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Archive for the ‘climate’ Category

What you always wanted to know about nitrous oxide

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If you want to see the latest figures for the state of our atmosphere, the Global Monitoring Division of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Earth System Research Laboratory is a good place to start. They consolidate data from a huge global network of monitoring stations.

Select your greenhouse gas (carbon dioxide – CO2, methane – CH4, nitrous oxide – N2O) and watch the graphs climb. We’re perhaps used to seeing graphs for carbon dioxide, so for the sake of a little variety in your gloomy global warming news, here’s a graph for increases in nitrous oxide.

Nitrous oxide increase in atmosphere

Otherwise known as “laughing gas” or “happy gas”, nitrous oxide is somewhat less amusing in increasing concentrations in large swaths of atmosphere. Over a hundred year period, it is 298 times more potent a greenhouse gas than CO2. At the moment, it apparently accounts for 6% of the human-related warming effect. It’s released by industrial activity, burning coal for example. Also released by tropical soils and from the oceans, human activity has till recently been thought to account for 30% of what’s now in the atmosphere. But it appears releases from nitrogen-based fertilisers may have been greatly underestimated. Overall, atmospheric levels have increased 15% since 1750. It’s also an ozone-depleting gas – in fact, it’s now the key ozone depleting gas.

Written by David Le Page

October 18, 2009 at 2:52 pm

Shell and BP still funding climate change denial

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Though oil companies BP and Shell both acknowledge the reality of climate change, both continue to support industry associations that are lobbying against climate change legislation:

“BP maintains its membership of the API through paying substantial fees based on the large size of BP’s business. It is our concern that these fees are used by the API to undermine US government action on climate change and that BP’s membership of the API contradicts its position on the issue,” writes John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, in a letter to Tony Hayward, the BP boss.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/aug/19/oil-firms-warned-over-us-lobbying

It is difficult to say how much climate change denialism is funded by US industry, but amazingly, the long-term campaign against it seems to have begun as much with the tobacco industry Read the rest of this entry »

Written by David Le Page

October 1, 2009 at 10:28 am

Hands up, climate change non-denialists

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So guess how many wind turbines there are in South Africa?

So guess how many wind turbines there are in South Africa?

Yesterday, the Guardian published a story describing how Jim Hansen, the renowned NASA climate scientist, has called on President-almost-post-elect Obama to take decisive action on climate change in the next four years, arguing that we have almost run out of time.

“We cannot afford to put off change any longer,” said Hansen. “We have to get on a new path within this new administration. We have only four years left for Obama to set an example to the rest of the world. America must take the lead.”

Hansen said current carbon levels in the atmosphere were already too high to prevent runaway greenhouse warming.* Yet the levels are still rising despite all the efforts of politicians and scientists.

A friend has noted that an overwhelming number of the commented responses to the Guardian article deny the existence of climate change, and wonders if the apparently high number of sceptics is reason for those of us who believe urgent action is necessary, to despair. But are there really that many climate sceptics out there?

What do you think? Are climate change denialists just a very noisy minority, or are opinion-leaders seriously out of touch with the feelings of ordinary people on this issue?

UPDATE Tuesday 20 Jan: My goodness, this post has been an interesting experiment. Looking at my stats, 90% of the clickthroughs arriving here have come from what we might call a, um, distinctly climate change sceptical website. Apologies, everyone, btw, I’m going to be offline till Sunday, so won’t be able approve comments till then.

* Runaway global warming refers to secondary warming processes set in play by the primary process of carbon dioxide accumulation in the atmosphere. For example, higher temperatures can increase the number of forest fires, which in turn pour more CO2 into the atmosphere. Another example: the permafrost in the Arctic Circle is beginning to thaw, releasing locked-away CO2 and methane, which is a greenhouse (warming) gas many times more potent than CO2 itself.

Written by David Le Page

January 19, 2009 at 7:12 pm

Energy insanity in South Africa

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This 11MW solar thermal power station in Seville, Spain, is being expanded to 300MW of capacity. Pic: Flickr – Chausinho

A solar thermal plant being developed in Seville, Spain, will produce 300MW of power at a projected cost of E1,200bn, or R11,6 billion. That’s an installed cost of R4-billion per 100MW. A prototype 11MW plant is already up and running; it’s almost a thing of beauty – take a look here or here. (The rays you see in the atmosphere have not been added to the photograph – they’re not illustrated but real, created by the intense illumination of the solar array hitting atmospheric dust and moisture.)

Eskom’s (our parastatal national electricity provider) prototype Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) is likely to cost R25 billion. The projected output is 120MW. By my admittedly rough calculations, that makes the cost of building the PMBR approximately FIVE times more expensive than solar thermal. Even using the figures Eskom prefers to use, which are of course far lower than R25-billion, the PBMR remains much expensive than solar thermal. (The PBMR has also been judged an economic non-starter for South Africa, by PriceWaterhouseCoopers, according to documents Eskom accidentally sent to Earthlife Africa.) Read the rest of this entry »

Written by David Le Page

December 27, 2008 at 11:53 pm

British police tactics? How luvverly.

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A very interesting comment amongst the ensuing discussion on this George Monbiot article in the Guardian.

An ex-police officer friend once explained to me how the police operate on this sort of protest. The first few days they have a ‘low key’ presence, they chat to protesters and try to gather as much intelligence they can, where protesters are from, the ‘leaders’ etc, they then take an harder line, test the water by trying to provoke little incidents to see what sort of response they get, before a planned direct action day the police will go through all their intelligence data and pick out their ‘targets’ these people are given names like ‘green hat’ ‘badges’ etc and these they will try an arrest on the day.

On the day of action there will be police within the ranks of the protesters they’re mainly there to pick out ‘green hat’ or ‘badges’, but sometimes they are there to provoke trouble, at a given signal they will start throwing missiles, my friend said a good thing to throw were marbles, they can be throw with reasonable accuracy over the heads of the police cordon, where they can be picked up and used has ‘evidence’.

He also told me how to find out how many people were protesting, you take the ‘official’ police figure and then the number given in a ‘trot paper’ and the real figure is the number between these two.

Written by David Le Page

August 18, 2007 at 11:40 am

Posted in climate

Oh alright, I’ll blog the tornado

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And here it is: a tornado. Is it thrusting its brute way across the plains of the Midwest, is it rearing from an African plain, is it playinguploaded to YouTube by New Scientist (my first ever credit as a cameraman!).
Devon tornado extreme reality weather in Indonesia? Nope, this is Devon. In an England where even the weather is now less genteel. My brother spotted this from the veranda of our holiday accommodation at Flears Farm, near Goveton (half an hour from Totnes), a week ago, round about 6.30pm in the evening. We dashed about furiously trying to capture it on video and memory card: you can see the results
Other climate havoc — submarine England — somewhat reduced our chances of getting it into the news.

Written by David Le Page

July 26, 2007 at 4:39 pm

Posted in climate