How Bad Is Global Warming?

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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby stillrobertpaulsen » Mon Nov 30, 2015 8:52 pm

Luther Blissett » Mon Nov 30, 2015 7:32 pm wrote:
zangtang » Mon Nov 30, 2015 5:05 pm wrote:last opportunity?


Impossible to tell since that might have been ten years past. Hopefully not and that there are still more opportunities.

I don't imagine that the arbitrary dates of a summit for the powers that be hold any special significance but it would be nice to simultaneously hit on something as a people.


Our last opportunity until the first. The first being when the participants finally have the 'a-ha! moment' of understanding the importance of the Cree Prophecy: "When all the trees have been cut down, when all the animals have been hunted, when all the waters are polluted, when all the air is unsafe to breathe, only then will you discover you cannot eat money."

That's not likely to happen this year in Paris.

Why the Paris Climate Talks Are Doomed to Failure, Like All the Others

by Steffen Böhm

Even if the world celebrates a Paris climate deal on December 11, the process will still have to be regarded as failure. Let me explain why.

The basic reason is that the unequal distribution of carbon emissions is not even on its agenda. The historical responsibility of the West is not on the table, nor is a method of national carbon accounting that looks at how the emissions a country consumes rather than produces. Instead, what is on the table are expanded and new mechanisms that will allow the rich, Western countries to outsource their emission cuts so they can paint themselves green.

When the figures are in, 2015 is likely to be the warmest year on record and we’ve just reached 1℃ temperature rise since the industrial revolution, halfway to the 2℃ widely agreed to be the upper safe limit of global warming. It’s the fastest surface temperature increase in the world’s known geological history. We are now entering “uncharted territory”.

The dangers of global warming have been known – even to oil company executives – since at least the early 1980s. Yet, despite 25 years of UN-led climate talks, the world is burning more fossil fuels than ever.

This is not simply the fault of big emerging economies such as China, India or Brazil. Instead, what we are dealing with is the fundamental failure of neoliberal capitalism, the world’s dominant economic system, to confront its hunger for exponential growth that is only made possible by the unique energy density of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas.

Historical responsibility

A glance at global history reveals how closely energy is linked to economic growth. The Netherlands was the first country to get a taste for exponential industrial growth back in the 16th and 17th centuries – and the Dutch empire was built on the availability of cheap domestic peat as well as timber from Norwegian and Baltic forests.

One reason the British took over the Netherlands' imperial leadership was its vast reserves of cheap coal, which started to be burned at the end of the 18th century, exponentially growing in the 19th century. Then came oil and gas, which helped make America the imperial master from the early 20th century onwards.

So there are more than 300 years of massive fossil fuel burning by the so-called West to account for. And while this historical responsibility still played a significant role at Kyoto in 1997 – resulting in emissions cuts that were only legally binding for industrialised countries – it has gradually been pushed into the background.

Now in Paris it seems almost forgotten. But the fact that about 80% of historical carbon emissions have to be attributed to the developed countries cannot simply be wished away.

The rapid rise of emissions, particularly in China and India, is often cited as reason for why these rapidly industrialising countries now also have to curb their emissions. I’m not saying that they shouldn’t. Both countries clearly have their own imperial ambitions, which they hope to achieve by stimulating massive industrial expansion.

But let’s bear in mind that India’s carbon emissions per capita are still 10 times lower than those of the US. And China’s rapidly rising emissions are to a great extent driven by export-driven industries, producing consumer goods for the West.

Creative carbon accounting


In fact if a consumption-based approach to carbon accounting is taken, the UK’s national carbon emissions would be twice as high as officially reported. This is also true for most Western European countries and the United States, which have experienced increasing rates of deindustrialisation over the past two decades with not only jobs but also carbon emissions being offshored to developing countries. In return the West is receiving cheap consumer goods without recognising the responsibility for the embedded carbon emissions that come with them. A clear form of carbon colonialism.

Of course, some of the exponential growth in carbon emissions by India and China is also due to increases in home-grown consumption. China apparently now has the largest middle class in the world. However, if we take a consumption-based view, then even China’s emissions per capita will not reach the US’s current rate for a long time – and India’s lag further behind.

Yet rich countries continue to be eager to outsource their responsibilities. Carbon offsetting will see an unprecedented growth in the coming years. Countries such as Norway and Switzerland will continue to strike bilateral deals with poor nations desperate for cash. Emissions trading systems (ETS) will allow maximum flexibility for companies to offset their emissions.

These are all mechanisms designed to cement the status quo. The EU ETS has not made a significant impact on the trading bloc’s carbon emissions since its inception in 2005, allowing Shell’s chief executive, Ben Van Beurden, to insist even in 2015 that: “The reality of demand growth is such that fossil fuels will be needed for decades to come.”

Nothing significant has changed since Rio 1992 or Kyoto 1997. Paris 2015 will be no different. The talking will continue until we realise climate change is a failure of a system, which – on the back of fossil fuel – is geared towards exponential economic growth. Nobody who sits at the negotiation table in Paris has the mandate nor inclination to ask fundamental, systemic questions of the logic of the dominant economic system and the way we consume the resources of this planet.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby chump » Wed Dec 02, 2015 12:21 am

The World Mourns One of its Greats: Maurice Strong Dies, His Legacy Lives On

Founding Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Maurice Strong passed away at age 86. Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of UNEP, issued the following statement:

“Today the world mourns one of its greats. Maurice Strong was a visionary and a pioneer of global sustainable development.

"His courageous leadership allowed the Stockholm Conference of 1972 to make history by launching a new era of international environmental diplomacy which saw the birth of UNEP, the first UN agency to be headquartered in a developing country. Not a believer in summits as an end in themselves, he accepted the appointment to become UNEP's first Executive Director and moved to Kenya to establish UNEP's iconic global headquarters on what was then a coffee farm on the outskirts of Nairobi.

"Strong will forever be remembered for placing the environment on the international agenda and at the heart of development. He shepherd global environmental governance processes — from the original Rio Earth Summit, Agenda 21 and the Rio Declaration to the launch of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Convention on Biological Diversity.

“As the Paris Climate Conference commences, we hope his words echo strong. I reiterate his message to the 2014 UN General Assembly calling on world leaders to ‘rise to their historic responsibility as custodians of theplanet, to take decisions that will unite rich and poor, North, South, East and West, in a new global partnership to ensure our common future'.

"The sustainability road-map which started in Stockholm, continued in Rio, Johannesburg and Rio+20, must now become a reality in Paris. This would indeed be the most fitting tribute to the legacy of Maurice Strong; leader, mentor and friend.

"Mr. Strong served the United Nations as well as the international community in many capacities - among them as Secretary-General of the UN Conference on Human Environment in Stockholm (1972) and the Rio Sustainable Development Summit (1992). Today we join his family, friends and countless communities across the world in celebrating his life and legacy - with respect, admiration and gratitude".


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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby KUAN » Wed Dec 02, 2015 9:41 am

Fuck - not being able to breathe could find one out http://www.afp.com/



Doomsday revisited: will warming deprive us of oxygen?
01 DEC 2015

-

A NASA satellite image shows tropical cyclone Chapala in the Arabian Sea in early November 2015
Global warming has triggered an array of apocalyptic scenarios for future generations, from worsening drought, storms and floods to melted icesheets and rising seas.
Now a new study, published Tuesday and coinciding with the UN climate talks in Paris, adds to the grim tableau: the risk that warming at the far end of the scale could rob our planet of oxygen.
"We have identified another possible consequence of ... global warming that can potentially be more dangerous than all others," say a pair of scientists from Britain's University of Leicester.
Their study, based in the peer-reviewed journal the Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, is based on a computer model of phytoplankton, the microscopic sea plants which produce about two-thirds of the oxygen in the atmosphere.
Average global warming of 6 C (10.8 degrees Fahrenheit) would be a threshold at which the phytoplankton's vital oxygen-generating abilities, determined by water temperature, would be impaired, they say.
"It would mean oxygen depletion not only in the water but also in the air," said the team. "Should it happen, it would obviously kill most of life on Earth."
Warming of 6 C exceeds mainstream projections, although the International Energy Agency (IEA) has previously warned it is possible if nothing is done to reverse the rise of greenhouse-gas emissions.

AFP / Raphael Alves

Cracked soil sits on the bed of the Aleixo Lake in the Amazonas, Brazil, on October 23, 2015 as the region suffers a severe drought
Many scientists say that if this temperature is ever reached, it could result from unbridled carbon emissions over a very long period -- or from a tipping point such as the release of methane gas from melting permafrost, which would cause warming to accelerate at a stroke.
UN members negotiating a climate rescue pact in Le Bourget have embraced a goal of limiting global warming to 2 C over pre-Industrial Revolution levels, or less. Last month, Britain's weather office said 2015 was on track to hit the halfway, 1 C, mark.
The UN's climate science panel, considered the authority on the subject, has said the globe could become 4.8 C warmer this century on worst-case-scenario greenhouse gas emission trends.
"The message from this study is that there may be another disaster approaching us as a consequence of global warming, and it may be much worse than all other consequences identified previously," co-author Sergei Petrovskii told AFP.
"There may be very little warning signs before the disaster actually happens... but once the critical threshold is passed (as estimated at 6 C), then the catastrophe will develop fast," he explained by email.
The team said research into the effects of warming on oceans so far had focused on sea level rise and species loss.
Their study was based on mathematical modelling, rather than observational research, and the authors acknowledged they did not factor in certain natural processes, such as ocean circulation, which could influence the outcome.
But, they said, if carbon emissions remain unchecked, deoxygenation is ultimately not a risk to be dismissed.
"The danger... is probably more real than to be drowned," they wrote.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby zangtang » Wed Dec 02, 2015 11:43 am

'But, they said, if carbon emissions remain unchecked, deoxygenation is ultimately not a risk to be dismissed.'

nice line in understatement, what?
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby stillrobertpaulsen » Wed Dec 02, 2015 4:57 pm

The Pentagon Is a Massive, Unacknowledged Threat to the Global Climate

One of the largest contributors to global warming has no intention of agreeing to reduce its pollution.
By Gar Smith / War Is A Crime
December 2, 2015

Image

During the November 15 Democratic Presidential Debate, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders sounded an alarm that "climate change is directly related to the growth of terrorism." Citing a CIA study, Sanders warned that countries around the world are "going to be struggling over limited amounts of water, limited amounts of land to grow their crops and you're going to see all kinds of international conflict."

On November 8, the World Bank predicted that climate change is on track to drive 100 million people into poverty by 2030. And, in March, a National Geographic study linked climate change to the conflict in Syria: "A severe drought, worsened by a warming climate, drove Syrian farmers to abandon their crops and flock to cities, helping trigger a civil war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people."

The sobering insight that climate change can accelerate violence should weigh heavily on the minds of delegates to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris—a city that, on November 13, suffered grievously from the blowback of the Syrian conflict. But there is another looming threat that needs to be addressed.

Put simply: War and militarism also fuel climate change.

From November 30 to December 11, delegates from more than 190 nations will convene in Paris to address the increasingly visible threats of climate disruption. The 21st Conference of the Parties (aka COP21) is expected to draw 25,000 official delegates intent on crafting a legally binding pact to keep global warming below 2°C.

But it is difficult to imagine the delegates reaching this goal when one of the largest contributors to global-warming has no intention of agreeing to reduce its pollution. The problem in this case is neither China nor the United States. Instead, the culprit is the Pentagon.

The Pentagon's Carbon Bootprint

The Pentagon occupies 6,000 bases in the US and more than 1,000 bases (the exact number is disputed) in 60-plus foreign countries. According to its FY 2010 Base Structure Report, the Pentagon's global empire includes more than 539,000 facilities at 5,000 sites covering more than 28 million acres.

The Pentagon has admitted to burning 350,000 barrels of oil a day (only 35 countries in the world consume more) but that doesn't include oil burned by contractors and weapons suppliers. It does, however, include providing fuel for more than 28,000 armored vehicles, thousands of helicopters, hundreds of jet fighters and bombers and vast fleets of Navy vessels. The Air Force accounts for about half of the Pentagon’s operational energy consumption, followed by the Navy (33%) and Army (15%). In 2012, oil accounted for nearly 80% of the Pentagon's energy consumption, followed by electricity, natural gas and coal.

Ironically, most of the Pentagon's oil is consumed in operations directed at protecting America's access to foreign oil and maritime shipping lanes. In short, the consumption of oil relies on consuming more oil. This is not a sustainable energy model.

The amount of oil burned—and the burden of smoke released—increases whenever the Pentagon goes to war. (Indeed, human history's most combustible mix may well prove to be oil and testosterone.) Oil Change International estimates the Pentagon's 2003-2007 $2 trillion Iraq War generated more than three million metric tons of CO2 pollution per month.

The Pentagon: A Privileged Polluter

Yet, despite being the planet's single greatest institutional consumer of fossil fuels, the Pentagon has been granted a unique exemption from reducing—or even reporting—its pollution. The US won this prize during the 1998 Kyoto Protocol negotiations (COP4) after the Pentagon insisted on a "national security provision" that would place its operations beyond global scrutiny or control. As Undersecretary of State Stuart Eizenstat recalled: "Every requirement the Defense Department and uniformed military who were at Kyoto by my side said they wanted, they got." (Also exempted from pollution regulation: all Pentagon weapons testing, military exercises, NATO operations and "peacekeeping" missions.)

After winning this concession, however, the US Senate refused to ratify the Kyoto Accord, the House amended the Pentagon budget to ban any "restriction of armed forces under the Kyoto Protocol," and George W. Bush rejected the entire climate treaty because it "would cause serious harm to the US economy" (by which he clearly meant the U.S. oil and gas industries).

Today, the Pentagon consumes one percent of all the country's oil and around 80 percent of all the oil burned by federal government. President Barack Obama recently received praise for his Executive Order requiring federal agencies to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2020, but Obama's EO specifically exempted the Pentagon from having to report its contribution to climate chaos. (As a practical matter, the Pentagon has been forced to act. With battlefield gas costing $400 a gallon and naval bases at risk of flooding from rising seas, the Pentagon managed to trim its domestic greenhouse-gas emissions by 9 percent between 2008-2012 and hopes to achieve a 34 percent reduction by 2020.)

Climate Chaos: Deception and Denial

According to recent exposés, Exxon executives knew the company's products were stoking global temperatures but they opted to put "profits before planet" and conspired to secretly finance three decades of deception. Similarly, the Pentagon has been well aware that its operations were wrecking our planetary habitat. In 2014, Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel identified climate change as a "threat multiplier" that will endanger national security by increasing "global instability, hunger, poverty, and conflict." As far back as 2001, Pentagon strategists have been preparing to capitalize on the problem by planning for "ice-free" operations in the Arctic—in anticipation of US-Russian conflicts over access to polar oil.

In 2014, Tom Ridge, George W. Bush's Homeland Security chief, stated flat-out that climate change posed "a real serious problem" that "would bring destruction and economic damage." But climate deniers in Congress continue to prevail. Ignoring Ridge's warnings, a majority of House Republicans hammered an amendment onto the National Defense Authorization bill that banned the Pentagon from spending any funds on researching climate change or sustainable development. "The climate . . . has always been changing," Rep. David McKinley (R-W.Va) said dismissively. "[W]hy should Congress divert funds from the mission of our military and national security to support a political ideology?"

Since 1980, the US has experienced 178 "billion dollar" weather events that have caused more than $1 trillion in damages. In 2014 alone, there were eight "billion dollar" weather calamities.

In September 2015, the World Health Organization warned climate change would claim 250,000 million lives between 2030 and 2050 at a cost of $2-4 billion a year and a study in Nature Climate Change estimated the economic damage from greenhouse emissions could top $326 trillion. (If the global warming causes the permafrost to melt and release its trapped carbon dioxide and methane gases, the economic damage could exceed $492 trillion.)

In October 2015 (the hottest October in recorded weather history), BloombergBusiness expressed alarm over a joint study by scientists at Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley that predicted global warning "could cause 10 times as much damage to the global economy as previously estimated, slashing output as much as 23 percent by the end of the century."

This is more than a matter of "political ideology."

The Pentagon's role in weather disruption needs to become part of the climate discussion. Oil barrels and gun barrels both pose a threat to our survival. If we hope to stabilize our climate, we will need to start spending less money on war.

Gar Smith is editor emeritus of Earth Island Journal, co-founder of Environmentalists Against War and author of "Nuclear Roulette" (Chelsea
Green, October 2012).
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Luther Blissett » Sat Dec 05, 2015 12:58 pm

This #ExxonKnew the people vs. Exxon trial at COP21 is probably one of the most important things happening in the world today. I could do without all the pop culture infiltration, but I suppose sometimes there's a time and a place for it (and I like making fun of Saarsgard plenty so that's cool).

Exxon's lies and adjustment of the illusion is really making me ponder what the world could have been today even more than I already normally do. It's really difficult to envision, almost to Man in the High Castle-levels.

I want even more testimonies from the front lines of climate change, everyday, in perpetuity. Sadly I don't know if we're going to hear it, nor in a way that is palatable to the vast majority of people who might be willing to resist.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Nordic » Sat Dec 05, 2015 11:52 pm

chump » Tue Dec 01, 2015 11:21 pm wrote:
The World Mourns One of its Greats: Maurice Strong Dies, His Legacy Lives On

Founding Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Maurice Strong passed away at age 86. Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of UNEP, issued the following statement:

“Today the world mourns one of its greats. Maurice Strong was a visionary and a pioneer of global sustainable development.

"His courageous leadership allowed the Stockholm Conference of 1972 to make history by launching a new era of international environmental diplomacy which saw the birth of UNEP, the first UN agency to be headquartered in a developing country. Not a believer in summits as an end in themselves, he accepted the appointment to become UNEP's first Executive Director and moved to Kenya to establish UNEP's iconic global headquarters on what was then a coffee farm on the outskirts of Nairobi.

"Strong will forever be remembered for placing the environment on the international agenda and at the heart of development. He shepherd global environmental governance processes — from the original Rio Earth Summit, Agenda 21 and the Rio Declaration to the launch of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Convention on Biological Diversity.

“As the Paris Climate Conference commences, we hope his words echo strong. I reiterate his message to the 2014 UN General Assembly calling on world leaders to ‘rise to their historic responsibility as custodians of theplanet, to take decisions that will unite rich and poor, North, South, East and West, in a new global partnership to ensure our common future'.

"The sustainability road-map which started in Stockholm, continued in Rio, Johannesburg and Rio+20, must now become a reality in Paris. This would indeed be the most fitting tribute to the legacy of Maurice Strong; leader, mentor and friend.

"Mr. Strong served the United Nations as well as the international community in many capacities - among them as Secretary-General of the UN Conference on Human Environment in Stockholm (1972) and the Rio Sustainable Development Summit (1992). Today we join his family, friends and countless communities across the world in celebrating his life and legacy - with respect, admiration and gratitude".





Jeff's blog entry about Maurice Strong from 2005:

http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2 ... e.html?m=1
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sun Dec 06, 2015 12:37 pm

I'll have to read a bit more to offer any comment on the discussions prompted by several recent postings, but for now I want only to share this news:

For the first time in 116 years the City of Buffalo, on the eastern shore of Lake Erie at the head of the Niagara River in New York State, has had no measurable snowfall this late in December and none is predicted for weeks to come.

Dec. 4, 2015, (top) Nov. 19, 2014, (below)
Image

No-show snow a 116-year first
City that averages 93 inches a year yet to see a measurable amount

Carolyn Thompson, Associated Press
Published 11:05 pm, Friday, December 4, 2015

Buffalo

A 116-year-old snow record has fallen in Buffalo. This time, it's for lack of snow.

The city had yet to see its first measurable snowfall by Friday, breaking the record for latest first snow set on Dec. 3, 1899.

The wait will continue, National Weather Service meteorologist Jim Mitchell said. There's no snow in the forecast until at least mid-December.

"This record is going to most likely be shattered," Mitchell said.

The start of the winter season couldn't be more different from last year, when some areas of Buffalo and its suburbs saw an unheard of 7 feet of snow in November during what's now called the "Snowvember" storm.

"I'm out of the house!" Robert Ross said Friday while contemplating the difference between last year and now. As he walked his dog, Ralph, along dry pavement in Cazenovia Park, he said he wouldn't miss the snow if it continued to hold off, except maybe on Christmas Eve.

"And two days later that would be the end of it. That would be perfect," Ross said.

That's not expected to happen. Although the El Nino weather pattern, when the waters of the Pacific Ocean get warmer than usual, has been keeping the eastern part of the country mild, it is forecast to weaken later in the season.

"We will get our cold shot," Mitchell said.

During an average season, Buffalo gets its first measurable snow, considered a tenth of an inch or more, on Nov. 8 and sees about 93 inches in the winter.

Friday was a relatively chilly 40 degrees heading into a weekend that promised highs in the 50s. But with just grass and fallen leaves under foot as they fished at Tifft Nature Preserve, 13-year-old Tyler Waterman and his father, Ken, were thrilled with the conditions. An abundance of snow days last year shortened Tyler's summer vacation.

"I'm loving it. I hope it stays this way," Ken Waterman said. "Last winter was so brutal. My heat bill is next to nothing so far this year. Getting around is easy, there's no accidents to speak of."

At the Streets Department garage, a dozen snowplows sat idle next to an untouched mountain of road salt.

And at the Canalside ice rink, the only snowflakes were in the form of sparkling holiday decorations.

But "it's still early," said Ken Osika, who stopped by to skate. "I'm sure it'll come."

http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/No-show-snow-a-116-year-first-6677140.php
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Luther Blissett » Mon Dec 07, 2015 11:43 am

It's got to be linked to 2015 being an off-the-charts hottest year on record. Has this chart been posted here? I've spread it around so much that I've forgotten.

Image

Last winter, I claimed to a group of friends in the sciences that I had seen evidence that the various positive feedback loops were going to kill the aberration in the "polar vortex" that was causing northeastern North America to experience some of the lowest winter temperature deviations on the planet. Of course they laughed but I knew that the oceans were nearing or were at the threshold beyond which they could no longer absorb excess heat; that permafrost melt was nearing a threshold; that CO2 volume was continuing unabated; etc. I could still be proven wrong but I have seen the recent harsh winters as a total spasmodic fluke, not part of a continuing pattern.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Luther Blissett » Tue Dec 22, 2015 10:23 am

2016 set to be hottest year on record globally
UK Met Office estimates 2016 will be at least as hot as 2015, which would mean the three hottest years ever had occurred in a row

2016 is set to be the warmest year ever recorded, according to a forecast issued by the UK Met Office on Thursday.

Climate change and the peaking of the El Niño weather phenomenon are expected to drive the global average temperature next year above the record now certain to be set for 2015, which itself beat a new record set in 2014.

The forecast comes just five days after 195 nations agreed a historic deal to fight global warming at a UN summit in Paris by keeping the world’s temperature rise under 2C, with an ambition to restrict the rise to 1.5C.

The Met Office forecast indicates the global average temperature in 2016 will be 1.14C above pre-industrial temperatures, showing how challenging it will be to meet the 1.5C goal. The Met Office said there was just a 5% chance the global average temperature in 2016 would be below that in 2015.

“The vast majority of the warming is global warming, but the icing on the cake is the big El Niño event,” said Prof Adam Scaife, head of monthly to decadal prediction at the Met Office.

El Niño is a natural cycle of warming in the Pacific Ocean which has a global impact on weather. The current episode is the biggest since 1998 and is peaking now, but the global temperature effects take time to spread around the globe. “We expect the peak warming from El Niño in the 2016 figures,” said Scaife.

Rising temperatures driven by global warming combined with natural variability leads to a greater chance of extreme weather events, he said: “When variability adds to the underlying warming, it can give impacts that have never been seen before.”

Heatwaves have scorched China, Russia, Australia, the Middle East and parts of South America in the last two years. The recent floods in the northwest of England are estimated to have been made 40% more likely by climate change.

Despite rising greenhouse gas emissions trapping ever more heat on Earth, the last decade has seen relatively slow warming of air temperatures, dubbed a “pause” in climate change by some.

In fact, global warming had not paused at all. Instead, natural climate cycles led to more of the trapped heat being stored in the oceans. Now, according to the Met Office, all the signs are that the period of slower rises in air temperatures is over and the rate of global warming will accelerate fast in coming years. 2014 was the first year the world passed 1C of warming above pre-industrial levels.

The temperature trend caused by climate change will continue to be upwards unless carbon emissions begin to fall. However, the Met Office does not expect the run of back-to-back records from 2014-16 to continue indefinitely, as El Niño is expected to wane during 2016.

“But the current situation shows how global warming can combine with smaller, natural fluctuations to push our climate to levels of warmth which are unprecedented in the data records,” said a Met Office statement.

“This is yet more evidence that the world is warming fast. We’ll see far more savage storms and floods in places like Cumbria and Chennai if governments do not act to cut carbon pollution,” said Simon Bullock at Friends of the Earth.

“The Paris agreement was crystal-clear that urgent measures are needed now, yet David Cameron’s government has reacted by stamping on the solar industry, while championing fracking. This morally bankrupt response is the exact opposite of what is needed.”

Bob Ward, policy director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics, said: “Global mean surface temperature continues to rise. This means governments must act strongly and urgently to cut emissions of greenhouse gases if there is to be any chance of keeping future warming to well below 2C, as laid out in the Paris agreement.”

He added: “This projection is another fatal blow to claims by climate change ‘sceptics’ that global warming has stopped or stalled.”

The Met Office forecast for 2016 predicts a global average temperature of 1.14C above pre-industrial levels, with a 95% likelihood of being between 1.02C and 1.26C. 2015 is expected to be about 1C warmer.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby zangtang » Tue Dec 22, 2015 1:02 pm

if i've read that last sentance correctly, & i've run it thrice now, we've already hit 2.0C over pre-industrial baseline, this year, but the Met predict 95% likelihood of global average dropping by 1C

Hmmmnnn.....
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby DrEvil » Tue Dec 22, 2015 1:50 pm

zangtang » Tue Dec 22, 2015 7:02 pm wrote:if i've read that last sentance correctly, & i've run it thrice now, we've already hit 2.0C over pre-industrial baseline, this year, but the Met predict 95% likelihood of global average dropping by 1C

Hmmmnnn.....


No.
2015: about 1C above pre-industrial baseline.
2016: 95% chance of 1.02C-1.26C above pre-industrial baseline.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby zangtang » Tue Dec 22, 2015 1:53 pm

well thats all right then.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Iamwhomiam » Thu Dec 24, 2015 3:46 am

Temperature tomorrow in Albany NY projected to be 72F Not one sticking flake yet.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Luther Blissett » Thu Dec 31, 2015 3:03 pm

It was almost 40°F at the North Pole yesterday - warmer than Southern California, West Texas, and parts of the Sahara. It's dark 24 hours a day at the Pole at this time of year. Climatologists are calling this winter and this current storm in the North Atlantic causing that polar warming "unprecedented". Same with the numbers of tornados throughout the U.S. this week.
The Rich and the Corporate remain in their hundred-year fever visions of Bolsheviks taking their stuff - JackRiddler
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Luther Blissett
 
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