Climate clippings 99

This edition is somewhat themed around climate policy and planning in China, the US and Australia. It also includes items on puffins in Maine, the Lowy Institute poll and the warm weather we’ve been having in May.

1. Petey Puffin dies on camera

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Puffins were once common on the coast off Maine but were eliminated by overhunting. In recent years there has been a project to repopulate the area, which was proceeding well accompanied by a cam project where children around the world could watch the birds in their habitat. Petey Puffin, a chick being fed by its parents became a popular focus. The only problem was that the parent birds kept bringing him butterfish which were just too large for him to swallow. This went on day after day until the chick died on camera.

The project co-ordinator then checked the 64 other burrows being monitored to find that only 30% of chicks survived.

Problem was that hake and herring normally abundant around Maine had moved north as the water warmed to be replaced by butterfish.

The warmer water brought many other changes to the waters off Maine.

Incidents such as these remind people that they are living in the midst of climate change.

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2. President Obama gets serious on climate change

From John Abraham at Climate Consensus – the 97%:

President Obama just announced a major effort to reduce global-warming gases from United States power plants. These new rules, and his prior strong actions on climate change, signify a major shift for the United States. No longer is the U.S. the world laggard on dealing with climate change – we are quickly becoming the leader.

We finally have a president that understands science. We finally have a president that honestly includes scientists as decision makers – rather than effectively muzzle them. We finally have a president that recognizes the social and economic costs of climate change. We finally have a president who is charting a pathway that may lead us to bend the curve of emissions downward so that the most serious climate change consequences are avoided.

Most importantly, we finally have a president who is a world leader.

3. Not everyone is happy

John Podesta before rejoining the White House inner circle in an interview said history will not applaud the measures taken by Obama as it fails to meet what the science demands. It won’t limit us to a 2°C temperature rise, and 2°C is too dangerous.

A 30% reduction by 2030 from 2005 levels shrinks to 7.7% if you use the international baseline of 1990. Moreover, coal will be replaced by gas, where the ‘fugitive’ methane emissions are not counted.

Podesta says that in Obama’s first term his top aides never took climate change seriously. Ironically, Podesta as Obama’s transition director in 2008 helped select those aides.

4. China to cap emission

China will seek to cap fossil fuel emissions for the first time, we are told.

Reading carefully it seems that emissions will still grow, but not as fast as business as usual.

Pointing out that there are 1.6 billion people in the US and China, Amanda McKenzie CEO of Climate Council thinks the decisions are a game changer.

5. Time for Tony Abbott to admit his climate policy is crap

In case you missed it, that is Giles Parkinson’s advice to Abbott.

Parkinson says Australia should be embarrassed by its lack of action compared to the United States and China, which has indicated it will place a cap on its emissions as soon as 2016.

Ironically, Abbott could have a pretty good collection of climate and renewable energy policies just by doing nothing. Everything Labor put in place is still there, apart from Tim Flannery and the Climate Commission, which has morphed into the Climate Council with private money and public donations.

6. Lowy poll

The Lowy Institute Poll 2014 is now available.

The number of Australians now saying global warming is a “serious and pressing problem” and that “we should begin taking steps now even if this involves significant costs” is now 45%.

Some 38% now say the the problem of global warming should be addressed, but its effects will be gradual, so we can deal with the problem gradually by taking steps that are low in cost. 15% think we should leave it until we are sure it’s a problem if costs are involved. Here’s the graph:

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63% of people thought the government should be taking a leadership role in reducing emissions.

Lowy poll 2_cropped_600

I guess Abbott would claim that’s what they are doing.

7. Heat wave in May

Will Steffen talks here and here about the unusually warm period in May, which I believe officially rates as a heat wave.

A remarkable, prolonged warm spell occurred over the period 8-26 May, with daytime temperatures 4 to 6°C above normal over much of south-central Australia, extending from South Australia and northwest Victoria into Queensland and the Northern Territory.

The Scientific American noticed.

BOM think we are in for a warm winter:

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And drier for large parts of the southern mainland:

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Reminder: Use this thread as an open thread on climate change.

6 thoughts on “Climate clippings 99”

  1. Apparently the ALP is seriously open to winding back their support for carbon pricing. Words fail me.

  2. Val: I think the bottom line is what Labor is proposing to do about climate action, not whether it is going to continue defending the carbon price and the RET. What I want to hear is what emission reduction targets Labor is going to support and what concrete action it is proposing to meet these targets
    My personal view is that defending both the RET and carbon price has become a distraction. The problem with both of these is that these systems will only drive long term investments if they have the bipartisan support that is clearly not there at the moment. (It is worth noting that there has been no commitment to RET justified renewable energy for the last 18 months and that the RET certificate price has halved since the last election – hardly an encouragement to invest.) Bipartisanship is not going to be restored if Abbott loses the next election.
    It is also worth noting that what is still working are contract based systems like the ACT renewable energy auction system A key advantage of contract based systems is that they do not depend on bipartisanship. A contract entered into under one government is legally binding on a new government no matter what they think.
    My real concern is that Labor is talking as though it wants to move closer to Abbott’s position on climate action. It is one of the reasons I am an active Greens supporter.

  3. Actually they can get out of contracts but they rarely do.

    I know you are not a supporter of carbon pricing, whereas I think it is one of the things we should be doing, just not the only or most important thing. The auction idea sounds good but I asked in response to a previous post on this, is this only an option for governments that have not privatised energy? Sorry, can’t remember if you answered.

  4. Val: The auctions are an option for governments that use non government generation for at least some of the power.

  5. John, on carbon pricing perhaps one could make a parallel with Medicare where we had no bipartisanship initially. I guess the difference is in the major private investments that we are depending on.

    My own view is that a general cap and trade carbon pricing was not an initial priority, but should be introduced later as it takes off internationally in conjunction with an international agreement based on carbon budget principles.

  6. I do agree, however, that we need to worry about what Labor is going to take to the next election.

    My understanding is that they are still wedded to carbon pricing as a means of combating ‘carbon pollution’. The big worry is that they may see it as the only or main thing that needs to be done.

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