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This is actually a thread on CC. The calamity in the Philippines deserves massive, urgent current attention. Lets hope its given and used.
But the question with CC is whether we can expect more extreme climate events as a result of increases in ocean temperature and increases in sea levels. Whenever there is a tragedy either human or natural we have the opportunity to take a close look at whatever happened and take measures to prevent/manage similar incidents in the future. Thats why they are called "learning moments" . That is what this conversation is about.
I noted Trainspotter that you chose to comment on any of the questions I raised except for the typhoon in Philippines. (By the way on all current reports it was the biggest one yet) . Any thoughts ?
Wow! I was totally amazed when you quoted that figure trainspotter - so i went to the source.
Absolutely spot on. But lets think about the implications for all this.
1) In 8 years our GDP goes up 350%!!! can anyone see where this 3.5 fold increase in wealth is reflected in our society ? Obviously the richest few cent have done very well but where has the rest gone?
2) I'm guessing the lions share of this GDP increase has come from the mining boom and the property market. Lets say the property market went up 150% over the time. Does this actually represent an increase in value to the community ? A house is still a house whether it costs 100k or 300k . And the mining sales seem to have gone to many O/S investors and a small core of local businesses. And of course a decent flow on to local employment and taxes. (but surely nothing like the extra trillion dollars indicated.
In fact when you look at the other indicators of GDP it is all far more sensible. We can see how GDP has gone up an average of 3% a year since 2004. So over 10 years that should result in say 45% overall increase ? All a bit funny.
http://www.nbcnews.com/science/typhoon-haiyan-pushed-limit-bigger-storms-are-coming-2D11577486Typhoon Haiyan pushed the limit, but bigger storms are coming
Alan Boyle, Science Editor NBC News
Nov. 11, 2013 at 5:58 PM ET
Video: Typhoon Haiyan may be among the biggest ever recorded, peaking at more than 200 mph with a 20-foot storm surge. N
Experts say Typhoon Haiyan was about as strong as it could theoretically get when it swept through the Philippines, killing thousands of people and driving hundreds of thousands from their homes. But intensity limits have been rising over decades past ”” and climate models suggest they will keep rising over the decades to come, with the potential for bigger and more devastating storms.
"The tragedy of this particular storm is that it reached its limit just about the time it made landfall," Kerry Emanuel, a climate scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told NBC News.
Based on satellite imagery, the U.S. military's Joint Typhoon Warning Center estimated that Haiyan's winds reached a sustained peak as high as 195 mph shortly before it made landfall, with gusts rising to 235 mph. Estimates from Philippine weather officials were lower, suggesting that the storm packed sustained winds of 147 mph and gusts of 170 mph when it hit land. Either way, the typhoon ranks among the world's strongest tropical storms and appears to have been more powerful than Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
If the higher estimates are correct, the warning center said Haiyan's maximum strength would exceed that of its previous record-holder: Hurricane Camille, which hit the northern Gulf Coast in 1969 with sustained winds of 190 mph.
"This is at the top end of any tropical system that we've seen on our planet," said Bryan Norcross, The Weather Channel's hurricane specialist.
The definition of that top end has been shifting, Emanuel said. He was part of a team of researchers who predicted climate change could make tropical storms more intense, particularly in the Pacific.
"That part of the ocean, the Western Pacific, in November is pretty juicy," he said. "It has a high thermodynamic limit. That limit has been going up in time, perhaps in response to global warming. It's a little hard to say that for sure."
...The increasing number and intensity of storms is a worrying trend to those who have closely observed the weather and nature all of their lives.
Perhaps you are looking at the wrong charts Sails.The charts I have seen don't indicate that these storms are increasing either in number or intensity.
Hey lets drop the aggro shall we TS ? It doesn't make this any fun.
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PS I also checked out your Wiki URL on most powerful and costliest typhoons in Philippines.
Did you notice that 6/10 of the deadliest storms happened since 2000?
That ALL of the most costly have happened since 1990 with six happening since 2008 ?
Any thoughts on why this might be so ?
Perhaps you are looking at the wrong charts Sails.
Check out the Wiki URl that Trainspotter left highlighting typhoons in the Phillipines. As I noted above the last 10-20 years has seen the vast majority of the big and deadliest storms ie the ones that will really knock your socks off.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon...he_Philippines
Today in the morning, I was stunned by the dishonesty of the professional climate alarmists again. Their moral defects are just shocking. It seems completely obvious to me that they must know that they are lying 24 hours a day.
This controversy is about the claim that the typhoon Haiyan was the strongest tropical cyclone that ever made a landfall, and so on. You can see this preposterous misinformation almost everywhere. For example, start with the first sentence of the Wikipedia article on Typhoon Haiyan....
All the mistakes are completely obvious and demonstrable, as I will argue below, but it is impossible to even fix basic errors on the Wikipedia page, or elsewhere. Such pages are being controlled by obsessed hardcore climate alarmist trolls and crackpots…
So let’s look at some real numbers and the origin of the flawed numbers…
So have a look at the list of the most intense tropical cyclones ever.
They are geographically divided to 8 regions ("basins"). Starting from the lowest pressure (strongest cyclones), they are (the minimum pressure of the strongest cyclone is added):
870 hPa: Western North Pacific Ocean (Tip 1979)
882 hPa: North Atlantic Ocean (Wilma 2005)
890 hPa: South Pacific Ocean (Zoe 2002-03)
895 hPa: South-West Indian Ocean (Gafilo 2003-04)
900 hPa: Australian region (Gwenda 1998-99)
902 hPa: Eastern Pacific Ocean (Linda 1997)
912 hPa: North Indian Ocean (BOB 07 1999)
972 hPa: South Atlantic Ocean (Catarina 2004)
Most of the basins are dominated by cyclones in recent decades because reliable and continuous measurements of the pressure only began recently…
I wrote the strongest basin in the bold face because that’s the region in which Haiyan belongs. If you focus on the table for that basin, you will see than Haiyan is between 21st and 35th strongest cyclone in that region since the 1950s or so. In 60 years or so, one gets 21-35 cyclones just in that region that are equally strong or stronger. In other words, every 2-3 years, one gets a cyclone of the equivalent or greater magnitude…
CNN wrote (via Pielke Jr) that the storm surge was 40-50 feet; the actual figure from the meteorologists was 13-18 feet. CNN probably had no sensible source for the huge (doubled or tripled) figure at all.
As terrible as the Haiyan typhoon has been for the Philippines, it is nowhere close to being the “worst storm ever,” as some media outlets have alleged. Current stories on Haiyan are describing it as the strongest tropical cyclone to make landfall in recorded history based on its extraordinary wind strength of 195 mph. However, in terms of loss of life, a cyclone that occurred 2,000 miles west of the Philippines some 40 years ago was far worse.
In November 1970, the Bhola Cyclone smashed into East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) and West Bengal (India) and killed at least 500,000 people -- although the true death toll will never be known. That is at least 50 times the number of deaths recorded in the Philippines over the weekend.
While there is continued uncertainty surrounding future changes in climate (Knutson et al. 2010), current projections of TC frequency or intensity change may not yield an anthropogenic signal in economic loss data for many decades or even centuries (Crompton et al. 2011). Thus, our quantitative analysis of global hurricane land- falls is consistent with previous research focused on normalized losses associated with hurricanes that have found no trends once data are properly adjusted for so- cietal factors.
http://sciencepolicy.colorado.edu/admin/publication_files/2012.04.pdf
http://www.skynews.com.au/national/article.aspx?id=924834
Australian govt mocked at climate summit Friday November 15, 2013
"...Australia has won its third 'fossil of the day' award at the UN climate talks in Warsaw, as international environment groups attempt to embarrass the Abbott government on the world stage over its decision to scrap the carbon tax.
The dubious honour has been awarded each day of the annual talks to a so-called 'dinosaur' deemed by environment groups to have stalled progress on climate change.
...The Climate Action Network said the Australian government's reluctance on climate financing, 'obtrusiveness' in negotiations and Wednesday's tabling of the carbon tax repeal laws had earned it three gongs.
Business groups at the summit are questioning recent policy changes in Australia.
Baker and McKenzie climate lawyer Ilona Millar said she had fielded questions from business delegates asking about the future of carbon pricing in Australia, and when the repeal was to occur.
'A lot of people who are working in that space are a little bit perplexed about why you would move away from a market-based approach,' she told AAP from Warsaw on Friday.
Those excited about Australia's carbon market linking with Europe's emissions trading scheme had expressed 'some disappointment' at the prospect of it being dismantled, she said..."
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