Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

Global Warming - How Valid and Serious?

What do you think of global warming?

  • There is no reliable evidence that indicates global warming (GW)

    Votes: 8 5.2%
  • There is GW, but the manmade contribution is UNPROVEN (brd),- and we should ignore it

    Votes: 12 7.8%
  • Ditto - but we should act to reduce greenhouse gas effects anyway

    Votes: 46 30.1%
  • There is GW, the manmade contribution is PROVEN (brd), and the matter is not urgent

    Votes: 6 3.9%
  • Ditto but corrective global action is a matter of urgency

    Votes: 79 51.6%
  • Other (plus reasons)

    Votes: 7 4.6%

  • Total voters
    153
"'Really extreme' global weather event leaves scientists aghast
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Climate scientists are used to seeing the range of weather extremes stretched by global warming but few episodes appear as remarkable as this week's unusual heat over the Arctic.

Zack Labe, a researcher at the University of California at Irvine, said average daily temperaturesabove the northern latitude of 80 degrees have broken away from any previous recordings in the past 60 years.



"To have zero degrees at the North Pole in February - it's just wrong," said Amelie Meyer, a researcher of ice-ocean interactions with the Norwegian Polar Institute. "It's quite worrying."

The so-called Polar Vortex - a zone of persistient low-pressure that typically keeps high-latitude cold air separate from regions further south - has been weakening for decades.

In this instance, "a massive jet of warm air" is penetrating north, sending a cold burst southwards, said Dr Meyer, who has relocated to Hobart to research on the southern hemisphere, and is hosted by Australia's Integrated Marine Observing System.


"The anomalies are really extreme," Andrew King, a lecturer in climate science at the University of Melbourne, said. "It's a very interesting event."

Warm, moist air is penetrating much further north than it would normally at a time when the North Pole is in complete darkness.

Cape Morris Jessup, the world's most northerly land-based weather station, in Greenland, touched 6 degrees late on Saturday, about 35 degrees above normal for this time of year.

Robert Rohede, a Zurich-based scientist with Berkeley Earth, posted on Twitter that Cape Morris Jessup had already recorded 61 hours above freezing so far in 2018.

The previous record of such relative was just 16 hours recorded to the end of April in 2011.

"Parts of Greenland are quite a bit warmer than most of Europe," Dr King said.

The cold snap will sink temperatures moderately below freezing in London each day until Friday. However, cities such as Berlin will dive to as low as minus 12 degrees and Moscow to minus 24.

With a weak jetstream, surface winds are taking an unusual course - bringing snow from the east and prompting some commentators to dub the event the "Beast from the East".

"For Britain and Ireland, most weather systems would typically blow in from the west, but [on Tuesday] we will see a cold front cross Britain from the east," Dr King said.
Along with the unusual warmth over the Arctic, scientists are monitoring the retreat of sea ice in the Bering Sea.

The ice coverage in the region is now at levels previously seen only in May or June, Mr Labe posted on Twitter, citing data from the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre.

While climate change itself is only likely to have exacerbated regional weather variability, the long-term shrinkage of sea ice has a reinforcing effect on global warming in a region already warming faster than anywhere else on the planet, Dr King said.

Ice reflects sunlight back to space. When it melts, the sea ice exposes more of the dark ocean beneath, which then absorbs that solar radiation, adding to the warming.

Sea ice coverage is currently at or close to record low levels at both the Arctic and Antarctic regions.

The impact of the relatively warm air in the Arctic could play out for months to come. Multi-year ice is likely to be thinner and more cracked, leading to a faster melt when spring arrives, Dr Meyer said.

While researchers had pegged 2050 as a possible year when the Arctic will become ice-free, this winter and the previous one - also unusually warm - had thrown those estimates out.

"It's going much faster than we thought," said Dr Meyer, who will begin work later this year at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes."

https://www.smh.com.au/environment/...leaves-scientists-aghast-20180226-p4z1q4.html

And as I post the ABC show massive col;d across Europe. All gets back to the displacement effect we discussed on the Hysteria thread some years back.
 
A further update this morning even more alarming in my view:-

"
An alarming heatwave in the Arctic is causing blizzards in Europe and forcing scientists to reconsider even their most pessimistic forecasts of climate change. The record warmth this month could yet prove to be a freak occurrence, but experts warn it is unprecedented and are concerned that global warming is eroding the polar vortex, the powerful winds that once insulated the frozen north. Seasoned observers have described what is happening as “crazy”, “weird” and “simply shocking”, with an influx of warm air pushing temperatures in Siberia up by as much as 35C above historical averages this month. At the world’s most northerly land weather station – Cape Morris Jesup at the northern tip of Greenland – recent temperatures have been, at times, warmer than London and Zurich, which are thousands of miles to the south.

“This is an anomaly among anomalies ... It is a suggestion that there are further surprises in store as we continue to poke the angry beast that is our climate,” said Michael Mann, director of the Earth System Science Centre at Pennsylvania State University. “The Arctic has always been regarded as a bellwether because of the vicious circle that amplify human-caused warming in that particular region. And it is sending out a clear warning.”

https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/#inbox/161d8ebc99835544
 
"Winter in the Arctic and it's 2 degrees above freezing
By Linda Mottram on PM



It's winter in the Arctic and it's two degrees Celsius above zero - 30 degrees warmer than it should be.

Sea ice is cracking in unexpected places, with a feedback loop of warming air, melting ice, and warming water allowing warm weather events to more readily sweep into the region.

Dr Alek Petty is a research scientists at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, said that while it's not the first time it's occurred, this latest incident of arctic warming has scientists very concerned.

Duration: 4min 36sec
Broadcast: Tue 27 Feb 2018, 6:30pm"

http://www.abc.net.au/radio/program...ctic-and-its-2-degrees-above-freezing/9490548

Interesting that the news is particularly focussed on the cold and snow in the northern climes but silence reigns on the seriously unusual warmth in the arctic.
 
Continued silence by the media (it seems world wide too) in relation to this speaks volumes.

https://www.ecowatch.com/arctic-climate-change-2539897203.html

Scientists Stunned by Off-the-Charts Arctic Temperatures, Record-Low Sea Ice

Over the past few days, many climate scientists took to social media to express dismay over the Arctic'sunseasonably warm temperatures and its record-low sea ice. At the height of winter, the region is clocking temperatures normally seen in May.

"The northernmost permanent weather station in the world, just 440 miles from the North Pole, has warmed to 43°F today—in the middle of months-long darkness during what is normally the coldest time of the year," meteorologist Eric Holthaus tweeted Saturday.

"This is simply shocking. I don't have the words," he added.

"Just how hot is the Arctic now?" Peter Gleick, the president-emeritus of the Pacific Institute and a member of the U.S. National Academy of Science tweeted, "Hotter than ever measured in the winter. Human-caused climate change is beginning to radically transform our planet."

Climate scientist Zack Labe, a researcher at the University of California at Irvine, shared several striking graphs of the Arctic's record-breaking heat.


Robert Rohde, a lead scientist at Berkeley Earth, commented that parts of the Arctic are seeing temperatures more than 60°F above normal for February. In translation? "The North Pole is warmer than much of Europe right now."

"This is associated with a warm air intrusion from the Atlantic and displacement of cold air onto Asia following large scale disturbances to the polar jet stream," he explained.

"Temperatures are still breaking records at North Greenland. +6°C (43°F) for a daily high is not just a record for February, it beats the highest temperature observed at this site in March or April as well. This is roughly 35°C (63°F) above normal for this time of year," he tweeted Sunday.


In real-world terms, the warmth has caused crucial sea ice to melt. This frightening footage, first flagged by Mashable, shows how the Bering Sea's disappearing ice is exposing Alaskan coastal communities to terrifying storm surges. Normally, the sea is solidly frozen.
 
"Climate Change — The Earth Is Screaming For Help. Is Anyone Listening?
February 28th, 2018 by Steve Hanley

At CleanTechnica, our main mission is to bring our readers news about how to decarbonize the economy so average global temperatures don’t rise high enough to roast us and every other living thing on the planet out of existence. We try to inform rather than preach. We may cajole on a regular basis, but we try not to shout. Yet if there was ever a time to shout, it is now. Climate change denial is simply endangering the lives of all 7 billion+ souls who inhabit this planet, regardless of age or ethnicity.


The news isn’t hard to understand. It’s not mired in techno-speak that non-professionals cannot comprehend. It’s simply that temperatures in the Arctic right now are way out of whack. According to a report in The Atlantic, at Cape Morris Jesup, the northernmost tip of Greenland, the mercury is reading 43 degrees Fahrenheit — 50 degrees higher than the norm for this time of year. It’s easy to read and then say, “Ho hum. Guess I’ll go check my Facebook page or Twitter feed.” So let me emphasize that bit of information.

At Cape Morris Jesup, the northernmost tip of Greenland, the mercury is reading 43 degrees Fahrenheit — 50 degrees higher than the norm for this time of year.
This isn’t some fake news. It’s not a bunch of scientists banding together to get more research grant money. It involves a simple ministerial task, something even Scott Pruitt could do when he isn’t flying around the world at taxpayer expense — put on a hat and coat, go outside and read a thermometer. No talking points needed. No alternative facts to be bandied about on Fox & Friends.

Assuming the thermometer at Cape Morris Jesup is accurate and hasn’t been hacked by Russian bots, the Earth is sending us a clear, unequivocal message — it is scary hot up here and that is going to affect your comfortable, middle class world sooner than you think. If you thought your grandkids were going to live in the same world you are accustomed to, it’s time for a checkup from the neck up.

200 miles southeast at Cape Nord, the temperature last weekend was a toasty 36.5º F. Something is going on up there in Greenland and it’s not getting any ink in the mainstream media.

“This is an anomaly among anomalies. It is far enough outside the historical range that it is worrying. It is a suggestion that there are further surprises in store as we continue to poke the angry beast that is our climate,” Michael Mann, director of the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University tells The Guardian. “The Arctic has always been regarded as a bellwether because of the vicious circle that amplify human-caused warming in that particular region. And it is sending out a clear warning.”

A graph prepared by The Guardian makes the seriousness of the emergency abundantly clear.



“Spikes in temperature are part of the normal weather patterns. What has been unusual about this event is that it has persisted for so long and that it has been so warm,” said Ruth Mottram of the Danish Meteorological Institute. “Going back to the late 1950s at least, we have never seen such high temperatures in the high Arctic.”

Indeed, spikes are not that unusual. In 2011 and 2017, record high temperatures were recorded in the Arctic but they lasted only a few hours. The current temperature spike has lasted for 10 days. “In 50 years of Arctic reconstructions, the current warming event is both the most intense and one of the longest-lived warming events ever observed during winter,” said Robert Rohde, lead scientist of Berkeley Earth, a non-profit organization dedicated to climate science.

The danger now is what is known as a feedback loop. Higher temperatures in the Arctic lead to less sea ice, which leads to more of the sun’s warmth being absorbed by the oceans which leads to more melting. That melting leads to more methane emissions as parts of Greenland and the Arctic that have been under the ice shelf for millenia become exposed to the warm atmosphere above which leads to more heat trapping gases in the atmosphere and more melting.

Unlike the yapping, yowling pack of climate deniers who decry any and all warnings, the climate scientists take a measured, considered approach to the news. Is the sky really falling? Is it time to run and tell the king? “This is too short term an excursion to say whether or not it changes the overall projections for Arctic warming,” says Michael Mann. “But it suggests that we may be underestimating the tendency for short term extreme warming events in the Arctic. And those initial warming events can trigger even greater warming because of the ‘feedback loops’ associated with the melting of ice and the potential release of methane.”

Mann, fellow scientists like James Hansen, and activists like Bill McKibben have been persistent in sounding the alarm but their voices have been largely drowned out by the din created by ExxonMobil and Koch Industries as they fight to save their income streams even if they have to kill every living thing on Earth to do so.

But there is hope. Anthropologists tell us the legend of the Great Flood is known to every culture on earth, even in remote tribes that have had little to no contact with so-called civilization. So perhaps the Earth will simply rest for a few million years beneath a protective cocoon of ocean water until it is time for mankind to regenerate itself once again.

Mistakes are the best teachers, they say. But will those future humans benefit from the errors of their forebears or plunge right back in to the same cycle of greed and destruction that destroyed the Earth in the first place? It’s possible the next generation of humanoids will be smarter and profit from those prior mistakes, but the history of humanity offers few reasons for optimism."

And what more can one say, its all look away. Plod

https://cleantechnica.com/2018/02/28/climate-change-earth-screaming-help-anyone-listening/
 
"Harrison Ford: "We've Got People in Charge of Important **** Who Don't Believe in Science"
Shots fired.


SCIENCE AF STAFF
5 NOV 2017
Speaking at an event for the environmental group Conservation International on Thursday, Harrison Ford blasted the Trump administration's handling of climate science.

"We face an unprecedented moment in this country. Today's greatest threat is not climate change, not pollution, not flood or fire," said Ford, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

"It's that we've got people in charge of important **** who don't believe in science."

Ford has been involved with the non-profit for nearly 26 years, and he currently serves as the executive vice-chair. On Thursday, during the organization's 30 year anniversary, Ford was honored with the Founders' award for his dedication and service.

Not one to miss an opportunity, Ford used his acceptance speech to criticize those politicians who allow "political or economic self-interest denigrate or belittle sound scientific understanding of the causes and effects of human pressure on the environment."

"I'm here tonight for one reason: I care deeply for the natural world. It's not about me, it's not about me at all, it's about this other world we're going to leave behind," Ford said.

"If we don't stop the destruction of nature, nothing else will matter. Jobs won't matter, our economies won't matter, our freedoms and ethics won't matter, our children's education and potential won't matter, peace, prosperity. If we end the ability of a healthy natural world to sustain humanity nothing else will matter, simply said."

Ford was first introduced to Conservation International in 1999. The leading environmental group, which provides a fund for scientists in 30 countries to identify and overcome biodiversity threats, impressed him so much that he joined the organization's board. After years of dedication and hard work, Ford now sits on the board's executive committee.

"Other than my family, doing this work has been the most important thing of my life," he said.

"Nature doesn't need people, people need nature"

Top thinker. Plod
 
"Harrison Ford: "We've Got People in Charge of Important **** Who Don't Believe in Science"
Shots fired.


SCIENCE AF STAFF
5 NOV 2017
Speaking at an event for the environmental group Conservation International on Thursday, Harrison Ford blasted the Trump administration's handling of climate science.

"We face an unprecedented moment in this country. Today's greatest threat is not climate change, not pollution, not flood or fire," said Ford, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

"It's that we've got people in charge of important **** who don't believe in science."

Ford has been involved with the non-profit for nearly 26 years, and he currently serves as the executive vice-chair. On Thursday, during the organization's 30 year anniversary, Ford was honored with the Founders' award for his dedication and service.

Not one to miss an opportunity, Ford used his acceptance speech to criticize those politicians who allow "political or economic self-interest denigrate or belittle sound scientific understanding of the causes and effects of human pressure on the environment."

"I'm here tonight for one reason: I care deeply for the natural world. It's not about me, it's not about me at all, it's about this other world we're going to leave behind," Ford said.

"If we don't stop the destruction of nature, nothing else will matter. Jobs won't matter, our economies won't matter, our freedoms and ethics won't matter, our children's education and potential won't matter, peace, prosperity. If we end the ability of a healthy natural world to sustain humanity nothing else will matter, simply said."

Ford was first introduced to Conservation International in 1999. The leading environmental group, which provides a fund for scientists in 30 countries to identify and overcome biodiversity threats, impressed him so much that he joined the organization's board. After years of dedication and hard work, Ford now sits on the board's executive committee.

"Other than my family, doing this work has been the most important thing of my life," he said.

"Nature doesn't need people, people need nature"

Top thinker. Plod

Somebody, ahem, will say that Ford is a hypocrite because he fly his own planes, most likely travel in private jets... and he kill and shaped and bend timber into furniture for fun!
 
Check out how Climate Change is affecting California through drought, fire, floods and mudslide.
And it hasn't officially started has it ?

Southern Californians know: climate change is real, it is deadly and it is here
Nora Gallagher
An earthly paradise is ravaged by inferno and flood, the earth itself rising to proclaim a horrifying and deadly new normal

Sat 3 Mar 2018 07.00 EST


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A child plays in surf reddened by the reflection of heavy smoke in Montecito, just south of Santa Barbara. Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images
When people ask me where I live and I say, “Santa Barbara,” I wait for the inevitable reply, “Paradise,” and the quizzical look that says, how does one live there, rather than vacation. It’s as if I had replied, Disneyland.

People who visit from colder climates have been complaining lately. Last year, when it finally rained after six years of drought, and we were practically on our knees with gratitude, a woman from New England remarked, “I didn’t come here for the rain.” I almost said, “Well, then, why don’t you go back home?” Another pestered a friend: when was her club in Montecito going to open? My friend replied, “I think it’s under eight feet of mud.” She wanted to add, “And they’re still looking for the bodies.”

It’s always been a struggle here to have a normal life, to hold on to reality.

In December, we got a mega-dose of reality when the biggest fire in California’s history burned more than 270,000 acres. Seven cities were evacuated.

When the air was labeled “hazardous” for three days running, we made plans to leave. On Sunday morning, my phone pinged a mandatory evacuation for Montecito. I called a friend who lives there. “Packing,” she said. The fire was less than a mile away. I drove through the brown air and falling ash to a gas station and when I got there, my credit card wouldn’t work; the power was out. I stood in the zombie snow as others lined up behind me. Finally, we drove north to a hotel on the coast, where, with evacuated friends, we hiked and walked together along the shore.

After we’d been there a few days, I woke up at 3am and thought of a movie I’d watched years ago. Ava Gardener and Gregory Peck waiting for the fallout from a nuclear war in the northern hemisphere to float on the wind to them in Australia. They were going to die, and everyone and everything they cared about was already dead or was going to be. I remembered a lot of drinking and dancing, fruitless searching by submarine along the coasts of the United States for survivors and Fred Astaire fixing up his sports car so he could rev it up in his garage and commit suicide.

I thought, we are On the Beach.

Like them, we were hardly refugees. We hadn’t walked out of our houses not knowing where we were going or who would take us in. But still, hanging over our hikes, was dread.

And what was coming toward us? Immediately, it was the fire. The fire at that point was burning so hot it was basically gas. Because of the long drought, the lack of rain this season, and Santa Ana winds in December.

But we were waiting for something else, too.

And then, the firefighters, all 8,549 of them, stopped the fire and we went home for Christmas.

In early January, a tropical storm from the south hit the newly burned mountains above Montecito between two and three in the morning, and dropped a half-inch of rain in five minutes. A force of water and ash and soil no longer secured by plants picked up boulders on its way down the mountain and swept into the town. My friends in Montecito were just too tired to evacuate ahead of this storm. A firefighter told them the day before. “If you hear a sound like a freight train, get up on the second story or the roof.” They woke up at three under a red sky from houses exploding over severed gas lines and they heard it: “A terrible grinding roar.” It buried houses and cars and people. It buried the freeway and the train tracks. All the way to the ocean. A body of a man was found on the beach. Not far from him was the body of a bear.

Broken houses line mud-caked streets, and two people are still missing including a two-year-old. We are no longer a pretty backdrop, and our hearts aren’t pretty, either.

And we know now what the dread was we felt in December. Call it climate change or climate collapse, that was the Big Dread behind the smaller ones. Climate believers, climate deniers, deep in our hearts we think it will happen somewhere else. Or, in some other time, in 2025 or 2040 or next year. But we are here to tell you, in this postcard from the former paradise, that it won’t happen next year, or somewhere else. It will happen right where you live and it could happen today. No one will be spared.

So, if you are driving around and flying on airplanes and ordering things to be shipped by truck and making money off oil stock the way so many of us are – like there’s no tomorrow? We are here to tell you there is a tomorrow and we are living in it.

If you visit, talk to us as if our dose of mega-reality is not some singular string of bad luck or an inconvenience to you. Help tether us to the reality we are – all of us – living in now and that we in southern California don’t want to forget in the face of returning to “normal”. Give us the one gift that will help us: please, let’s not go back to business as usual.

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...lifornia-climate-change-fires-flood-landslide
 
Australian BoM computer specialists on the 8th floor in Melbourne were in late Feb rounded up into a separate room, and eventually sent home.

Two of their number are suspected of using BoM computers to mine cryptocurrency.

This certainly beats using the BoM computers to analyse why temperature readings have seemed to increase artificially, after the introduction of the new temperature probe instrumentation.
8 March 2018 - http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-...aff-implicated-in-cryptocurrency-ring/9524208
Police question Bureau of Meteorology staff over cryptocurrency operation
By Dylan Welch - ABC

Two Bureau of Meteorology employees are being investigated by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) for allegedly running an elaborate operation involving the use of the bureau's powerful computers to "mine" cryptocurrencies, ABC News has learned.

Federal police officers executed a search warrant at the bureau's Collins Street headquarters in Melbourne on Wednesday last week (February 28). The officers spoke to two IT employees, according to people with knowledge of the raid.

The rest of the bureau's IT team was ushered into a conference room and told to wait while the employees were questioned, the people said ...
 
This certainly beats using the BoM computers to analyse why temperature readings have seemed to increase artificially, after the introduction of the new temperature probe instrumentation.

Really Logique ? Is that the truth or just another BS lie spread by global warming deniers ?

Funny isn't it. The last dozen plus posts highlights the overwhelming physical reality of CC around the world. Storms, fires, floods, unbelievable warmth at the North Pole, changes in climate caused by these warmings in fact so much factual evidence of CC it seems inconceivable that this reality is denied.

And yet ??
 
The Arctic Ocean is becoming more accessible for shipping. Most of the increase in commercial shipping traffic has been during summer, primarily through the Northern Sea Route along the coast of Siberia. However, this February a commercial tanker, the Eduard Toll, made the first crossing of the Northern Sea Route in winter. Improvements in ship-building and the development of ice-strengthened hull technology is a major factor in enabling winter access. Previous ice-strengthened ships could only navigate safely through 0.5 meter thick ice, compared to the 1.8 meter thick ice that the Eduard Toll cruised through. A fleet of six ships with similar technology is being constructed by a South Korean shipbuilder.

At present the sea ice extent is at a new low for winter, with delays of ice formation occurring due to heightened temperatures (or maybe inaccurate temperature measuring equipment? (joke))
 
There is absolutely no reason why the planet should remain suitable for human existence. It wasn't for millions ny billions of years. Such desperation. :speechless:
 
The financial realities of global warming are coming home to roost. The storms, fires, flooding and extreme weather that are now the "new normal" are threatening the insurance industries survival.

What happens if the Insurers go broke or refuse to insure a swath of events ? The story may be more than a year old but 2017/18 has seen an even bigger jump in extreme weather events so the unwinding of the insurers financial position can only be getting worse.

Climate change threatens ability of insurers to manage risk
Extreme weather is driving up uninsured losses and insurers must use investments to fund global warming resilience, says study

Damian Carrington

@dpcarrington
Wed 7 Dec 2016 17.00 AEDT Last modified on Thu 15 Feb 2018 04.08 AEDT



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Severe flooding in Carlisle, north-west England, December 2015. Photograph: Andrew Yates/Reuters
The ability of the global insurance industry to manage society’s risks is being threatened by climate change, according to a new report.

The report finds that more frequent extreme weather events are driving up uninsured losses and making some assets uninsurable.

The analysis, by a coalition of the world’s biggest insurers, concluded that the “protection gap” – the difference between the costs of natural disasters and the amount insured – has quadrupled to $100bn (£79bn) a year since the 1980s.

Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, warns in the new report that: “Over time, the adverse effects of climate change could threaten economic resilience and financial stability [and] insurers are currently at the forefront.”

The ClimateWise coalition of 29 insurers, including Allianz, Aon, Aviva, Lloyd’s, Prudential, Swiss Re and Zurich, conclude that the industry must use more of its $30tn of investments to help fund increased resilience of society to floods, storms and heatwaves.

The Bank of England warned in 2015 that insurance companies could suffer a “huge hit” if their investments in fossil fuel companies were rendered worthless by action on climate change and some insurers have already shed investments in coal.

The ClimateWise report, published on Wednesday, also says the industry must also use its risk management expertise to convince policymakers in both the public and private sector of the urgent need for climate action.

The industry’s traditional response to rising insurance risks – raising premiums or withdrawing cover – would not help deal with the rising risks of global warming, it said.

“The insurance industry’s role as society’s risk manager is under threat,” said Maurice Tulloch, chairman of global general insurance at Aviva and chair of ClimateWise. “Our sector will struggle to reduce this protection gap if our response is limited to avoiding, rather than managing, society’s exposure to climate risk.”

The report said that, since the 1950s, the frequency of weather-related catastrophes has increased sixfold. As climate-related risks occur more often and more predictably, previously insurable assets are becoming uninsurable, or those already underinsured are further compromised, it said.

https://www.theguardian.com/environ...change-threatens-ability-insurers-manage-risk
 
Where are we going ?
Climate change is a disaster foretold, just like the first world war
Jeff-Sparrow,-L.png

Jeff Sparrow
The warnings about an unfolding climate catastrophe are getting more desperate, yet the march to destruction continues

@Jeff_Sparrow
Mon 12 Mar 2018 12.02 AEDT Last modified on Mon 12 Mar 2018 12.04 AEDT


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‘The extraordinary – almost absurd – contrast between what we should be doing and what’s actually taking place fosters low-level climate denialism’ Photograph: Guido Dingemans/Alamy Stock Photo
“The lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our life-time.”

The mournful remark supposedly made by foreign secretary Sir Edward Grey at dusk on 3 August 1914 referred to Britain’s imminent entry into the first world war. But the sentiment captures something of our own moment, in the midst of an intensifying campaign against nature.

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Arctic has warmest winter on record: 'It's just crazy, crazy stuff'
Read more
According to the World Wildlife Fund’s 2016 Living Planet Report, over the last four decades the international animal population was reduced by nearly 60%. More than a billion fewer birds inhabit North America today compared to 40 years ago. In Britain, certain iconic species (grey partridges, tree sparrows, etc) have fallen by 90%. In Germany, flying insects have declined by 76% over the past 27 years. Almost half of Borneo’s orangutans died or were removed between 1999 and 2015. Elephant numbers have dropped by 62% in a decade, with on average one adult killed by poachers every 15 minutes.

We inherited a planet of beauty and wonders – and we’re saying goodbye to all that.

The cultural historian Paul Fussell once identified the catastrophe of the first world war with the distinctive sensibility of modernity, noting how 20th century history had “domesticate[d] the fantastic and normalize[d] the unspeakable.”

Consider, then, the work of climate change.

In February, for instance, scientists recorded temperatures 35 degrees above the historical average in Siberia, a phenomenon that apparently corresponded with the unprecedented cold snap across Europe.

As concentrated CO2 intensifies extreme events, a new and diabolical weather will, we’re told, become the norm for a generation already accustomising itself to such everyday atrocities as about eight million tons of plastics are washed into the ocean each year.

"It may seem impossible to imagine, that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we’re now in the process of doing.”

This passage from the New Yorker’s Elizabeth Kolbert concluded a piece on global warming, which was published way back in 2005. Over the 13 years since, the warnings from scientists have grown both more specific and desperate – and yet the march to destruction has only redoubled its pace.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...saster-foretold-just-like-the-first-world-war
 
"It may seem impossible to imagine, that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we’re now in the process of doing.”

The deafening silence from a man who was once passionate about climate change and would not lead a party who was not as committed as he was to doing something about it is a measure of how much a prisoner he is of the neo cons and alt right, and it's about time he either got back his principles or got out of the way.
 
The party is on folks:-

A "Surreal" Atmospheric CO2 Record Just Blew All Previous Measures Out of The Water

CARLY CASSELLA
6 JUN 2019
Humanity has been climbing a treacherous path, and now, looking down from such great heights, our footprints are clear to see.

In the middle of May, carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in our planet's atmosphere climbed over and above 415 parts per million (ppm) for the first time since the dawn of our species. That was a single-day high. Now, for the second time in two months, scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and NOAA have bad news."

https://www.sciencealert.com/co2-le...il&utm_term=0_fe5632fb09-de12e29d16-365530661
 
The rate of increase in CO2 in the atmosphere is terrifying. If I had to think of comparisons I would imagine a submarine captain watching the depth gauge rise as the sub sunk and wondering when the seals would pop.
Or a pilot watching his altimeter unwind when his engines cut out.
Check out the history of atmospheric CO2
 
The rate of increase in CO2 in the atmosphere is terrifying. If I had to think of comparisons I would imagine a submarine captain watching the depth gauge rise as the sub sunk and wondering when the seals would pop.
Or a pilot watching his altimeter unwind when his engines cut out.
Check out the history of atmospheric CO2

So wadaya gonna do with your Landcruiser, bas?
 
Isn't it interesting how some people can completely ignore a terrifying reality like an exponential CO2 increase leading inevitably to an unlivable planet and choose to trash talk the person bringing the situation into view?:thumbsdown:
 
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