Month: February 2020

Fierce cold, even record cold, in Kamchatka

The weather in Chukotka and Kamchatka has noticeably deteriorated.

Both in the continental regions of Chukotka and in Kamchatka it is now much colder than it should be on the calendar. The temperature anomaly reaches 6-8 degrees.

In Kamchatka, and in the southeast, the cold reached a record. In Nachiki, on the morning of February 4, the air cooled to -43.4°C. The previous record, -42.7 °C, held since 1973.

Not only cold, but also blizzards with a sharp gusty wind (up to 24 m/s) came both to Kamchatka and Chukotka. And this weather will last some more time.

On February 6 in Chukotka temperatures will drop to -30 ..- 35°C, in places -25 ..- 30°C, in continental areas up to -50°C.

In Kamchatka in the south of the peninsula -10 ..- 15°C, in places -20 ..- 25, at night to -41 ..- 46°C. In the northern regions -22 ..- 27°C, in places -12 ..- 17°C, at night to -40°C.

http://www.hmn.ru/index.php?index=1&ts=200205142218

Thanks to Martin Siebert for this link

The post Fierce cold, even record cold, in Kamchatka appeared first on Ice Age Now.

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February 5, 2020 at 07:14PM

Global cooling after nuclear war would harm ocean life

Seafood production also may be impacted by increased acidification

Rutgers University

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Corals, which are threatened by global climate change and ocean acidification, support a wide range of reef fish at Baker reef in the Pacific Remote Islands.

Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Morgan Winston

A nuclear war that cooled Earth could worsen the impact of ocean acidification on corals, clams, oysters and other marine life with shells or skeletons, according to the first study of its kind.

“We found that the ocean’s chemistry would change, with global cooling dissolving atmospheric carbon into the upper ocean and exacerbating the primary threat of ocean acidification,” said co-author Alan Robock, a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.

The study is published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Scientists looked at how climate changes stemming from nuclear war would affect the oceans. They used a global climate model in which the climate reacted to soot (black carbon) in smoke that would be injected into the upper atmosphere from fires ignited by nuclear weapons. They considered a range of hypothetical nuclear wars, including a relatively small one between India and Pakistan and a large one between the United States and Russia.

Excess carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels enters the ocean and reacts with water to form carbonic acid, which decreases ocean pH (makes it more acidic) and lowers levels of carbonate ions. Corals, clams, oysters and other marine organisms use carbonate ions to create their shells and skeletons, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. A more acidic ocean makes it harder to form and maintain shells and skeletons.

The massive amount of smoke from a nuclear conflict would block sunlight and cause global cooling. The cooling would temporarily boost the pH in the surface ocean over five years and briefly lessen the decline in pH from ocean acidification. But the cooling would also lead to lower levels of carbonate ions for about 10 years, challenging shell maintenance in marine organisms.

“We have known for a while that agriculture on land would be severely affected by climate change from nuclear war,” Robock said. “A lingering question is whether the survivors could still get food from the sea. Our study is the first step in answering this question.”

The next step is to combine projected changes in ocean chemistry with projected changes in temperature and salinity and assess their impacts on shellfish and fish stocks throughout the oceans, he said.

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Joshua Coupe, a Rutgers doctoral student, contributed to the study, which also included scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder; University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; National Center for Atmospheric Research; U.S. Department of Energy; and University of California, Santa Barbara.

From EurekAlert!

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February 5, 2020 at 04:07PM

New paper says Baffin Bay polar bears may have been affected by less summer sea ice

A new paper on Baffin Bay polar bears reports data on body condition and litter sizes collected as part of a major study of the region completed in 2013 compared to sea ice declines since the 1990s; based on a computer model, the authors predict that in 37 years time (if sea ice declines continuously), the incidence of twin litters could “largely disappear.” However, no decline in population numbers was predicted and a critical caveat acknowledges that factors other than changes in sea ice could have affected the body condition and litter size data the authors analyzed, which means the conclusions are scientifically inconclusive.

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Fat polar bear, summer 2012 near Thule, NW Greenland (Baffin Bay subpopulation). Robin Davies photo.

The last (2013) polar bear population survey of Baffin Bay (SWG 2016) generated an estimate of almost 3,000 (2,826; range 2,059-3,593), which means that regardless of some slight changes in body condition and litter size over the last two decades (which may or may not have been caused by loss of sea ice), there are currently a lot of bears in Baffin Bay.

Laidre et al 2020 map polarbears_gps_2013

A summary of the Baffin Bay paper on NASA’s Earth Observatory “image of the day” website (see map above) for 4 February 2020 [“Polar bears struggle as sea ice declines”, which seems to be serving as a press release] quoted lead author Kristin Laidre (U. Washington), as saying [my bold]:

“Climate-induced changes in the Arctic are affecting polar bears,” said Laidre, who was the main author of the study. “They are an icon of climate change, but they’re also an early indicator of climate change because they are so dependent on sea ice…

Polar bears are a harbinger for the future,” said Laidre. “The changes we document here are going to affect everyone around the globe.”

Writers at the UK’s Metro widely-read but free newspaper interpreted this as “Climate change is killing polar bears and it’s an ominous ‘harbinger of the future’, Nasa warns” (4 February 2020). Oh dear.

According to the paper (Laidre et al. 2020 in press), polar bears arrived on land in the summer an average of 20 days earlier in the 2000s than they did in the 1990s (4 August vs. 24 August) but departed from land in the fall only 7 days later, an insignificant difference (8 November vs. 1 November). The NASA folks redrew the Laidre paper graph showing sea ice decline and timing of bears off and on the land (in fall and summer, respectively):

Laidre et al 2020 bear_ice_reatreat_chart_2017

In total, Baffin Bay bears are now spending about three months onshore (about 90 days).

To put this in perspective, polar bears in Western and Southern Hudson Bay spend almost five months on shore over the summer (about 150 days) yet even this length of time has not had a marked impact on polar bear health or population size: some decline has been claimed for both but as I have stated repeatedly (Crockford 2017, 2019a,b), according to the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC 2018, released in June 2019) neither is statistically significant.

Regarding body condition, Laidre and colleagues found fewer Baffin Bay bears were in ‘very good’ condition in the 2000s than in the 1990s (13% vs. 39%) but more bears in the 2000s were in ‘good’ condition than in the 1990s (66% vs. 44%); the percentage of bears in ‘poor’ condition were about the same in both periods (17% in 1990s vs. 21% in 2000s), see their Table 2.

This overall decline in body condition was said to be correlated to sea ice cover and to have impacted mean litter size for cubs of the year (but not litters of yearling cubs, see their Table 4): in other words, the size of litters for cubs that had survived their first year (and have the best chance of surviving to adulthood) did not change significantly between the 1990s and the 2000s.

Oddly, the population size of Kane Basin polar bears to the north of Baffin Bay has been found to have increased significantly between the 1990s and 2000s (SWG 2016), as was the size of the Davis Strait population to the south of Baffin Bay (Crockford 2019a; Peacock et al. 2013; Rode et al. 2012). However, the apparent 36% increase in Baffin Bay population size between 1997 (about 2,074) and 2013 (about 2,826) was dismissed as untrustworthy due to methodological differences between the two estimates (Crockford 2019a, b; SWG 2016; York et al. 2016), although the 2013 population size estimate of 2,826 is not disputed. In other words, although we cannot tell for sure if the population size increased since 1997, there are currently a lot of bears in Baffin Bay.

The author’s caveat (2nd last sentence of their paper) is critical:

We note, however, that the functional and temporal relationships between declines in body condition and recruitment, and declines in subpopulation size, are poorly understood and that the trend of the BB subpopulation is currently unknown (SWG 2016).”

This warning is not included in the abstract of the paper or in the online summary provided by NASA or by fellow polar bear specialist Andrew Derocher (20 January 2020). But it is a really important limitation of the study: sea ice may not be the only factor (or even the main one) affecting body condition and litter size. For example, changes in size of prey population sizes or their distribution, or even snow depth in spring could have had a crucial impact.

In other words, because no other factor besides sea ice cover was considered in this study, no definitive conclusions can be drawn from the results of the study. Correlation of body condition and litter size declines with sea ice decline does not prove that sea ice decline is the cause of those declines. It’s just been made to look that way, which was apparently acceptable to the journal that published the paper.

References

COSEWIC. 2018. COSEWIC assessment and status report on the Polar Bear Ursus maritimus in Canada. Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. Ottawa. Online version here: https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/species-risk-public-registry/cosewic-assessments-status-reports/polar-bear-2018.html

Crockford, S.J. 2017. Testing the hypothesis that routine sea ice coverage of 3-5 mkm2 results in a greater than 30% decline in population size of polar bears (Ursus maritimus). PeerJ Preprints 19 January 2017. Doi: 10.7287/peerj.preprints.2737v1 Open access. https://peerj.com/preprints/2737/

Crockford, S.J. 2019a. State of the Polar Bear Report 2018. Global Warming Policy Foundation Report 32, London.

Crockford, S.J. 2019b. The Polar Bear Catastrophe That Never Happened. Global Warming Policy Foundation, London. Available in paperback and ebook formats.

Laidre, K.L, Atkinson, S., Regehr, E.V., Stern, H.L, Born, E.W., Wiig, Ø., Lunn, N.J. and Dyck, M. 2020 in press. Interrelated ecological impacts of climate change on an apex predator. Ecological Applications https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2071  [open access]

Peacock, E., Taylor, M.K., Laake, J., and Stirling, I. 2013. Population ecology of polar bears in Davis Strait, Canada and Greenland. Journal of Wildlife Management 77: 463–476. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jwmg.489/abstract?deniedAccessCustomisedMessage=&userIsAuthenticated=false

Rode, K.D., Peacock, E., Taylor, M., Stirling, I., Born, E.W., Laidre, K.L., and Wiig, Ø. 2012. A tale of two polar bear populations: ice habitat, harvest, and body condition. Population Ecology 54:3-18. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10144-011-0299-9

SWG [Scientific Working Group to the Canada-Greenland Joint Commission on Polar Bear]. 2016. Re-Assessment of the Baffin Bay and Kane Basin Polar Bear Subpopulations: Final Report to the Canada-Greenland Joint Commission on Polar Bear. +636 pp. http://www.gov.nu.ca/documents-publications/349

York, J., Dowsley, M., Cornwell, A., Kuc, M. and Taylor, M. 2016. Demographic and traditional knowledge perspectives on the current status of Canadian polar bear subpopulations. Ecology and Evolution 6(9):2897-2924. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.2030

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February 5, 2020 at 04:03PM

Former “Fridays For Future” Teen Activist Reveals “Cult-Like Control”, “Hostility”, “Leftist Infiltration

Sina, aged 14, used to be active as a spokesperson for Fridays for Future in a city in the German state of North Rhine Westphalia.

But she quickly became disenchanted by the movement’s “cult-like” structures which did not tolerate questions. Recently she revealed her story. 

Hat-tip: EIKE

Sina began her environmental activism by joining a demonstration against coal power plants, organized by Greenpeace and WWF, before getting involved as a press spokesperson in the FFF movement in March; 2019.

In the interview, she reports on cult-like control, censorship, hostility and left-wing infiltration.

By November, 2019, she began questioning the movement. As press spokesperson, she says she recalls having an older organizer constantly standing at her side at the demonstrations to make sure she said “the right things” when interviewed by radio or television.

“No matter what was asked, it had to be answered like this or like that” and we had to “sound dramatic and to not express any doubts about it,” Sina tells GROSSE FREIHEIT TV (Great Freedom TV) in the interview.

Constantly watched

“We have to act immediately, otherwise things will go like so, and the world will fall apart if you don’t take to the streets, and those who don’t are to blame for the world collapsing and all such things that put pressure on people,” said Sina, explaining what the organizers expected the press spokeschildren to say to the media.

According to Sina:

One question from the press has always been very popular, and that is what you do yourself for climate protection. A very clear guideline was the answer that one should live vegan, plastic-free, seasonal and regional, as well as avoid car journeys and flights as far as possible. I believe, that is also the first thing I learned there.”

Began to have doubts

In the interview, the sharp-witted teen explains how she began to have doubts about the movement when the question of a CO2 tax came up and her father had doubts about it. This made Sina think about the implications of shutting down the coal power plants and the financial implications.

“The demands were so dogmatic and radical” that “they they could not really be implemented,” she says in the interview. She then explains how she researched the subject and found out that the 97% claimed consensus was bogus.

Insults and attacks…”Nazi” …”climate denier”

When her doubts and skepticism became known, she recounts how immediately she was accused of acting like a Nazi, and getting labelled a “climate denier” and “future destroyer”.  At that point she had had enough and ditched the movement.

“Cult character”

At the 20:35-mark, having been asked to describe how she sees the FFF movement, shes says: “In my view, it has a sort of cult character because you have to have that opinion. Otherwise you’ll be insulted out, if you will.”

She then adds: “They make demands without even thinking about solutions and thinking about the consequences of immediately exiting coal power.”

She adds: “High taxes isn’t going to buy the CO2 out of the air.”

Her advice: “Do a little research”

Later she describes how dissent is absolutely not tolerated by the movement in any way. At school some of the more extreme teachers “couldn’t understand” why she exited the movement and how she was confronted by other radical classmates: “If you don’t take part, then it will be your fault that none of us will have a future and we’ll all die.” She responded to them: “Just do a little research!”

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February 5, 2020 at 01:15PM