Month: September 2017

1886 ; America’s Busiest Hurricane Season

The US was hit by seven hurricanes in 1886, the only year that has happened. Three of those hurricanes occurred in June, which never happens any more. Three locations in the US were hit by two hurricanes. Texas was hit by four hurricanes, and Florida was hit by three hurricanes.

1886 Atlantic hurricane season map – 1886 Atlantic hurricane season – Wikipedia

15 Jun 1886, Page 5 – The Morning News at Newspapers.com

TimesMachine: July 8, 1886 – NYTimes.com

24 Aug 1886, Page 1 – Lawrence Daily Journal at Newspapers.com

30 Sep 1886, Page 1 – The Stark County Democrat at Newspapers.com

21 Oct 1886, Page 2 – Ashland Clipper at Newspapers.com

Superstitious people are always looking for someone to blame for hurricanes. In 1886 they blamed the bad hurricanes, cyclones, blizzards, cholera, and smallpox on planetary alignment. Now they blame a harmless trace gas.

20 Jun 1886, Page 8 – The Topeka Daily Capital at Newspapers.com

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September 13, 2017 at 04:41AM

IPCC Scenarios Refuted By Reality: Global Emissions Intensity Increasing, Not Declining

New study reveals that global emissions intensity growth exceeded 37 of all 39 IPCC scenarios – including all 6 main scenarios – over the decade 2000–2010. 

 

Abstract

The wide spread of projected temperature changes in climate projections does not predominately originate from uncertainty across climate models; instead it is the broad range of different global socio-economic scenarios and the implied energy production that results in high uncertainty about future climate change. It is therefore important to assess the observational tracking of these scenarios. Here we compare these socio-economic scenarios created in both 1992 and 2000 against the recent observational record to investigate the coupling of economic growth and fossil-fuel CO2 emissions. We find that global emission intensity (fossil fuel CO2 emissions per GDP) rose in the first part of the 21st century despite all major climate projections foreseeing a decline. Proposing a method to disaggregate differences between scenarios and observations in global growth rates to country-by-country contributions, we find that the relative discrepancy was driven by unanticipated GDP growth in Asia and Eastern Europe, in particular in Russia and China. The growth of emission intensity over the 2000s highlights the relevance of unforeseen local shifts in projections on a global scale.

Introduction

The wide spread of projected temperature changes in climate projections does not predominately originate from uncertainty across climate models; instead it is the broad range of different global socio-economic scenarios and the implied energy production that results in high uncertainty about future climate change. While the physical-science basis of models used in Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC 1990–2013) [8] reports is very much the focus of the debate in climate research [23], the underlying socio-economic scenarios that determine emissions of greenhouse gases have received comparably less attention. Observations over two decades are now available against which the initial sets of socio-economic scenarios underlying the IPCC reports can be assessed to study the observational tracking. Here we compare these socio-economic scenarios created in both 1992 (IS92 – see Refs. [12,20]) and 2000 (SRES – see Ref. [17]) against the recent observational record to investigate the coupling of economic growth and fossil-fuel CO2emissions. We find that global emission intensity (fossil fuel CO2 emissions per GDP) rose in the first part of the 21st century, despite all major climate projections foreseeing a decline. Studying the differences between projections and observations we find that the relative discrepancy was driven by unanticipated GDP growth in wider Asia, particularly in Russia and China. The growth of emission intensity over the 2000s highlights the relevance of unforeseen local shifts in projections on a global scale.

We make three main contributions to the existing literature. First, we provide an assessment of socio-economic scenarios in terms of their growth rates over a long time-span matching the intervals of the IPCC scenarios. The assessment is particularly relevant to investigate any suggested de-coupling of economic growth from fossil-fuel CO2 emissions. Second, we provide a method to decompose aggregate differences in growth rates into individual contributions when down-scaling is necessary due to a coarser resolution of the projected values relative to observational data. This can be used for future scenarios on a global level to assess whether particular countries (or regions) have led to systematic deviations from the projected paths. Our analysis highlights that unforeseen shifts in single countries can contribute substantially to global differences and our decomposition allows this contribution to be quantified directly. Third, based on our conclusions we provide suggestions for the development of future scenarios.

Four sets of scenarios have been used in the IPCC reports: the first used the SA90 scenarios, the second used the IS92 projections, the third and fourth used the Special Report on Emission Scenarios (SRES), while the fifth relied on the Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs)2. We assess all main socio-economic indicators in the IS92 and SRES: real gross domestic product (GDP), population, and fossil fuel CO2 emissions, all of which are major components in the Kaya identity [11]. We focus on emission intensity as it is a crucial measure for the environmental impact of energy production and economic growth, and plays a crucial role in projected future warming [1]. Emission intensity combines two projected socio-economic series, real gross domestic product (GDP) and fossil-fuel CO2emissions3. Additional results for all other socio-economic series are reported in the supplementary material.

Full paper

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September 13, 2017 at 04:39AM

Some Himalayan Glaciers Have Been Melting For 400 Years, Scientists Discover

Global warming and climate change are serious issues that are drawing the attention of the world. However, the phenomenon of Himalayan glaciers melting is not a recent one. In fact, it has been happening for 400 years.

It was during the Little Ice Age, a period of cold conditions from 1645 CE-1715 CE, that Arctic and sub-Arctic glaciers were expanding but Himalayan glaciers were melting.

Melting of glaciers is not only caused due to industrialization and global warming but natural factors like oceanic currents and total solar irradiance (TSI), which means total sun energy coming to earth, are equally responsible. Oceanic currents affect monsoon and since glaciers are dependent on monsoon precipitation in the form of snow, any change in it affects glaciers. TSI affects temperature and other climatic factors which affect glaciers.

A study by a team of nine scientists from Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences has unfolded the health status and behaviour of Himalayan glaciers over a period of four centuries.

The scientists used tree ring data of around 400 years from Himalayan conifers in the glaciated valleys of Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir for research.

The study has been published in the prestigious international journal ‘Scientific Reports’ of Nature group.

“Glacier melting has been an area of great concern, as glaciers are huge water reservoirs and a source of fresh water. Our study highlights the loss in volume of the Himalayan glaciers and shows that even when European glaciers were expanding, Himalayan glaciers were shrinking,” said senior scientist Parminder S Ranhotra.

Ranhotra added that there is no instrument to measure glacier health over such a long period of time and the team used tree rings, a reliable technique to study expansion and melting of Himalayan glaciers centuries ago. The team is the first in the country to use this technique to study loss in volume of glaciers, he added.

Lead author of the research Mayank Shekhar said the team conducted research on 13 glaciers. Three of these were in Jammu & Kashmir, six in Himachal Pradesh and four in Uttarakhand.

The research shows that every 10 years, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh glaciers were melting at 6% and 5% respectively, while glaciers of J&K were stable. The reason is that Uttarakhand and Himachal glaciers are dependent on Indian summer monsoon system, governed by oceanic currents and changes in solar energy. On the other hand, glaciers of J&K are dependent on winter precipitation mainly in the form of snowfall, which has lesser impact on glacier volume.

“This is a complex subject but the study provides compelling evidence of global significance for understanding the dynamics of past glacier advances and retreats in the context of changing climatic conditions and their drivers in each of the three major sectors of Himalayas,” said BSIP director Sunil Bajpai.

Full story

 

Himalayan glaciers experienced significant mass loss during later phases of little ice age

Mayank Shekhar et al. (2017) Scientific Reports, September 2017 

Abstract

To date, there is a gap in the data about the state and mass balance of glaciers in the climate-sensitive subtropical regions during the Little Ice Age (LIA). Here, based on an unprecedented tree-ring sampling coverage, we present the longest reconstructed mass balance record for the Western Himalayan glaciers, dating to 1615. Our results confirm that the later phase of LIA was substantially briefer and weaker in the Himalaya than in the Arctic and subarctic regions. Furthermore, analysis of the time-series of the mass-balance against other time-series shows clear evidence of the existence of (i) a significant glacial decay and a significantly weaker magnitude of glaciation during the latter half of the LIA; (ii) a weak regional mass balance dependence on either the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) or the Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) taken in isolation, but a considerable combined influence of both of them during the LIA; and (iii) in addition to anthropogenic climate change, the strong effect from the increased yearly concurrence of extremely high TSI with El Niño over the past five decades, resulting in severe glacial mass loss. The generated mass balance time-series can serve as a source of reliable reconstructed data to the scientific community.

Full paper

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September 13, 2017 at 03:56AM

Norwegian Voters Snub Green Anti-Oil Push

An election seen partly as a referendum on Norway’s future as an oil-producing country went solidly for the status quo.

Prime Minister Erna Solberg of the center-right Conservative Party and her main collation partner, the Progress Party, won 89 seats in Norway’s 169-seat Parliament, defeating a group led by the Labor Party that was projected to win 80 seats.

Before the election, weakening of the Labor coalition was thought to have created an opportunity for the Green Party to gain influence. The Greens campaigned to halt oil and gas exploration and to phase out the Norwegian oil industry in 15 years.

But the party only retained its single seat, winning an estimated 3.3% of the vote.

No Conservative-led Norwegian government has retained power in an election since 1985.

The Labor Party was projected to lose 6 of its 55 seats but to remain Norway’s largest single party.

Full post

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September 13, 2017 at 03:06AM