15/11/2020

(AU) State Of The Climate: Five Big Issues From The Report That Will Affect Every Australian

The GuardianGraham Readfearn 

The extremes of the past year will soon become commonplace, as rivers dry and temperatures rise

The year 2019 will live long in the memory of Australians – the hottest and driest year on record, where towns ran out of water and bushfires destroyed thousands of homes. But this is just the beginning, with this decade likely to be the coolest this century. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters




Since 1910, Australia has warmed by 1.44C and the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere have been accelerating.

Neither of those facts would be tangible or noticeable for the everyday Australian.

But as this week’s State of the Climate report has revealed, those intangibles are now delivering the kind of searing temperatures, heatwaves, unprecedented bushfires and shifts in rainfall that mean the climate crisis has undeniably arrived.

What is even more sobering are the warnings in the report that there is, unfortunately, a lot more where that came from.

Here are five big issues the State of the Climate report revealed.

1. Temperature extremes beyond anything on record

In the 58 years from 1960 to 2018, there were only 24 days where the average maximum temperature across the whole continent hit 39C or higher.

In 2019 alone, there were 33 days.

For some, Australia warming by 1.44C since 1910 might seem benign. But that area average manifests in temperatures that melt roads, thongs and dramatically raise the risk of deadly bushfires.

Rising numbers of extremely hot days from the 2020 BoM/CSIRO State of the Climate report. Photograph: BoM/CSIRO State of the Climate

Dr Karl Braganza, manager of climate environmental prediction service at the Bureau of Meteorology said modelling has been forecasting the changes in temperature and shifts in rainfall for decades.

What has changed is that Australians are now starting to feel the affects of those rising temperatures and shifting rainfall patterns.

Australians are used to living in a climate that is highly variable, with big shifts in temperature and rainfall, he said. But now, they are noticing the extremes.

“When that natural variability and the underlying warming trends push in the same direction, that’s when you break record,” he said.

“In Australia, once you start to push into the 40Cs, that’s extreme by anyone’s measure and in an Australian context, we notice that.”

2. This is just the beginning

There’s a sense that the year 2019 will live long in the memory of Australians – the hottest and driest year on record where towns ran out of water and bushfires destroyed thousands of homes and killed or displaced billions of native animals.

That year bookended the hottest decade on record.

But the State of the Climate report’s projections suggest that even with ambitious cuts to greenhouse gases, 2019 will be seen in the decades to come as just an average year.

“This is us on a journey,” says Dr Jaci Brown, director of CSIRO’s Climate Science Centre. “This decade will likely be the coolest decade of the next century.”

The Paris climate agreement’s more ambitious goal of keeping global heating below 1.5C is, based on the pledges made by countries, so far well out of reach.

If the world did manage to keep temperatures down to 1.5C, that extra warming would render the heat of 2019 as just your average Australian summer.

The State of the Climate report says that whatever happens to emissions in the next decade “the amount of climate change expected … is similar under all plausible global emissions scenarios”.

“The average temperature of the next 20 years is virtually certain to be warmer than the average of the last 20 years,” the report says.

So what’s in store?

According to the report, Australia will get hotter with more heatwaves and more extreme hot days, the sea level will keep rising as the oceans gather more heat and ice sheets and glaciers melt, and rainfall in southern and eastern Australia keeps dropping.

3. Less water flowing through rivers

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology has a network of 467 water gauges in rivers and streams across the continent, and most of them show there’s less water flowing through Australia’s rivers in the south.

Some 222 of those gauges have been recording the flowing water for more than 30 years in places unaffected by irrigations and dams.

According to the State of the Climate report, three quarters of those long-term undisturbed gauges show a drop in riverflows which, the report says, is “an indicator of long-term impacts from climate change”.

Mark Lintermans, an associate professor at the University of Canberra and a freshwater scientist, says this is all “bad news for fish”.

Australia’s native fish are already in trouble, with river systems dramatically altered by irrigation and dams.

Less water flowing through rivers, Linterman says, means they heat up more and sediment tends to build up instead of being washed through.

“Permanent streams can become ephemeral, oxygen levels drop, sediment levels rise, water temperature goes up and the fish get smothered and cooked,” Lintermans says.

4. CO2 levels are accelerating in the atmosphere

On the northwest tip of Tasmania at Cape Grim, a cliff-top monitoring station has been measuring the composition of the clean air blowing from the Southern Ocean since 1976.

Dr Zoe Loh, a senior research scientist at CSIRO, leads a team working on the Cape Grim data.

The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere measured at Cape Grim has risen from 330 parts per million when the station opened, to 410 ppm now.

“That’s a really considerable rise and it’s happening at an accelerating rate,” Loh says.

“Through the 1980s the record showed an increase of 14 parts per million. Between 2010 and 2019 [it] rose by 23 parts per million.”

CO2 molecules have different chemical signatures depending on their origins, and Loh says that analysis shows the rise in atmospheric CO2 is being “overwhelmingly driven by fossil fuel emissions with some contribution from land clearing”.

Chart showing Co2 levels at cape Grim monitoring station in Australia. Photograph: CSIRO

She said ice cores drilled in Antarctica contain bubbles that record the composition of the atmosphere over thousands of years, showing CO2 had been relatively stable at about 278ppm.

“It is very clear that the rate of rise of carbon dioxide we have experienced over the last 100 years is more than an order of magnitude greater than the rate of change in the global atmosphere on a geological time scale.

“We’re now in an era where we are seeing a 10 parts per million rise in three or four years,” Loh says.

“That’s what’s driving the warming climate and driving all the impacts and the compounding effects. This will be very hard for us to live with and adapt to.”

According to the State of the Climate report, eight of the 10 warmest years on record for the country’s oceans have occurred since 2010, with devastating consequences for the Great Barrier Reef. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

5. Australia’s oceans are getting hotter, and they’re rising

Australia’s Great Barrier Reef – the world’s biggest coral reef system – has been through three mass bleaching events in the past five years.

The cause of the bleaching is the heating of the oceans and the marine heatwaves that go with it.

As the State of the Climate report notes, eight of the 10 warmest years on record for the country’s oceans have occurred since 2010.

This, the report says, “has caused permanent impacts on marine ecosystem health, marine habitats and species”. The Great Barrier reef and Ningaloo Reef have both suffered.

But the area heating up the fastest is around the southeast and in the Bass Strait off Tasmania, where kelp forests have been disappearing.

“Climate models project more frequent, extensive, intense and longer-lasting marine heatwaves in the future,” the report says.

About 90% of the extra energy caused by the extra greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is taken up by the world’s oceans.

 That warmer water is expanding and, with the ice sheets and glaciers melting, the sea level is also rising.

Jaci Brown said globally, sea levels had risen by 25cm since 1880. She encouraged Australians to head to the beach and take a “handy school ruler”, stand at the high tide mark and see how much further the water would travel.

“But even more confronting,” she said. “What would a metre of sea level look like?”

 According to the report: “Rising sea levels pose a significant threat to coastal communities by amplifying the risks of coastal inundation, storm surge and erosion. Coastal communities in Australia are already experiencing some of these changes.”

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'Buddha Would Be Green': Dalai Lama Calls For Urgent Climate Action

The Guardian

Exclusive: The Dalai Lama warns of terrible consequences of climate inaction

In an interview for Channel 4 News and the Guardian, the Dalai Lama warns of ecological destruction affecting the lives of billions and the planet. Photograph: ITN

The Dalai Lama has appealed to world leaders to take urgent action against climate change, warning of ecological destruction affecting the lives of billions and ruining the planet, including his birth country, Tibet.

As a call to action he has brought out a new book declaring that if Buddha returned to this world, “Buddha would be green”.

In an interview for Channel 4 News and the Guardian, the Buddhist spiritual leader spoke from the Indian city of Dharamsala, where he has been exiled for six decades. 

He warned that “global warming may reach such a level that rivers will dry” and that “eventually Tibet will become like Afghanistan”, with terrible consequences for at least a billion people dependent on water from the plateau “at the roof of the world”.

The 85-year-old Nobel peace laureate is considered by his followers to be the earthly manifestation of an enlightened one who has chosen rebirth in order to help liberate all living beings from suffering through compassion.

Lhamo Thondup, as he was named at birth, was discovered as the latest incarnation of the Dalai Lama when he was just two years old. He uses Zoom to communicate with people around the globe these days, unable to travel or invite visitors because of the coronavirus pandemic.

He insists, as he announced in 2011, that he is retired from politics and his leadership of the struggles for Tibetan freedom from China, and that ecology is now the thing that is “very, very important” to him.

In the week the Cop26 UN climate conference was to have been held in Glasgow, he says has high expectations of world leaders, and wants them to act on the Paris climate agreement.

“The United Nations should take a more active role in this field,” he says. Asked whether world leaders are failing, he says: “The big nations should pay more attention to ecology. I hope you see those big nations who spent a lot of money for weapons or war turn their resources to the preservation of the climate.”

The Dalai Lama says that if he joined a political party now, “I would like to join the Green party. Their idea is very good.”

The Dalai Lama has been known to put his foot in it with inadvertent enthusiasm, such as when he said it was possible he could be succeeded by a woman, but that she should be “very, very attractive”. He later made clear that he had meant no offence and said he was deeply sorry that people had been hurt by his words.

His suggestion for how to make world leaders see sense on climate change may also raise eyebrows, but again seems to be the product of a lively 85-year-old sense of humour. 

The Dalai Lama chuckles as he suggests we should lock them all in a room and “pipe carbon dioxide into it until they realise what climate change really means”. He explains that “people who have a certain luxury sort of style of life in a room without proper oxygen” would realise “it is very difficult”.

The Dalai Lama says he is in favour of large-scale tree planting to help tackle climate change. He also believes meat consumption worldwide should fall dramatically, but explains that since his own decision to go vegetarian in 1965, health problems have led doctors to advise him to resume eating a little meat.

He says his greatest personal contribution to fighting climate change is education and promoting the concept of compassion. 

The Dalai Lama is most passionate when talking about his idea of oneness among 7 billion people. “We see too much emphasis on my nation, my religion, their religion. That really is causing all these problems due to different religions and different nations are fighting. So now we really need oneness.” 

He even says he can now live as one with China, which he claims is “the biggest Buddhist population now”.

A Changpa nomadic shepherd watches over his pashmina goats near Korzok, a village in the Leh district of Ladakh. Many are rethinking their way of life, in part because of climate change. Photograph: Noemi Cassanelli/AFP/Getty Images

Nearing the end of this life, the Dalai Lama has not publicly explained how his reincarnation should be sought, or whether a 15th Dalai Lama should be found at all. He jokes that in his next life “I may be born on the Moon or Mars. Then I will starve.”

In the past he has raised the idea of being the last in the line of Dalai Lamas, perhaps to prevent China naming a politically cooperative successor. 

For now, he says he wants to leave that decision to others. “As long as I live I should be useful to help other people. Then after that, not my business. These are the concerns of other people.”

His advice for the rest of us living through the coronavirus pandemic is similarly practical, crediting an unnamed Indian scholar with the idea that “If there’s a way to overcome [coronavirus], then no need to worry. If there is no way to overcome, then it’s no use to worry too much either.”

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(USA) America, We've Missed You. Now Please Get Your Act Together On Climate Change

CNN - Ban Ki-moon | Patrick Verkooijen


Authors
  • Ban Ki-moon served as the eighth secretary-general of the United Nations.
  • Patrick Verkooijen is CEO of the Global Center on Adaptation, an international organization hosted by the Netherlands which works as a solutions broker to accelerate action and support for climate adaptation.
Joe Biden's victory in the US presidential election makes us hopeful for our collective future on Earth. 

We are confident that under his leadership public trust in facts, in science, and in international collaboration to solve global problems will be restored. 

In doing so, the President-elect will bring a short but aberrant period of US history to a close.

Nevertheless, Biden has his work cut out. He is inheriting multiple crises, and with so many competing priorities he must ensure that climate change remains at the top of the pile. 

Restoring environmental standards and safeguards and rejoining the Paris Climate Accord -- that sees almost every other country in the world working together to help humanity avert disaster -- are essential, but they won't be enough. 

Our global climate emergency has intensified over the past four years. We now have less than a decade to stop irreversible climate change. To do so, we must cut our greenhouse gas emissions by half by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

Ban Ki-moon

Time is running out. So are our options.

The Trump administration's dismissal of climate change has cost America dearly at home and abroad. Outside the US, President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris agreement has encouraged other nations to ignore their own climate pledges. 

Patrick Verkooijen

The Amazon is burning. Illegal logging has accelerated in Indonesia, according to conservation-news site Mongabay. Russia is mulling oil exploration in the Arctic. Over the past three years, climate-related disasters have cost the world $650 billion, according to Morgan Stanley.

Domestically, Trump's decision to silence climate scientists and gut environmental protection agencies has left the country ill-equipped to deal with the destruction wrought by climate change. That is why it is imperative that President-elect Biden makes reversing this a priority from day one.

This is not just because the costs of ignoring climate change are becoming an intolerable burden on all the Americans who lose their homes and livelihoods to hurricanes, floods and wildfires. As Biden's clean energy and environmental justice plan makes clear, acting on climate change could be the biggest economic and employment opportunity in history. Many of the strategies used to accomplish this will also simultaneously help tackle other pressing crises.

If the ongoing pandemic has taught us anything, it is that the health of humans, the economy and our planet are deeply intertwined. If we continue to slash and burn our forests, for example, deadly pathogens will continue to jump species and humans will remain vulnerable to future pandemics. Our overlapping health, economic and environmental crises are connected. They demand connected solutions.

Biden's plan is ambitious, but we urge him to go further. On the campaign trail, the Democratic candidate was equivocal about the future of fossil fuels. We urge him to end subsidies to the fossil fuel industry once and for all. 

According to an International Monetary Fund (IMF) study, the US spent $649 billion in fossil fuel subsidies in 2015 alone -- more than the country's defense budget and more than seven times the federal spending on education in that year. 

The US remains, along with China and Russia, one of the world's top three subsidizers of dirty fuels, the IMF report noted. To remain so would make a nonsense of the President-elect's own climate plan.

Some of those billions would be better spent on education and scientific research -- so savagely neglected and sabotaged by President Trump. Innovation is an essential part of dealing with climate change. We will need a barrage of innovations to strengthen our food security, to improve how steel and cement are made, and to feed the hungry without destroying more of our natural habitats. 

Data is a resource, like seeds, water or money, and it can be used to help farmers make better decisions, such as when to sow crops. Timely health data can detect outbreaks of infectious diseases and stop their spread. But at present, the world dedicates as little as 4% of global research and development spending on green innovation, according to The Economist — more than $80 billion a year, or just twice the amount tech firm Amazon spends on R&D.

Lastly, we would urge President-elect Biden to invest in adapting to climate change as well as curbing it because millions of Americans are already living with the effects of global warming. Miami may be fighting for survival in the face of rising sea levels while Manhattan needs to be better prepared for the next Superstorm Sandy.

Under President Trump, America lost precious time in the race to limit climate change. The President-elect represents a fresh start. Investing in science, innovation and adaptation, and re-engaging with the international community on climate action, will rebuild a better nation. And hopefully a better world, too. 

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