22/04/2016

Cabinet Ministers Fiona Nash And George Brandis Say Climate Science 'Not Settled'

Fairfax - Michael Koziol

Nationals deputy leader Fiona Nash has joined her cabinet colleague  Attorney-General George Brandis in claiming the science of climate change is not yet settled.
Senator Nash, responsible for regional development, communications and health, told Sky News there were "varying views" on climate science and she was of the opinion it was still up for debate.
"I don't think it's necessarily settled but I think we certainly think we should be taking every precaution possible to ensure that the planet is healthy," she said.
Deputy Nationals leader Fiona Nash at her Parliament House office.
Deputy Nationals leader Fiona Nash at her Parliament House office. Photo: Andrew Meares
"I think there's varying views on whether it's settled or not. What I'm really focused on, again as a farmer, is that climate is changing and that we have to be able to adapt."
Earlier in the week, Senator Brandis told the Senate there were still questions about the nature and causes of climate change, though he acknowledged he was not a scientist.
Addressing Labor's Kim Carr, Senator Brandis said: "Senator Carr, you're the one who says the science is settled. I don't."
Attorney-General George Brandis with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
Attorney-General George Brandis with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Photo: Janie Barrett

"I'm aware that there are a number of views about the two questions of the nature and the causes of climate change," he said. "It doesn't seem to me that the science is settled at all. But I'm not a scientist, and I'm agnostic really on that question."
He made the comments during the tabling of documents in relation to the CSIRO, which is taking a major hit to its climate research capacity courtesy of job cuts.
Senator Brandis said it was illogical for Labor to contend the science was settled but simultaneously oppose changes to the CSIRO that "would reflect the fact that the science is settled".
He appeared to be arguing that the CSIRO had been restructured because climate science was now settled.
Labor seized on Senator Brandis' remarks, labelling them "breathtaking" and suggesting climate scepticism was still prevalent within Coalition ranks.
The vast majority - in excess of 97 per cent - of scientific papers on climate change agree its causes are primarily man-made.
CSIRO chief executive Larry Marshall told staff in February: "The question has been answered, and the new question is what do we do about it, and how can we find solutions for the climate we will be living with."
But as recently as last month, the NSW Liberal Party called on the Turnbull government to conduct a series of public debates about climate change, including one on the question: "Is all the science settled?"
The motion reportedly passed the Liberal Party's state council with the support of more than 70 per cent of delegates.
Climate change remains a vexed issue within the Coalition. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull was deposed from his 2009 stint as Liberal leader due to his support for Labor's emissions trading scheme, and conservative elements both within and outside the Coalition remain hostile to climate action.
Last year, former prime minister Tony Abbott's chief business adviser Maurice Newmann memorably opined that climate change was a hoax led by the United Nations so that it could impose "a new world order".

Link

Record Number Of Countries To Sign Historic Paris Agreement On Climate Change On Earth Day

AccuWeather - Miguel Perez

A historic meeting will take place on April 22, 2016, as 155 countries have committed to sign the Paris Agreement on Climate Change at the headquarters of the United Nations (UN) in New York.
The agreement was approved by the 196 Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention of the Climate Change (UNFCCC) in COP21 in Paris on Dec. 12, 2015. In the agreement, all countries pledged to work to limit the temperature rise overall below 2 degrees Celsius, but are aiming to achieve a temperature rise below 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Sunday, Dec. 6, 2015, photo, the Eiffel Tower lights up with the slogan"Action Now"referring to the COP21, United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)
Following the Friday event at the UN headquarters, the period for signatures will remain open for one year, so that all parties can sign to validate the Paris Agreement and to ratify it.
The signing ceremony will take place during the morning and early Friday afternoon. In it the Paris Agreement will be signed officially by the representatives of the parties to the UNFCCC. Parallel to the signing, representatives of countries will make their national statements and deliver the instruments of ratification, or specific action plans to combat climate change.
The opening takes place in the hall of the General Assembly, with the Secretary General of the UN Ban Ki-moon, President of France Francois Hollande, the President of the COP21 Segolene Royal and the Executive Secretary of UNFCCC Christiana Figueres, according to UN officials.
"The number of countries that have indicated their intention to attend and sign the Paris Agreement on 22 April is now up to 155," said the Spokesman for the UN Secretary General Farhan Haq in a press conference last Friday.
What are countries committing to when they sign the Paris Agreement?
All parties to the UNFCCC are invited to sign the agreement, as stated in a recent press release.
With each country's signing of the agreement, they must also submit a proposal plan for actions for the agreement to be effective.
This process takes many different forms and can be quick or longer, depending on the internal practices of each country.
French President Francois Hollande, right, French Foreign Minister and president of the COP21 Laurent Fabius, second, right, United Nations climate chief Christiana Figueres and United Nations Secretary General Ban ki-Moon hold their hands up after the final conference at the COP21, the United Nations conference on climate change, in Le Bourget, north of Paris, Saturday, Dec.12, 2015. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)
After each nation completes this process, the action plans will be presented to the Depositary under Ban Ki-moon in New York. It is only when an action plan has been deposited that a country has officially ratified the Paris Agreement.
The Paris Agreement will become effective on the 30th day after the date on which at least 55 parties, which cut at least about 55 percent of total emissions of greenhouse gases, have reached the full requirements under the agreement, the statement said.
Referring to the political will and the massive wave of action that allowed the adoption of the historic Paris Agreement last December, UN Climate Chief Christiana Figueres said in a talk at TED 2016 last February in Vancouver, "Impossible isn't a fact; it's an attitude."
In her talk, the Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC explains how the world's nations "met and decided unanimously to intentionally change the course of the world economy in order to protect the most vulnerable and improve the lives of us all."
This Friday, a record number of countries under the UNFCCC will meet in New York to sign the agreement, which is expected to enter into force quickly, sending a strong signal of commitment to combat climate change. The old record for international countries signing an agreement goes back to the Law of the Sea in Montego Bay, which was signed by 119 countries on opening day in 1982.
Signing of climate change agreement coincides with international Earth Day celebration
This year's Earth Day coincides with the ceremony of the signing of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
In 2009 the UN General Assembly decided to designate April 22 as International Mother Earth Day, with the resolution A/RES/63/278. Representatives at the meeting acknowledged that Mother Earth is a common expression for the planet Earth in a number of countries and regions, and that this demonstrates the interdependence between human beings, other living species and the planet we all inhabit, and noting that Earth Day is observed each year in many countries.
 By 2016 the theme chosen is: Trees for Earth. In the United States, Earth Day was first celebrated in 1970 and is organized by the Earth Day Network whose mission is to broaden and diversify the environmental movement worldwide and mobilize as the most effective vehicle for building a healthy, sustainable environment, tackling climate change and protecting the Earth for future generations.
Matt Ritter, left, Nico Reyes, 6, center, and Patrick Grover all help in planting a tree along the Los Angeles River during a community tree-planting and clean-up effort as part of Earth Day, Saturday, April 20, 2002, in the Glassell Park area of Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Lee Celano)
Leading up to the celebration of the 50th anniversary of Earth Day and emphasizing the theme of this year, the Earth Day Network has set a target of planting 7.8 million trees in the next five years.
Trees help to combat climate change as they absorb excess CO2 that is harmful to the Earth's atmosphere. In fact, in one year, an acre of mature trees absorbs the same amount of CO2 produced by driving the average car 26,000 miles, as described by the UN on the International Day of Mother Earth website.
Trees also help to counter the loss of species. Likewise, for the different communities and their livelihoods, trees help achieve economic and environmental sustainability in the long term and provide food, energy and income.
This year the International Mother Day will be historic with the formal invitation that Ban Ki-moon has extended to governments to sign the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
"The world now has an agreement on universal, equitable, flexible and durable climate," Ki-moon said. "Our task is not over. In fact, it's just begun. In 2016, we must move from words to deeds. The signing ceremony this April 22 is an essential step."

Links

15 Images That Show How Climate Change Has Affected This Slowly Vanishing Island

Business Inside - Courtney Verrill

About 90 miles south of Kolkata, India, lies an island that is slowly washing away.
Ghoramara Island, located in the Sundarbans Delta, has seen a dramatic rise in sea levels due to climate change. A recent study by oceanographer Sugata Hazra found that 30 square miles of the Sundarbans have disappeared in the past 30 years. More than 600 families have had to relocate from Ghoramara.
Photographer Daesung Lee spent two months on the island, living side by side with those who currently reside there. "The first day I arrived, there was low tide and I saw what the coast of the island looked like. [It appeared that] it was surrounded with a rock cliff, but it was actually the eroding land of island," Lee told Business Insider.
Lee asked residents to stand on small pieces of land near the edges of the island to show the severity of the land breaking away. Below, see Lee's haunting photos, which won him third place in the Contemporary Issues category at the Sony World Photography Awards in 2013.
vanishing island
Ghoramara Island Daesung Lee 


Made up of 54 separate islands, the Sundarbans are one of the world's largest collection of river delta islands. They are located off the coast of southern Bangladesh and eastern India.
Made up of 54 separate islands, the Sundarbans are one of the world's largest collection of river delta islands. They are located off the coast of southern Bangladesh and eastern India.
Google maps
Ghoramara Island is in the delta area of the Sundarbans, which meets the Indian Ocean.
Ghoramara Island is in the delta area of the Sundarbans, which meets the Indian Ocean.
Daesung Lee
The warmer weather has caused glaciers to melt, which increased the sea level and made the river flow faster, causing it to slowly break down the island.
The warmer weather has caused glaciers to melt, which increased the sea level and made the river flow faster, causing it to slowly break down the island.
Daesung Lee
"For this series, I simply focused on two facts — [the] disappearing island and its inhabitants," Lee told Business Insider. "I found some symbolic landscape that explained the situation of the island and [I photographed] the inhabitants on this land to show their home is disappearing."
"For this series, I simply focused on two facts — [the] disappearing island and its inhabitants," Lee told Business Insider. "I found some symbolic landscape that explained the situation of the island and [I photographed] the inhabitants on this land to show their home is disappearing."
Daesung Lee
About four million people live on the Indian side of the Sundarbans.
About four million people live on the Indian side of the Sundarbans.
Daesung Lee Source: The New York Times
The exact population of Ghoramara Island, as well as how many people have left, is unclear because there are no actual government records.
The exact population of Ghoramara Island, as well as how many people have left, is unclear because there are no actual government records.
Daesung Lee Source: Academia.edu
But it's believed that since 1969, Ghoramara has shrunk down to half its former size.
But it's believed that since 1969, Ghoramara has shrunk down to half its former size.
Daesung Lee
Today, it barely covers three miles.
Today, it barely covers three miles.
Daesung Lee



Ghoramara used to be only two miles away from Kakdwip, located on the mainland, but now it's five miles away.
Ghoramara used to be only two miles away from Kakdwip, located on the mainland, but now it's five miles away.
Daesung Lee Source: Europe UNDP
Over the past 20 years, two other islands that were once by Ghoramara have washed away completely.
Over the past 20 years, two other islands that were once by Ghoramara have washed away completely.
Daesung Lee Source: The New York Times
People who have been forced to leave the island because it is washing away are going to Sagar Island — about six miles south of Ghoramara — which has also shrunk about two miles in the past nine years.
People who have been forced to leave the island because it is washing away are going to Sagar Island — about six miles south of Ghoramara — which has also shrunk about two miles in the past nine years.
Daesung Lee Source: The New York Times
Most of the people who remain on Ghoramara Island are farmers and fisherman.
Most of the people who remain on Ghoramara Island are farmers and fisherman.
Daesung Lee
"It still has old, traditional farming culture," Lee said.
"It still has old, traditional farming culture," Lee said.
Daesung Lee
The mud dams the residents have built around the islands over the years are too fragile to keep away the rising sea level. They are so fragile that one storm could potentially destroy a lifetime's labor on the land.
The mud dams the residents have built around the islands over the years are too fragile to keep away the rising sea level. They are so fragile that one storm could potentially destroy a lifetime's labor on the land.
Daesung Lee Source: The New York Times
When Lee was visiting, a civil servant he met told him the island is expected to be completely washed away within 25 years.
When Lee was visiting, a civil servant he met told him the island is expected to be completely washed away within 25 years.
Daesung Lee