9.11.07

Inconvenient Truths about Biofuels and Greenhouse Gas Mitigation

“Ethanol is often touted as a solution for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions, but the inconvenient truth expressed by concerned scientists is that the greenhouse gas emissions resulting from biofuel production and associated agricultural practices would effectively negate or even reverse any reduction in emissions that could be achieved by significantly expanding the use of ethanol as a transportation fuel.”
Charles T. Drevna
Executive Vice President, National Petrochemical & Refiners Association (NPRA)
November 8, 2007


Scientists Say the IPCC’s Latest Climate Mitigation Report Fails to Address the “Dangers and Pitfalls” Associated with Biofuel Expansion.

Scientists from Cornell University, the University of California, Berkeley, RSS GmbH’s Munich office, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, and Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt recently expressed their concerns in a lengthy letter to IPCC Chairman, Dr. Rajendra Pachauri on deficient or incomplete conclusions about biofuel production and use made by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in their recent global report.

Labels: , , , ,

Bookmark the AirZone Blog Subscribe to the AirZone Feed

C2NN: Submit it!

7.5.07

More from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

The third volume of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report was release on May 4th, entitled “Mitigation of Climate Change.” The report offers options for short-term and long-term strategies to stabilize factors contributing to climate change.

The report covers six areas:
• Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission trends
• Mitigation in the short and medium term, across different economic sectors (until 2030)
• Mitigation in the long-term (beyond 2030)
• Policies, measures and instruments to mitigate climate change
• Sustainable development and climate change mitigation
• Gaps in knowledge

According to the report summary, greenhouse gas emissions have grown since pre-industrial times, with the biggest increase of 70% was between 1970 and 2004. The largest increase can be seen in the area of energy supply with an increase of 145%.

To read the complete report along with suggestions on how changes can be made, visit: http://www.ipcc.ch/SPM040507.pdf

See the Source:
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change



Labels: , , , , ,

Bookmark the AirZone Blog Subscribe to the AirZone Feed

C2NN: Submit it!

6.4.07

Time's Running Out for Planet Earth

The IPCC delivered its second report on Thursday in Brussels entitled “Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability,” offering a somber projection for the future of Earth if action to abate global warming is delayed.

One author of the report, Kevin Hennessy, a researcher from CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research says the study, “clearly shows that human activities are already affecting some natural systems. That’s a very new finding.”

In blunt terms the report states, “Unmitigated climate change would, in the long term, be likely to exceed the capacity of natural, managed and human systems to adapt.”

A global temperatures rise of 1.5 – 2.5 degrees will have a devastating impact on the environment and human existence. Between 20 to 30 percent of plant and animal species addressed in the study are at risk of extinction. Mankind can expect an increase in severity and frequency of heatwaves, droughts, storms and other severe weather patterns, resulting in widespread malnutrition, water shortages, and diseases, as well as a lost of land mass.

Dr. Bryson, CSIRO Climate Program Director, says “climate change is real and the time to act is short. Adaptation to climate change is as important as the mitigation of greenhouse gases.”

Another researcher, Professor Terry Hughes adds, “we have a narrow window of opportunity – no more than 20 years to achieve decisive cuts in greenhouse gases – to protect coral reefs from massive degradation.”

Other warnings from the report include:
- water shortages in Africa, with an increased risk of hunger
- glaciers melting in the Himalayas will increase flooding, rock avalanches and disrupt water resources
- flooding in the Asian river deltas will lead to a rise in temperature and changing rainfall patterns, resulting in an increase of hunger in developing countries
- small island states will experience a rise in sea level, threatening communities and water supplies
- developed nations (such as US and Australia) face drought, fires and rising sea-levels that will impact coastal properties

The report recommends several strategies to deal with climate change, cut greenhouse gases and cope with changing technology, infrastructure and land use.

See the Source:
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
The Sydney Morning Herald

Labels: , , , , ,

Bookmark the AirZone Blog Subscribe to the AirZone Feed

C2NN: Submit it!

12.3.07

Statistical Analysis Debunks Climate Change Naysayers

Despite the fact that the hundreds of scientists and reviewers on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change announced February 2nd in Paris that global warming is "very likely" caused by human activity, governments and other policy-makers may still justify inaction because of naysayers like Danish weather scientist Henrik Svensmark, who maintains that global climate change can be attributed to the proportion of cosmic rays in our atmosphere, and atmospheric physicist S. Fred Singer, who asserts that “The whole question of anthropogenic, or human-caused, global warming is central to setting any policy of climate mitigation and therefore warrants closer examination.”

“These arguments are moot,” says Peter Tsigaris, an economist at Thompson Rivers University, in Kamloops, BC, Canada. He continues: “The important question is the cost of these opinions being wrong relative to the cost of the IPCC report being wrong in its assessment.”

In a thought-provoking statistical analysis, Tsigaris has concluded that whether or not climate change can be wholly attributed to human factors, it makes strong economic and environmental sense to take action as though it is human-caused, and mitigate the effects of global warming beyond taking measures to adopt.

He arrived at this conclusion as a result of creating the solution for a question he posed to his statistics students.

Tsigaris asked, “A claim is made that global warming is caused by humans. Set up the null and alternative hypothesis for this claim. As a scientist, you want to test that the above claim is true beyond a reasonable doubt. Discuss in terms of the type I and type II errors that are associated with the claim, and discuss the implications of the errors in terms of their associated costs.”

The null hypothesis, considered true unless the evidence brought forward throws serious doubt on it, is that global warming is not caused by human activities; the alternative hypothesis is the claim that it is. In the analogy of our justice system, a person on trial is assumed to be innocent, the null, until the evidence indicates that (s)he is guilty, the alternative, beyond a reasonable doubt.

Now for the interesting part. “As a scientist, in order to reject the null and thus accept the alternative, there has to be evidence that goes beyond a reasonable doubt. In statistical terms, the observed test statistics from the evidence pass beyond a reasonable doubt,” explains Tsigaris.

If the scientist rejects the null, based on strong evidence in favour of the rejection, there is still a small chance of making a type I error. In the same way, acceptance of the null might be the wrong decision. The latter decision would be associated with a type II error.

“A Type I error implies that you have accepted that global warming is caused by humans when in fact it is not, while a Type II error implies the opposite,” he says.

“As one of my statistics students, Robert Guercio, wrote in his exam booklet, ‘The cost of a type I error would mean spending a great amount of money and time focusing on how we can stop humans from causing global warming when humans are not the problem, but the cost of a type II error would mean spending a great deal of money and time on finding what is causing global warming and then continue to work on some factor of global warming, but not focusing on the real factor, humans.”

It’s not just a lesson in numbers, explains Tsigaris, who cautions that the cost of a type II error, stating that global climate change is not human-caused when in fact it is, could be as high as humankind destroying itself. "As Lovelock points out in his Gaia theory, earth is self regulating and will look after itself," he adds.“It is obvious that a type II error, being unaware that global warming is caused by humans and maintaining our current living styles, is much more serious than a type I error which argues that humans are the cause when they are not, in terms of the costs,” he says.

“Rising sea levels, temperature and precipitation caused by human lifestyles will have an impact on our health, agriculture, forestry, water, coastal areas, as well as on other species and natural areas,” he says, adding that “this analysis also confirms the Stern Review on The Economics of Climate Change which suggests that the cost of taking action today is way less than the cost of continuing the current path we have chosen.”

“The cost of changing behaviour and taking action now is estimated at one percent of global GDP and this can be seen as an investment from a long-term perspective: investing in cleaner technologies and also putting a price tag on the use of our atmosphere. If we delay as we would do if we accepted that climate change is not human-caused when this conclusion was false, we would be faced with a huge cost,” warns Tsigaris.

The recent 2007 IPCC report concluded that global warming was very likely (90%) to have been caused by humans. The Stern Review states that “the benefits of strong and early action far outweigh the economic costs of not acting” and estimates that “if we don’t act, the overall costs and risks of climate change will be equivalent to losing at least 5% of global GDP each year, now and forever. If a wider range of risks and impacts is taken into account, the estimates of damage could rise to 20% of GDP or more. In contrast, the costs of action – reducing greenhouse gas emissions to avoid the worst impacts of climate change – can be limited to around 1% of global GDP each year."

See the Source:
Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change

Labels: , , , ,

Bookmark the AirZone Blog Subscribe to the AirZone Feed

C2NN: Submit it!

2.2.07

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Adopts Major Assessment of Climate Change Science

Paris, 2 February 2007 – Late last night, Working Group I of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) adopted the Summary for Policymakers of the first volume of “Climate Change 2007”, also known as the Fourth Assessment Report (AR4).

“Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis”, assesses the current scientific knowledge of the natural and human drivers of climate change, observed changes in climate, the ability of science to attribute changes to different causes, and projections for future climate change.

The report was produced by some 600 authors from 40 countries. Over 620 expert reviewers and a large number of government reviewers also participated. Representatives from 113 governments reviewed and revised the Summary line-by-line during the course of this week before adopting it and accepting the underlying report.

The Summary can be downloaded in English from http://www.ipcc.ch/ and http://ipcc-wg1.ucar.edu/. A webcast of the final press conference has also been posted. The Summary will be available in Arabic, Chinese French, Russian and Spanish at a later date. The full underlying report will be published in English by Cambridge University Press.

From the IPCC website:
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been established by WMO and UNEP to assess scientific, technical and socio- economic information relevant for the understanding of climate change, its potential impacts and options for adaptation and mitigation. It is currently finalizing its Fourth Assessment Report "Climate Change 2007". The reports by the three Working Groups provide a comprehensive and up-to-date assessment of the current state of knowledge on climate change.

Climate Change 2007 - A comprehensive and rigorous picture of the global present state of knowledge of climate change.
- 2500+ Scientific Expert Reviewers
- 800+ Contributing Authors
- 450+ Lead Authors from 130+ Countries
- 6 Years of Work
- 4 Volumes
- 1 Report

The Conclusion: There is a 90 percent certainty that global warming is man-made as reported by scientists and representatives of 113 governments. The situation is an existing and worsening threat to the environment and inhabitants of earth, including an increase in storm risk and intensity, and a rise of sea level by 23 inches by 2100.

See the Source:
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

Find out:
How emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) contribute to global warming and how you can reduce NOx using selective catalytic reduction.

Labels: , , , ,

Bookmark the AirZone Blog Subscribe to the AirZone Feed

C2NN: Submit it!