Archive for March 19th, 2016

Environmental Activists Take to Local Protests for Global Results

New York Times: They came here to get arrested. Nearly 60 protesters blocked the driveway of a storage plant for natural gas on March 7. Its owners want to expand the facility, which the opponents say would endanger nearby Seneca Lake. But their concerns were global, as well. “There’s a climate emergency happening,” one of the protesters, Coby Schultz, said. “It’s a life-or-death struggle.” The demonstration here was part of a wave of actions across the nation that combines traditional not-in-my-backyard protests...

Australian Climate Council calls for urgent action as records tumble

Guardian: Record hot spells in Australia this month blurred the line between summer and autumn in another sign of rapidly advancing global warming, a Climate Council report says. The first four days of March saw maximum temperatures in much of the country 4C above average – and 8C to 12C above average in most of southeastern Australia – the report said. Despite summer being over, the New South Wales/Victorian border towns of Echuca and Tocumwal suffered the longest, hottest spell in their recorded history,...

New US support for Indonesia’s climate change goals

Jakarta Post: US Ambassador Robert Blake revealed two new projects aimed at bolstering the work of the newly formed Peatland Restoration Agency during the Environment and Forestry Ministry-sponsored climate festival. He said the two projects, funded under the Millennium Challenge Corporation's compact with Indonesia, were part of the US government's strong support for Indonesia's climate change goals. "The projects will help restore and protect the country's peatland areas, which have been threatened by fire...

El Niño Upsets Seasons, and Upends Lives, Worldwide

New York Times: In rural villages in Africa and Asia, and in urban neighborhoods in South America, millions of lives have been disrupted by weather linked to the strongest El Niño in a generation. In some parts of the world, the problem has been not enough rain; in others, too much. Downpours were so bad in Paraguay’s capital, Asunción, that shantytowns sprouted along city streets, filled with families displaced by floods. But farmers in India had the opposite problem: Reduced monsoon rains forced them off the...

February was the warmest month in recorded history, climate experts say

Guardian: Our planet went through a dramatic change last month. Climate experts revealed that February was the warmest month in recorded history, surpassing the previous global monthly record – set in December. An unprecedented heating of our world is now under way. With the current El Niño weather event only now beginning to tail off, meteorologists believe that this year is destined to be the hottest on record, warmer even than 2015. Nor is this jump in global temperature a freak triggered by an unusually...

Vanishing wetlands: Indiscriminate development & poor regulation

Economic Times: Vidhya Krishnan, a 30-year-old software engineer in Bengaluru, likes to take an early-morning walk around the city's Ulsoor Lake before an hour-long commute to work. However, in early March this year, she and other walkers got a rude shock: floating on the surface of the lake were hundreds of dead fish. Ulsoor Lake looked set to meet the fate of many such water bodies in India's information technology capital - one estimate stated that over 80 of them had disappeared in the last couple of decades....

Surge in 2016 Temps Adds Urgency to Climate Deal

Reuters: A record surge in temperatures in 2016, linked to global warming and an El Niño weather event in the Pacific, is adding urgency to a deal by 195 governments in December to curb greenhouse gas emissions to slow climate change, scientists said. Average global temperatures last month were 2.4°F above normal for February, the biggest temperature excess recorded for any month against a baseline of 1951-80, according to NASA data. The previous record was set in January, stoked by factors including...

Warmer Winters Will Mean Catastrophic Effects For The Environment And Human Life

ClimateProgress: For many, the winters we remember from childhood are becoming just that: memories. Winter’s record warmth in recent years - especially the shockingly high temperatures during the first months of 2016 - has become a frightening harbinger of a world to come. Along with shorter and warmer winters, many areas also are experiencing earlier-than-normal springs, or "false’’ springs, and sporadic hot summer-like days, a climate pattern that can produce chaos with the Earth’s ecosystems. "In the more...