Climate clippings 34

Mt Pinatubo

Volcanic CO2

Open Mind tells us that even earth scientists outside the field of volcanology don’t know how much CO2 volcanoes emit. Claims are made that it dwarfs human activity and that Mt Pinatubo emitted more than humans in the history of the world.

The answer is that it’s probably less than 1% and that we emit in half a day the equivalent of the Mt Pinatubo event.

Four degrees conference

the Copenhagen pledges to cut emissions will, if honoured collectively, result in average warming of 4 degrees or more. So what might Australia look like then?

Melbourne will be hosting a Four Degrees conference to explore this issue. Overseas talent includes Profs Malte Meinshausen and Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, both of the Potsdam Institute. Schellnhuber chairs the German Government’s Advisory Council on Global Change.

It would be nice if they got the attention from the MSM given to Lord Monckton.

The last great global warming

The Scientific American recently published an article by Lee R Kump (available here) on the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). His account of how it happened is complex. Its based on excavations in Spitsbergen, were land then submerged is now above sea level, whereas previous assessments relied on the analysis of marine sediments.

The key finding is that the carbon release took place over 20,000 years and that we are emitting at around 10 times that rate today. On land at least the biological systems coped reasonably well. Opportunities were created for the mammals that led to us.

Now it is all happening far too fast for plants and animals to adapt, so extinctions, already on the increase, are expected to proceed apace.

Attack of the jellyfish

Jellyfish have now closed down a couple of power stations.

The reason?

Scientists say the number of jellyfish are on the rise thanks to the increasing acidity of the world’s oceans driving away the blubbery creatures’ natural predators.

The warning came in a report into ocean acidification – an often overlooked side effect of burning fossil fuel.

Studies have shown that higher levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere doesn’t just trigger climate change but can make the oceans more acidic.

And a reminder that:

our oceans are acidifying 10 times faster today than 55 million years ago [during the PETM] when a mass extinction of marine species occurred.

The health of the Great Barrier Reef

Recently Bob Carter said that “the Great Barrier Reef is in fine fettle.” Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, who might just know, is doing a three-part response at Skeptical Science. In the first he looks at Current Conditions and Human Impacts. His summary:

Drawing together these three types of studies, there is fairly compelling evidence that the Great Barrier Reef has undergone significant ecological change over the past 50 to 100 years. Even the declined reported by the AIMS Long-Term Monitoring Project (Figure 2) from 28% to 22% coral cover (a decrease of 22%) from 1986 to 2004 (Sweatman et al. 2011) is of great concern given the massive size of the Great Barrier Reef and the speed of this change (10% decrease per decade).

Tar sands tipping point?

Bill McKibben at Climate Progress and Huffpost sees Canada as amongst the most irresponsible nations on earth in relation to the environment. Alberta’s tar sands, occupying an area bigger than the UK, are being exploited as fast as possible. A pipeline to the US Midwest was approved early in the Obama administration. Now:

This year, the U.S. stands poised to open a much larger spigot, the so-called Keystone XL pipeline, which will carry the heavy Canadian bitumen to Texas refineries.

Canada’s tar sands are worth about 200ppm of atmospheric CO2. James Hansen thinks that “if the tar sands are thrown into the mix, it is essentially game over.”

The game, in this case, is a livable planet.

Spanish solar produces electricity for 24 hours straight

As mentioned on another thread the Spanish have built a concentrated solar plant which can produce electricity for 24 hours straight and is expected to provide electricity for about 20 hours each day on average.

Also Stephen Lacey at Climate Progress. Lacey also looks at solar PV cost trends.

Some implications for Australia are given in Climate Spectator.

Sulphur from Chinese power stations masks climate change

From The Guardian:

The huge increase in coal-fired power stations in China has masked the impact of global warming in the last decade because of the cooling effect of their sulphur emissions, new research has revealed. But scientists warn that rapid warming is likely to resume when the short-lived sulphur pollution – which also causes acid rain – is cleaned up and the full heating effect of long-lived carbon dioxide is felt.

That part they got right. Joe Romm at Climate Progress explains the part they got wrong.

Pew centre on extreme weather

Is global warming causing more extreme weather? Yes, if you are talking about precipitation or temperature, according to a Pew Centre paper. The paper deals with US weather and can be downloaded from here.

Mainly I wanted to show you this image, which illustrates why you can get much more hot weather under a new weather regime:

Old and new weather with increased temperature

And less weather near the mean.

12 thoughts on “Climate clippings 34”

  1. “if the tar sands are thrown into the mix, it is essentially game over.”

    Tar sands are certainly going to be thrown into the mix, because it is about “jobs and growth”.

    Dohh!

  2. Climate progress had this to say as part of a dust storm report

    In large parts of Texas and Oklahoma now, the drought is more intense than it was during the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.

    In 2007, Science (subs. req’d) published research that “predicted a permanent drought by 2050 throughout the Southwest” — levels of aridity comparable to the 1930s Dust Bowl would stretch from Kansas to California. Last year, a comprehensive literature review, “Drought under global warming: a review,” by NCAR found that we risk multiple, devastating global droughts worse than the Dust Bowl even on moderate emissions path. Another study found the U.S. southwest could see a 60-year drought this century.

    My take is that the winners from climate warning will be Canada and Russia if they can hold out against invasions from nuclear powers further to the south.
    Predictions for Aus Brian?

  3. If

    When the volcano, Mt Pinatubo, erupted in the Philippines in 1991, it spewed out more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than the entire human race had emitted in its entire YEARS on earth.

    were true we would have seen an enormous jump in atmospheric CO2 at the time.
    You don’t have to be a volcano expert to realize this. You dont even have to be a scientist to google the necessary data Surprise surprise – no big jump.

  4. Heard a report on ABC news early this week about a conference, it was in Australia, I think, Canberra, possibly, on oceanography reporting a paper on the rise in sea level and its relationship to global warming. (it was early morning and I was on my first cup of coffee, hence the vagueness)
    I haven’t been able to track it down on the ABC internet site.

    Does anyone have any clues?

  5. Gizmag has pictures and details of the Gemasolar solar thermal with molten salt storage plant that has recently produced 24 hrs of continuous power. The details for this 19.9 mW plant are a bit of a worry:

    the Gemasolar plant opened last May in Fuentes de Andalucia. Its central tower is surrounded by 2,650 heliostats (mirrors) that stretch approximately 185 hectares. The mirrors concentrate the solar radiation at a ratio of 1000:1 and at the central receiver in the 140 m (450 ft) tower temperatures can exceed 500-degrees Centigrade (932°F). The molten salts (which are able to retain 95% of the radiation from the sun’s spectrum) are then stored in specially designed tanks, where high temperatures can be maintained at a level to facilitate the generation of electricity through steam turbines even after dusk.

    “Gemasolar achieved optimal performance in its systems in the last week of June. The high performance of the installations coincided with several days of excellent solar radiation which made it possible for the hot-salt storage tank to reach full capacity,” said Diego Ramírez, Director of Production at Torresol Energy. “We’re hoping that in the next few days our supply to the network will reach an average of 20 hours a day.”

  6. Looking forward to the Four degrees conference next week, which work has nicely paid for my attendance at. Ross Garnaut on Wedensday night, post release of ETS details.

  7. The Scientific American recently published an article by Lee R Kump (available here) on the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). His account of how it happened is complex. Its based on excavations in Spitsbergen, were land then submerged is now above sea level, whereas previous assessments relied on the analysis of marine sediments.

    The key finding is that the carbon release took place over 20,000 years and that we are emitting at around 10 times that rate today. On land at least the biological systems coped reasonably well. Opportunities were created for the mammals that led to us.

    Now it is all happening far too fast for plants and animals to adapt, so extinctions, already on the increase, are expected to proceed apace.

    Curt Stager, in Deep Future, also discusses the PETM and makes the point that in those days the animals could move about freely because there weren’t 7 billion humans and their artifacts in the way.

  8. Thanks for the link to the gemasolar plant John D. I think that’s interesting and promising.
    All those mirrors take up a lot of room, I wonder if enough heat could be created using the old magnifying lens trick. Could use a combination of a few mirrors/lens’ in a much smaller circle around the tower.

  9. jusme: You still have to collect the same amount of sunshine to provide the heat. A lens would simply absorb some of the heat.
    Having said this placement will have some effect since less heat is collected the more the mirror angle brings it closer to being parallel to the sun. Some of those mirror in the gemasolar plant mirror layout would be at a pretty unproductive angle – although the spread may help even out the heat absorbed over the day.
    You could also think about setting it all up as a rooftop system with the tower on top of a skyscraper and the mirrors on walls and roofs.

  10. Here’s Hansen’s letter concerning tar sands. It includes:

    the target to limit global warming to 2°C, rather than being a safe “guardrail”, is actually a recipe for global climate disasters.

  11. Hey Doug – most oceanographers (and volcanologists/earth scientists etc) have been down at IUGG which was held in Melbourne over the last two weeks. There were plenty of talks given on the links between sea level rise and climate change.

    IUGG program is here (warning: it’s not pretty). You can knock yourself out with the abstracts. 🙂

Comments are closed.