drivers of the trend. Increases in production of renewable energy, especially wind and solar power, have also bent the curve of emissions trends downward. Other studies have estimated that there was by 2015 enough renewable energy capacity to meet nearly 24 percent of global electricity demand.

Short-lived climate pollutants are so called because even though they warm the planet more efficiently than carbon dioxide, they only remain in the atmosphere for a period of weeks to roughly a decade whereas carbon dioxide molecules remain in the atmosphere for a century or more. The authors also note that most of the technologies needed to drastically curb emissions of short-lived climate pollutants already exist and are in use in much of the developed world. They range from cleaner diesel engines to methane-capture infrastructure.

“While these are encouraging signs, aggressive policies will still be required to achieve carbon neutrality and climate stability,” the authors wrote.

The release of the study coincides with the start of Climate Week NYC in New York, a summit of business and government leaders to highlight global climate action. Ramanathan and colleagues will deliver a complementary report detailing the “three-lever” mitigation strategy of emissions control and carbon sequestration on Sept. 18 at the United Nations. That report was produced by the Committee to Prevent Extreme Climate Change, chaired by Ramanathan, Nobel Prize winner Mario Molina of UC San Diego, and Durwood Zaelke, who leads an advocacy organization, the Institute for Governance and Sustainable Development, with 30 experts from around the world including China and India.

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September 14, 2017 at 06:02PM

Tony Abbott Is Winning The Australian Energy Policy Battle

The federal government is aiming to exclude the renewable ­energy target from its looming overhaul of the nation’s power supply in a key decision that will sharpen its divide with Labor on the use of coal and gas to guarantee energy security.

The government will leave the existing renewables scheme untouched to avoid a dramatic expansion in subsidies to solar and wind power, as it puts a ­priority on reliability after being warned of the prospect of blackouts.

Former prime minister Tony Abbott stepped up his warnings against taxpayer aid for wind and solar power, declaring “let’s not subsidise any more renewables” in order to rely on coal instead as the cheapest source of electricity.

The moves came as Malcolm Turnbull ramped up pressure on Labor over household energy costs, accusing Bill Shorten of misleading voters by claiming Sydney households had suffered a $1000 increase in their bills, a claim at odds with official figures.

Mr Turnbull accused the Opposition Leader of telling “one falsehood after another” in the hope that he would cut through to voters through repetition.

“He has no ­regard for the truth whatsoever,” Mr Turnbull told parliament. “He misled the Australian people by claiming that the Australian Energy Regulator’s figures show that under the time of the Coalition government, electricity prices for average Sydney households had gone up by $1000.

“That was completely untrue. There was no basis in fact.”

In a series of unsourced claims, Mr Shorten said Sydney prices had risen $1000 since 2013, while deputy Labor leader Tanya Plibersek said the price hike was “about $1000 a year” and others suggested the increase was $1000 a year for all households.

Energy Consumers Australia confirmed its analysis did not show a $1000 price increase, while the figure was not in a July news report in The Australian that Labor cited in parliament as the source for its claim.

Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg accused Labor of repeating its “Mediscare” tactics from last year’s election, bringing on a vote in the House of Representatives to condemn Mr Shorten for misleading voters.

Opposition energy spokesman Mark Butler said the row showed the government was out of touch with households.

“Power prices are not going down — they are going up, and up, and up,” Mr Butler said, but he and his colleagues stopped making the $1000 claim after being challenged on their figures. The future of the renewable energy target, or RET, has been a vital question in the debate over the government’s long-term plan as big investors wait for an outcome in Canberra to guide billions of dollars of spending on new projects.

The Australian has been told the existing RET will remain in its current form out of concern at sovereign risk for investors if the scheme was overhauled again after being amended by Mr ­Abbott and his energy minister Ian Macfarlane in a deal with Labor two years ago.

The deal set a target to generate 23.5 per cent of the nation’s electricity from renewables by 2020, giving solar and wind operators and others subsidies funded by consumers.

Those subsidies were valued at $2 billion last year, according to an analysis by BAEconomics commissioned by the Minerals Council of Australia.

Mr Abbott told Sydney radio 2GB yesterday he did not want to see any subsidies for energy production, including for coal.

“Let’s not subsidise any more renewables, and if we don’t subsidise any more renewables we won’t need to subsidise coal, ­because coal in a normal market is the cheapest way of providing ­reliable power,” he said.

“We’ve got the absurd situation where we subsidise wind, allegedly to save the planet, and now we’re looking at subsidising coal to keep the lights on.”

Full story

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September 14, 2017 at 04:30PM