Daily Archives: December 5, 2014

Glum and Glummer? Or is There a Glimmer? Fact-Checking “The Newsroom”

December 5, 2014

The piece above has gone viral – it’s Aaron Sorkin’s overly gloomy “it’s all over, why bother” take on climate change.

I maintain it’s the lazy way, – just as toxic, and wrong, as ‘it’s all a plot, there is no warming”.

It’s gotten enough traction that Climate Desk has done some fact checking, and Mike Mann was asked about it in a recent radio interview, excerpted below.

James West in Mother Jones:

The scene is odd for a number of reasons. The Newsroom packages

its drama based on last year’s events, and at that time, the news that the world was approaching 400 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere had been publicly anticipated for weeks. So, not a scoop in any way, or anything that anyone following the science didn’t already know.

But putting that aside, let’s take a look at Sorkin’s “facts”, as presented in the episode. How do they measure up? Let’s go line-by-line through the scene above.

…(read more).

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Fact-checking The Newsroom’s Take on Climate Change


Climate Desk

Uploaded on Nov 26, 2014

Check out the original article breaking down and reviewing the science in “The Newsroom”: http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marbl…

Dr. Michael Mann’s reaction:

Published on Dec 5, 2014

Climate expert Mike Mann on what “The Newsroom” got right, and wrong. from bradblog radio – http://www.bradblog.com/

Part two here:


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Martin Litton Remembered As Fervent Conservationist

Littton
December 3, 2014

Melissa Block speaks with Kevin Fedarko of Outside Magazine for a remembrance of conservationist and outdoorsman Martin Litton. Litton devoted more than 60 years of his life to protecting the natural beauty of the West. He is credited with helping to keep dams out of the Grand Canyon, a ski resort out of the Sierra’s Mineral King Valley, and pushing for the establishment of Redwood National Park.

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Animation: Loss of West Antarctic glaciers appears unstoppable

Dramatic loss:

Antarctic-glac3

May 12, 2014 2:22 PM EDT – A new study by researchers at NASA and the University of California at Irvine finds a rapidly melting section of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet appears to be in an irreversible state of decline, with nothing to stop the glaciers in this area from melting into the sea. (NASA)

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Research casts alarming light on decline of West Antarctic glaciers

By Chris Mooney and Joby Warrick December 4 at 3:21 PM

For two decades, scientists have kept a close watch on a vast, icebound corner of West Antarctica that is undergoing a historic thaw. Climate experts have predicted that, centuries from now, the region’s mile-thick ice sheet could collapse and raise sea levels as much as 11 feet.

Now, new evidence is causing concern that the collapse could happen faster than anyone thought. New scientific studies this week have shed light on the speed and the mechanics of West Antarctic melting, documenting an acceleration that, if it continues, could have major effects on coastal cities worldwide.

Twin papers this week show that the rate of ice loss from West Antarctica is increasing — with the acceleration particularly pronounced in the past decade — and also why this is happening: Warmer ocean waters are pushing up from below and bathing the base of the ice sheet.

The findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that the effects of climate change are outpacing scientific predictions, driven in part, scientists say, by soaring levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

…(read more).

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Amid Receipt of ‘Alternative Nobel,’ McKibben Donates Prize Money to 350.org, Steps Down as Chair

Bill McKibben giving a speech in the run-up to the People’s Climate March in New York City. (Photo credit: ©2014 Steve Liptay)

“Don’t worry,” author and activist assured members. “I’ll still be there when the time comes to go to jail, or to march in the streets, or to celebrate the next big win on divestment.”

by Jon Queally, staff writer

In a letter on Tuesday morning sent from Stockholm, Sweden—where on Monday night he accepted a Right Livelihood Award on behalf of himself and the climate action group 350.org—the journalist turned activist Bill McKibben announced that in addition to donating the prize money to the group he co-founded with former students, he will also be stepping down as chair of the organization’s board of directors.

“We have found our will to fight, and that gives us a fighting chance to win.” —Bill McKibben, 350.org”No one should run a board forever,” said McKibben in a blog post on the 350.org website that also went out to supporters of the group. McKibben vowed to remain highly active in the organization, retaining a seat on the board and acting as a senior adviser. “Don’t worry,” he told members. “I’ll still be there when the time comes to go to jail, or to march in the streets, or to celebrate the next big win on divestment.”

Offering credit to all the staff and volunteers who have made 350.org the premiere climate action group in the world, McKibben wrote:

Our goal, always, has been to build campaigns that volunteers around the planet can make their own, and that’s what we’ll keep doing. In truth, it’s been the great joy of my working life to be a volunteer here at 350.org, just like all of you. I’m looking forward to the next 25 years—the quarter century that will decide whether we make progress enough to preserve our civilizations. Together we’ve built a movement; now, together, we’ll deploy it to confront the greatest crisis we’ve ever faced. 2014 will be the hottest year in the planet’s history; that means we have to make 2015 the politically hottest season the fossil fuel industry has ever come up against, and 2016 after that, and….

We have found our will to fight, and that gives us a fighting chance to win. I’m happy to be here in Stockholm accepting this prize on our behalf, but for me it will be the biggest honor of all simply to be shoulder to shoulder with you as we go into battle.

The environmental campaigner—who wrote one of the first popular books on climate change, titled End of Nature in 1998, before initiating 350.org in 2007—was one of five recipients of this year’s Right Livelihoods awards, given to those offering “exemplary answers to the most urgent challenges facing” humanity and the planet. His co-laureates this year were NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger who shared a joint Honorary Award; human rights activist Asma Jahangir of Pakistan; and Basil Fernando and the Asian Human Rights Commission from Hong Kong.

In his acceptance speech for the award, McKibben stated, “We simply must defeat those forces that want to delay large-scale change so they can have a decade or two more profit. There’s no ducking that fight: If you invest in fossil fuel companies, you profit from the destruction of the earth. That’s the definition of dirty money. Those who invest in fossil fuel companies are making a wager that the world will do nothing to combat climate change. That’s an immoral wager.”

…(read more).

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BBC News – African soil crisis threatens food security, says study

3 December 2014 Last updated at 20:25 ET
By Mark Kinver Environment reporter, BBC News

Failure to tackle land degradation will exacerbate Africa’s food security worries, the report warns
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Neglecting the health of Africa’s soil will lock the continent into a cycle of food insecurity for generations to come, a report has warned.

The publication by the Montpellier Panel said the problem needed to be given a higher priority by aid donors.

It added that soil degradation was also hampering economic development, costing the continent’s farmers billions of dollars in lost income.

The study has been published ahead of the 2015 international year of soils.

The Montpellier Panel – made up of agricultural, trade and ecology experts from Europe and Africa – warned that land degradation reduced soil fertility, leading to lower crop yields and increased greenhouse gas emissions.

“In Africa, the impacts are substantial where 65% of arable land, 30% of grazing land and 20% of forests are already damaged,” it observed.

Panel chairman Sir Prof Gordon Conway, from Imperial College London, told BBC News: “We spend a lot of time talking about crops and we spend a lot of time talking about livestock. We have big debates about all kinds of agriculture, yet we tend to ignore that it all depends on soils.”

He added that recent measurements had shown that soil degradation levels across the continent were very high.

“Serious land degradation [accounts for] about a quarter of land area of sub-Saharan Africa – it is a vast area,” he said.

“There are about 180 million people who are living on land that is in some way or another degraded. It is really very severe.”

…(read more).

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BBC News – ‘Future Earth’ platform outlines global change strategy

4 December 2014 Last updated at 10:50 ET
By Mark Kinver Environment reporter, BBC News
Future Earth plans to focus on what are considered to be the most pressing issues facing the planet
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A global initiative bringing together scientists across different disciplines has launched its strategy to identify key priorities for sustainability.

The document outlines what Future Earth, launched at the 2012 Rio +20 Summit, hopes to contribute towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

It has identified eight global challenges, including “water, energy and food for all” and decarbonisation.

The strategy also focuses on the roles of policymakers and funding bodies.

“Future Earth is a global research platform aimed at connecting the world’s scientists across the regions and across disciplines to work on the problems of sustainable development and the solutions to move us towards sustainable development,” explained Future Earth science committee vice-chairwoman Belinda Reyers.

“It really is an unprecedented attempt to consult with scientists across the world as well as with important stakeholders and policymakers,” she told BBC News.

“It will consider what kind of science is needed in the medium-term to really move us towards more desirable futures.”

Dr Reyers – chief scientist at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) in Stellenbosch, South Africa – said the strategy had been distilled down to eight “sustainability challenges”:

See PDF of Report

http://www.futureearth.org/sites/default/files/future-earth_10-year-vision_web.pdf

…(read more).

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Report

BBC News – US chimpanzee Tommy ‘has no human rights’ – court

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-30338231
4 December 2014 Last updated at 16:50 ET

Chimpanzee Tommy is believed to be 40 years old
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A chimpanzee is not entitled to the same rights as people and does not have be freed from captivity by its owner, a US court has ruled.

The appeals court in New York state said caged chimpanzee Tommy could not be recognised as a “legal person” as it “cannot bear any legal duties”.

The Nonhuman Rights Project had argued that chimps who had such similar characteristics to the humans deserved basic rights, including freedom.

The rights group said it would appeal.

Owner pleased

In its ruling, the judges wrote: “So far as legal theory is concerned, a person is any being whom the law regards as capable of rights and duties.

“Needless to say, unlike human beings, chimpanzees cannot bear any legal duties, submit to societal responsibilities or be held legally accountable for their actions.”

The court added that there was no precedent for treating animals as persons and no legal basis.

…(read more).

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BBC News – Super Typhoon Hagupit strengthens as it nears Philippines

4 December 2014 Last updated at 20:36 ET

BBC Weather’s John Hammond says the Samar province is in the firing line for the typhoon
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Typhoon Hagupit has strengthened into a super storm over the Pacific as it approaches the Philippines.

Hagupit, or “Ruby” in the Philippines, has gusts of up to 250km/h (155mph) and is forecast to reach land on Saturday.

It is on course for the Eastern Samar province and the city of Tacloban, where thousands were killed by Typhoon Haiyan a year ago.

Tens of thousands of people, many of whom still live in temporary shelters, are moving away from coastal areas.

(read more).

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