Archive for June 12th, 2012

Climate Change to Alter Global Fire Risk – Science Daily

ScienceDaily: Climate change is widely expected to disrupt future fire patterns around the world, with some regions, such as the western United States, seeing more frequent fires within the next 30 years, according to a new analysis led by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, in collaboration with an international team of scientists. By the end of the century, almost all of North America and most of Europe is projected to see a jump in the frequency of wildfires, primarily because of increasing...

Fracking Research and the Money That Flows To It

New York Times: As I report in The Times, a central question in the controversy over a new fracking study from the State University of New York at Buffalo is where the money came from to finance the report and the new institute on gas drilling that released it. The university says the money came from discretionary funds in the budget of the College of Arts and Sciences but that the new institute is seeking funds from the natural gas industry and other sources. Industry grants for academic research are simply...

As Colorado and New Mexico burn, scientists say prepare for more

Mongabay: A massive wildlife in Colorado still burns after it has killed one person and damaged or destroyed over a hundred structures. The fire, the third largest in Colorado's history, has burned 39,500 acres (16,000 hectares) to date. Meanwhile in central New Mexico, another wildfire has damaged or destroyed 35 structures and burned 34,500 acres (14,000 hectares). This comes just weeks after New Mexico's largest wildfire ever-still going-has burned up over 247,000 acres (100,000 hectares) of the Gila Forest....

More Big Wildfires May Be Future Norm for US

Wired News: For the past 30 years, residents of tiny Laporte, Colorado, near the Wyoming border have gathered inside Bob`s Coffee Shop to swap gossip over coffee and danishes near the dense pine forest of Lory State Park. But since the weekend, Bob`s has become a very different kind of social hub: a de facto refugee camp for homeowners fleeing what many here call the worst wildfire in decades. From a booth just a mile and half from the fireline, Bob`s owner Chris McCullough in a phone interview on Monday...

The Fastest-Warming US State Is …

LiveScience: Some U.S. states are feeling the heat of climate change more than others, finds a new analysis of temperature increases over the past 100 years. The state that saw the highest temperature increase was Rhode Island, followed by Massachusetts, New Jersey, Arizona and Maine. Scientists from Climate Central, a research and public outreach organization, suggest natural climate variability along with atmospheric aerosols (that block incoming solar radiation) both play roles in the findings. For...

Defining Green Economy May Stymie Rio Summit

Inter Press Service: The thematic battle at the U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) in Brazil next week will be primarily around the new concept of a "green economy" - and how best to define it. "If the green economy is clearly defined in a way that supports sustainable development without resorting to market-based experiments or techno-fixes, this will be a success," Alex Scrivener, policy officer at the London-based World Development Movement (WDM), told IPS. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon...

Land grabs leave Africa facing ‘hydrological suicide’

AlertNet: A scramble for cheap African farmland by foreign investors threatens to leave millions of people without water and could ultimately drain the continent's rivers, a report warns. "If these land grabs are allowed to continue, Africa is heading for a hydrological suicide," said the report's co-author Henk Hobbelink, coordinator of GRAIN, an organisation supporting small farmers. Foreign governments and wealthy individuals are snapping up millions of hectares of land on the continent for large-scale...

Climate change will boost number of U.S. West’s wildfires

Reuters: Climate change will make wildfires in the West, like those now raging in parts of Colorado and New Mexico, more frequent over the next 30 years, researchers reported on Tuesday. More broadly, almost all of North America and most of Europe will see an increase in wildfires by the year 2100, the scientists wrote in the journal Ecosphere, a publication of the Ecological Society of America. The U.S. Southwest - Arizona, New Mexico and Texas - is the fastest-warming region of the United States,...

Extended Forecast: Northern Hemisphere Could Be in for Extreme Winters

Scientific American: Meteorological summer has begun in the Northern Hemisphere, but what is happening right now in the arctic could dramatically affect the weather you confront come December. This past winter was the warmest in U.S. history whereas eastern Europe was stuck in a deadly deep freeze with snow piled up to the rooftops. The winter before, however, it was the U.S. that got clobbered. What's going on? What will happen this year? We may finally have some answers. A new analysis published today in Oceanography...

Drier summers in the Lower Mainland will require new ways to conserve water: Study

Vancouver Sun: Drier summers in the Lower Mainland will require communities to find new ways to conserve water in the coming decades, says a major new study on climate change adaptation released Monday. That water conservation could include porous parking lot surfaces and roads without curbs. Both would allow water normally lost in storm sewers to replenish groundwater aquifers, said the 150-page report. A porous asphalt parking lot uses larger pieces of gravel and less tar, which allows more water to...