« profile & posts archive

This author has written 446 posts for Larvatus Prodeo.

Return to: Homepage | Blog Index

75 responses to “Climate clippings 61”

  1. jumpy

    Re EU airline CO2 tax, QANTAS aren’t happy ( fancy that ) but what’s Albanese bleating about?

    http://www.heraldsun.com.au/business/eu-carbon-tax-turbulence-hits-qantas/story-fn7j19iv-1226238582629

  2. Ootz

    Brian re Jet Streams, a while backNASA illustrated very effectively the link between a stalled jet stream system and major weather events in Extreme 2010 Russian Fires and Pakistan Floods Linked Meteorologically . It also contains a section on Future Directions and several animations. On the southern hemisphere this plays out slightly different because of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. An interesting and topical discussion re Jet Streams and relationship with ENSO at Weatherzone (posted by ROM, it also contains link to Southern Hemisphere Jet Stream analyses.) There were other reports, that the recent heat wave in SA were delivered by ‘unusual’ Jet Stream.

    Btw. later in that WZ Enso thread @p4 there is much venting re BOM and presumably Climate Modelling not taking into account ENSO in AGW models. I was just wondering whether this links with
    “In general, while doing a pretty good job, models tend to under-represent some aspects of natural climate variability (usually those on longer timescales) in the method section in rogers post linked in CC 60?

  3. Ootz

    Ugh …. rogers post above.
    (I am, health wise, under the weather again at present – hope yous don’t mind me occasionally loosing focus)

  4. Roger Jones

    Ootz, hope your health picks up (is this the wet season ailment?).

    The models have a range of responses re ENSO. Some produce the variability really well, in others it is suppressed. In the CSIRO model some years ago it was improved by better representation of the tight thermocline in the Pacific (that’s the layer in the ocean separating surface mixing from depth and marks a rapid temp change with depth.) Thermoclines are critical for surface water energy balance.

    One of the areas where models are less sensitive is in the reproduction of the sub tropical ridge over Australia in the 20th century. The SEACI (SE Oz Climate Initiative) project showed that the obs showed greater changes than in the NCAR model – similar behaviour in many of the other models.

    This is why, on balance, when the modelling represents better climate dynamics, the risks become even larger than in earlier simpler versions. The criticism of models doing a bad job is a two-edged sword.

  5. Roger Jones

    Brian,

    thanks for the summaries. Obviously I think the recent heat extremes are due to non-linear warming, or shifts. I analysed the Tamino (Foster and Rahmstorf) time series you show. Taking the variability influences out of it makes the shift in 1997 even clearer for the statistical tests I use. Adds support to my argument, I reckon.

    Will put up the analysis but need to pay some attention to the garden first.

  6. Lefty E

    “coal is the single greatest threat to civilization and all life on our planet.” Prof. James Hansen, NASA chief climatologist

    http://www.climateaction.org.au/files/The_Sword_of_Damocles_-_James_Hansen.pdf

  7. Lefty E

    Thats right Brian. Politically, we should be using language like “Moratorium” , and “Non-proliferation Treaty” etc.

    Coal-fired power stations are WMDs. Pure and simple.

  8. John D

    LE @9: Watch it mate. Fergies thought police will be on to you, not the builders and operators of coal fired WMD’s.

  9. Keithy

    The Canadian bloke who made the Compact Linear Fresnel Reflectors, Dr David Mills, is on Youtube stating that it is too late for the 440ppm level to not be passed!

    This was years ago he made that statement…

    He reckoned it was unkown if that 440ppm level could be breached and then brought back under but he said it was definately inevitable that it would be passed in the first!!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_IMRLi8HdY

    Fairly sure this is the link but I haven’t got sound at the moment unfortunately ~;^{

  10. John D

    Keithy: The Mauna Loa data indicates that the increase in CO2 at this site increased at an average rate of 2.05 ppm for the last 10 yrs. The current seasonally adjusted level is 393 ppm. On these figures the seasonally adjusted figure should reach 440 by 2035.
    The increase for the last 10 yrs is the highest 10 yr average in the ML record which started in 1959. 10 yrs ago the highest 10 yr average was 1.636 ppm/yr.

  11. Wozza

    Jumpy @1

    Albanese is between a rock and a hard place. He should be four square behind Qantas in opposing this illegal, under international law, tax and supporting the national interest – Governments exist in order that the national interest be advanced, do they not? – but opposing a carbon tax elsewhere would raise even more uncomfortable, if very pertinent, questions about what the Government has wrought in Australia. So he makes a ludicrously feeble attempt to nod in Qantas’ direction while supporting the principle of carbon taxes everywhere on everyone.

    Ludicrously feeble because as even a halfwit knows – come to think of it, of course, this gives Albanese an out – ICAO has no power to levy taxes. Even the UN doesn’t. And why on earth would any Government which objects to this tax as imposed by the EU agree to it if it came out of ICAO? Which of course it never could anyway, since with the US, China and India (and almost everyone else outside the EU, except possibly – we’ll never know because this pusillanimous Government will continue to sit on the fence with Albo-isms – Australia) opposed, ICAO would never pass it.

    Leaving aside the Albanese-bashing, this is a very important dispute. Where the rubber hits the road for global carbon pricing. I don’t understand, Brian, how you can dismiss it with “it’s amazing is that this will be a contentious issue at all”. It doesn’t matter if the impact is only $3 a ticket (and the substantial rest actually, but let’s take your figure since it doesn’t affect the argument), the issue is extra-territorial application of a tax imposed by one entity for dubious reasons in violation of international law. OK, it is possible to query the “violation” – not credibly in my view, but at the very least the US et al can be expected to contest the principle down to the last legal option since if the ruling is against them there are lots of implications outside aircraft fuel.

    After all, it’s in their national interests, and there are some countries fortunate enough to have governments that still know what this means.

  12. John D

    My understanding is that Delta will charge a massive $3 surcharge on its airfares to cover the cost of this airline destroying tax.
    A number of countries may actually feel that the EU is setting a useful precedent that can be used against the EU or other countries.

  13. Wozza

    Brian @15: believe it or not, the European Court of Justice has no jurisdiction over international trade disputes which is what this is.

    In September, the US, Brazil, India, China, Russia and 21 other governments made a joint representation to the EU, saying that unilaterally imposed European measures on airline emissions were “inconsistent with international legal regimes”. Subsequent to the ECJ decision, the US and India have both reiterated that position, threatening retaliation if the EU go ahead, the Chinese have said bluntly that they won’t pay, and none of the September signatories have actually said “oh, that’s it, we were wrong then”.

    But on the basis of an assertion from a European institution with no jurisdiction over international law, you prefer to believe that everyone’s out of step but our EU? Well, fair enough, we’re all entitled to an opinion but frankly I don’t think this one has enough behind it to justify snide remarks about mine.

    As for the only $3 per ticket, that depends whom you believe. The Washington Times says $30 per round trip, and Bloomberg quoting a UK aviation industry organisation says up to 3% of ticket value.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-09/air-ticket-prices-may-increase-by-3-on-eu-carbon-plan-oag-says.html

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/jan/2/europes-airline-tax-bomb/
    We’ll have to see, and that will take a while since the tax doesn’t cut in till March 2013, but I would point out that, if it is only $3, this will have next door to no impact on actual emissions, the ostensible point of the exercise. So, defy international opinion and precipitate a trade war for nothing achieved, is in your view praiseworthy?

    And whatever the eventual outcome, and the legal rights and wrongs – and I concede that airline services is a murkier area in that sense than most other areas of services trade, under the GATT/WTO treaties – the point that Jumpy and I were making about the pusillanimous, sit on the fence, bugger Qantas, totally characteristic of this government, response from Albanese, is not affected.

  14. Fran Barlow

    Wozza said in part:

    whatever the eventual outcome {…} under the GATT/WTO treaties – the point that Jumpy and I were making about the pusillanimous, sit on the fence, bugger Qantas …

    It’s fine with me. Firstly, there are no GATT/WTO implications as the measure falls easily within the provisions — (non-discrimination, public policy purpose, compliance with international treaty) — and it’s one of the reasons why an ETS here applying to transport was called for.

    Personally, I believe QANTAS/Jetstar/Air Some Place in South East-Asia deserves whatever bad stuff comes its way after its appalling conduct last year. If it goes to the wall, I’ll be amongst those waving goodbye with a smile — not that $3 or even 3% of ticket price — if it came to that would make the slightest difference given that everyone else is going to be wearing the same cost or bound to show that it is subject to an equaivalent cost burden per tCO2e.

  15. Fran Barlow

    oops: subject to an equivalent …

  16. Keithy

    BRIAN @ 16, OK- “sorry Forum, I was wrong… the relevant figure was 400ppm I apologise! (I could have sworn it was 440ppm!!!!)”

  17. Dave McRae

    Interesting (as in we’re going to run the experiment so may as well see what we’re getting) one from Nature regarding Tibetian permafrost in that the thawing seems to be reducing river runoff rather than increasing it
    http://www.nature.com/news/thawing-permafrost-reduces-river-runoff-1.9749

  18. Wozza

    Fran @ 19

    You are more forgiving of a politician obfuscating than I am. Though I suspect you wouldn’t be if it were Abbott not Albanese.

    The fact is that almost every non-EU country with a major airline has come out firmly against this tax, except Australia. Because it is against their national interests. Albanese has to explain why, unlike other countries, it is not against Australia’s national interests, or acknowledge that his comments are actually driven by partisan domestic politics. So should you.

    You are very confident that this measure is not contrary to the EU’s GATT/WTO obligations. On what grounds? It hasn’t been legally tested and this is one of the issues to be explored. Core air services are excluded from GATS and the TBT agreement, but there is an Annex to GATS covering some aspects of air services. Its scope is unclear. This paper if you are interested enough to lay out some money on it explores the issues:

    http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1959981

    Furthermore, the WTO is not all or even most of the international legal obligations the EU has in regard to air services. Most are in the web of bilateral air services agreements the EU and EU countries have with other countries. Including Australia, though funnily enough Albanese feels this is not worth mentioning.

    In regard to the WTO, it needs to be considered that, if the EU’s actions are indeed outside WTO disciplines, so therefore are retaliatory measures against EU airlines taken by the US et al. This could get very nasty very quickly.

    The bottom line is that the EU measure is shoot first, ask questions afterwards. This is fundamentally incompatible with an effective rules-bound international trading system. Since the Kyoto Protocol excludes airline emissions it gets no cover there or anywhere else in international law either. You may think that this is unimportant in comparison to computer-driven doomsday climate scenarios, but many well-informed,sovereign governments do not.

  19. Wozza

    Brian @ 18: yes, I think we can agree on most of that, particularly the importance of the thin end of the wedge. But I would invert the prism through which you are viewing it (“it seems to me that the Europeans take climate change more seriously than most”). It seems to me that the issue is that others take the rule of international law, and particularly its (relative) success over many years in preventing trade and economic disputes deteriorating and expanding into beggar thy neighbour wars, more seriously than does the EU.

    Without wanting to repeat what I have just said in response to Fran, extra-territorial application of domestic law is a hugely sensitive issue in international trade. It is more so now, with more and more suspicions that some, and as often as not the EU, are using environmental excuses to enact what are essentially protectionist measures. There is even greater vigilance with the expiry of the Kyoto Protocol, and the expectation (justified or not) that those who didn’t get what they wanted through that failed endeavour will now try to get it in other ways.

    In other words, the thin end of the wedge has got little to do with airlines per se. It is about this tax as a potential precursor to something much broader and much worse.

    For the record, I am not suggesting either that there is an easy answer to the issues raised by the EU carbon tax on airlines. I am suggesting only that there is a lot in play, and that it really can’t be dismissed with a simple “it’s amazing is that this will be a contentious issue at all”.

  20. Fran Barlow

    Without seeing the argument put by SSRN Wozza it’s hard to assess its force, but the more general provisions of GATT/WTO would not exclude this measure, and if someone felt they did, it would need to be arbitrated. If the losing party didn’t accept, the only alternative would be trade sanctions — and since both parties would lose in that scenario, one suspects a deal would be cut.

    Personally, I’d be happy to see a trade war over airline operations — it would be bound to cut airmiles in the longer run by more than any potential impost from the EU on carbon emissions.

    Not the least of the failures of the first iteration of the EU ETS was the failure to address this issue. I suppose that is why they have just decided to make a decision.

  21. Fran Barlow

    Baillieue Discovers the value of Freedom from Information

    The Baillieu government has been accused of using ”laughable” excuses to block the release of economic modelling it used to attack the Gillard government’s carbon tax …

  22. Wozza

    Fran Barlow @26

    I assume that would be the Victorian modelling done in response to the Federal modelling, done using a Treasury model which has also not been made public?

    While I have no sympathy for Baillieu’s position, a phrase about pots and kettles does come to mind.

  23. Fran Barlow

    Personally Wozza, I’d be entirely happy for the Federal Treasury modelling to be released, and believe strongly that it should be. That said, it was the Victorian government playing the alarmist card here, and if as seems likely, the modelling shoots down their claim, then the two are hardly comparable.

  24. Lefty E

    On a micro level: very happy with the negative $100 electricity bill ($100 credit) I just received for this quarter. Go solar!

  25. Fran Barlow

    I’ve seen a lot of PV panels on rooves lately Lefty. Coming back from Maitland (on John Hunter Drive?) there was a place which had every piece of north facing roof space covered — perhaps 40 panels. On Kissing Point Rd Dundas there’s a roof with 28 panels. And just down the street from the Bunnings at Carlingford someone has about 18 installed.

  26. alfred venison

    dear Brian
    my relatives report mild winter in alberta this time ’round: edmonton & points north. little or no snow on christmas day.v

    also, environment canada says 7 degrees above average is the norm this year across the country – this certainly gels with what my family’s been saying.

    i would have picked frankfurt as coldest myself because its inland, like edmonton; i don’t know about seoul, but i understand toronto has moderating effects from the lake.

    and this today from nasa:-
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/story/2012/01/12/mb-nasa-ecological-change-canada-manitoba.html?cmp=rss
    “Much of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba is predicted to see major shifts northward of plant and animal species.”
    yours sincerely
    alfred venison

  27. jumpy

    “”The NASA model used a global temperature increase of two to four degrees this century, as predicted by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.”"

    So NASA is programming IPCC data into their models?

    I thought it was supposed to be the other way around?

  28. Salient Green

    @34, our bill has gone down from $500 to $200 with a 1.5 kw system, and the inport export meter still has to be installed. (Shhh!) Go solar!

    I complained to both Origin and the installers about the the peak output being well below the 1.5kw and neither could give the actual reason, which, from my own research, is that the panel output is rated at 25C and loses .5% efficiency per degreeC above this. Even on a cool day, the temperature of the cells will be well above 25C.

  29. jumpy

    @38
    And there are idiots up here in Mackay with solar panels on black roofs with giant a/c units,triple stupid.

  30. Chris

    SG @ 38 – what sort of peak output are you getting? I think I read in the ReNew magazine that panels in summer often run around 85C so thats quite a drop in efficiency. Maybe they should be water cooled :-)

    At an Adelaide latitude I’m expecting to get around 4kWh/day per kW of installed rated power. Averaged over the whole year, with a lot more in summer than winter of course. With the FiT my panels should pay for themselves within about 7-10 years. With the upfront capital cost it is a bit like paying a few years of electricity in advance though :-)

  31. Lefty E

    Salient – Ive noticed the same, except for day 1, we’ve never got better than 1100 on our 1500 kw ph system. That said, the temp in Melbourne seems to suit the system well. On a 9-month scale, its provided 50% of our energy use. The good news is that the missing 3 months is summer. So I expect abuout 55%.

    Of course, with the feed-in tarriff for what we hae produced, the reduction in costs will be much greater than 55%. Id say closer to 70-75%.

  32. Salient Green

    Lefty, we’re getting around the 1.3kw but our area would be getting at least 100w/m2 sun than Melbourne. I have noticed that it will still crank up to the 1.5kw when there are a few white clouds in the sky. They seem to magnify the brightness.

  33. Fran Barlow

    Considering the falling efficiency of PV in conditions where ambient temperatures are above 25degC …

    Given that many people also have solar hot water, and the source of that water is either mains water or perhaps a rainwater tank, I wonder how feasible it would be to pass this water underneath the PV panels using a series of thin pipes (to maximise the heat sink effect). This should reduce the heat of the panels and by pre-heating the water, lead to improved efficiencies with hotwater output. It might even cool the roof.

  34. Chris

    LeftyE & SG – I think what you’re seeing is pretty typical for PV installations. Depending on the panel type/quality you can get quite different results. Some I had a look at promised 10% higher output but then they also cost more than 10% more. But more importantly than peak output is the overall energy production matching the modelling that the solar PV company supplied you with?

    Fran @ 45 – I’ve wondered why they don’t sell those sorts of systems here. Perhaps its complexity. Also in summer most solar hot water systems would produce way more hot water thatn people use and so the cooling capacity is greatly reduced unless you are willing to dispose of the water somewhere.

  35. Fran Barlow

    Also in summer most solar hot water systems would produce way more hot water thatn people use and so the cooling capacity is greatly reduced unless you are willing to dispose of the water somewhere.

    I can see that this could be a problem but you could always dump the excess into a rainwater tank. Raising the heat of the water there would help control small fauna and pathogens.

  36. Huggy

    Loss of PV power with temperature.
    Given constant insolation the power output from silicon based PV is reduced by almost 0.6% per degree centigrade above 45C . At solar noon I have measured about 90C at the back of the cell. This means at least 33% loss of power. You won’t hear about this from the solar shonks .
    Fran , water cooling has been tried – does not work.
    The most astonishing thing is that the module manufacturers cover the back of the module with white Tedlar which has a very high Albedo and thus poor emissivity.
    The other thing is the issue of thermally induced degradation in high voltage arrays. The PV industry won’t tell you about this either.
    Will your PV array really last 20 years? No way,, About as long as your Inverter – 5 to 10. Some fail after one year.
    That’s the power of the market folks.
    Huggy

  37. Fran Barlow

    And of course, the heat sink problem would be non-existent in medium and high density developments since ther relationship between roof collection capacity and users would be very different from that applying in traditional freee-standing residences.

  38. Wozza

    Well, if we’re going to talk about short term weather, I’ve been waiting for someone to mention the global temperature anomaly for 2011. Since no-one has – and I appreciate of course that today’s temperature in Toronto is much more significant for climate change than the most recent 12 months worth of data for the whole world – I guess I should.

    Global temperature anomaly less than +0.13C in December (UAH) wasn’t it? 2011 well below even Hansen’s scenario C (no net new greenhouse forcing after 2000)? Global temperature based on the last 6 years increasing at 0.45C per century?

    OK, granted, it’s weather. But it’s a sight nearer being climate than current temperatures in Toronto, Seoul and Frankfurt.

    Oh and in case anyone says “La Nina”, can I point out that Environment Canada were predicting a warm winter for Toronto before it started, because of ….. La Nina.

  39. alfred venison

    dear Brian
    thanks for the reply & the data – i’m open to correction. looks like frankfurt might be experiencing a beneficial effect from the gulf stream i didn’t account for, and seoul has its ocean currents, too. but when you say “It does go below -20C, lake or no lake” i cracked a wry smile. as i recall the minus 20′s are about as cold as it gets in toronto & that’s largely due to the lake. where i grew up (edmonton) minus 20′s the average in winter, the extreme is minus 30/ minus 35.

    the worst thing about winter in toronto is the humidity (again due to the lake) which combines with sub-zero temps into something very uncomfortable indeed. the cold moisture clings to your clothes, accumulates & gradually seeps in however carefully you wrap yourself. edmonton on the other hand is notoriously dry (guitarists & string players have slow release moisture sticks, called “snakes”, they insert into their instruments so the wood doesn’t split). consequently, the cold doesn’t seep into the very fabric of your clothes & chill you to your existential core. don’t get me wrong its still uncomfortable: your pants appear to freeze solid & feel like cold metal pipes around your thighs, your face stings. but at least you don’t feel “soggy” as well. the discomfort its qualitatively different. and of course the usual wind chill discomfort applies in both locales.

    they grow grapes in the toronto & make reasonably good wine in small volumes; they grow crab apples in edmonton & make stewed preserves in glass jars. if nasa’s right they’ll be growing mangoes in toronto & grapes in edmonton after i shuffle off. by the way, the “ice wine” production is down this year ’cause it wasn’t cold enough.
    yours sincerely
    alfred venison

  40. alfred venison

    dear Wozza
    there are mild winters and there are mild winters. and environment canda may well correlate them with la nina events, but from all i’m reading & hearing this is the mildest winter of them all. at least
    in other la nina winters since 1955 they had snow on the ground on xmas day in places where people live
    .
    yours sincerely
    alfred venison

  41. Chris

    Huggy @ 48 – the reputable solar PV sales people talk about how much power they will generate over a year rather than peak output. And they do warn people that output drops in higher temps, but you have longer days in summer which compensates…

    Also most PV panels have output guarantees over 20 years so if they degrade significantly within that time you’ll get replacements (as long as you bought from a manufacturer that will still be around!)

  42. Chris

    And talking about weather this year, it has been a fairly wet and cool (relatively speaking) summer in Adelaide this year – not that I’m complaining! Talking about short term weather effects in the context of global warming isn’t that helpful because there are such large natural variations from year to year.

  43. jumpy

    Big Wind is having as much trouble as Big Solar in the US.

    “”– Denmark-based turbine maker Vestas announced Thursday that it would lay off 2,335 employees worldwide, cease production at one of its 26 facilities, and warned that more cuts could be on the way.”"

    http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/01/vestas-to-cut-2335-jobs-worldwide-1600-u-s-jobs-may-be-next

  44. jumpy

    And if folk have the courage to get some ” skin in the game”or “money where ya mouth is” etc….
    Some clean energy stock-market tips

    http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/01/ten-clean-energy-stocks-for-2011-year-in-review

  45. jumpy

    I don’t know which surprise to hi light in this article.

    http://www.solardaily.com/reports/Philippines_pushes_renewable_energy_999.html

  46. BilB

    Chris,

    It is all about what happens in June. Remember August’s summer blast?

    I’m flaked out here in my office, suitably inebriated by a heavy application of medicinal red wine contemplating Robert Rapiers monthly video message of “it is not what the US have done or are doing now, it is what DC’s (developing countries) will do in the future” message, while complexing my contribution’s next week’s “business” spot visit to Charlotte NC.

    Environment?

    The word is rooted!

  47. BilB

    Followed, all too closely, by Kenny G’s “After the Love has Gone”

    Think about that!

  48. BilB

    And then delightfully in context, Tevin Campbell…..

    I21

  49. alfred venison

    dear Brian
    mississauga’s practically toronto, like parramatta’s practically sydney, just has a smaller “lake-frontage” and suburbs nearer the lake get more of the effect than suburbs further in land. some of my rels are in thunder bay ontario where the local climate benefits from the mitigating effects of another lake. of course, the best situated city in canada for local climate has to be vancouver, which has the further advantage of being stunningly beautiful.
    yours sincerely
    alfred venison

  50. BilB

    Vancouver is stunningly beautiful. One of my favourite places. And there is the ferry ride to Victoria,….or Seattle for that matter.

  51. Salient Green

    BilB, haven’t heard from you for a while. A bit of self medication never hurt me too much while contemplating the world’s problems although the red wine can dampen the benefit quite a bit if you’re not careful. I prefer a margarita or bourbon and coke for medicine, save the red for a meal. Enjoy and gluck.

  52. jumpy
  53. Huggybunny

    Chris @48
    20 year warranties for PV; they are warranted to be within a certain percentage of power at a Normal Operating Cell Temperature of 45C.
    In any case, homes change hands about every 7 years on average. So the PV module guys are totally safe; by the time the modules start to die the house will have changed hands maybe 3 times or if the original owners are in residence they will be far too demented by then to even give a stuff.
    Huggy

  54. BilB

    As it happens, Alfred, I’m going to visit a guy whose father fought in the Pacific in all of the same places that my dad did, and in the same way. It makes one think.

    You know, I was living in Port Moresby when the Japanese came through in the 50′s to take in all of the metal trash left from the War. There is some irony there. To the loser goes the spoils.

    My dad didn’t talk too much about the war. There was the occaisional story. One I remember was dad talking briefly about them hosing what was left of the tail gunner out as that was all that could be done. This, we humans, did to ourselves.

    I’m afraid, Alfred, that I am full of foreboding for what we…humans…are preparing for ourselves in the coming decades. The “war” will be tame by comparison. The tells are falling into place. Current talk of oil prices and energy supplies are more of many in that direction. And the environment? This thread is about the building climatic energy flows. What happened in Japan recently is a small glimpse of the future.

  55. alfred venison

    dear Brian
    don’t know what happened to that link, but here it is again, out in the open, no fancy pants:-
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/holiday/canadians-dreaming-of-a-white-christmas-can-keep-dreaming/article2280134/

    its just a fluffy life-style section color piece (like annabel crabbe used to write) but its based on a data set of “white christmases” maintained by environment canada since 1955. defined as “at least 2 cm of snow on the ground at 7:00 am”, last year saw the largest proportion of population not experiencing “white christmas” since records were started in 1955. it was predicted that “even where snow accumulates, there will be less than average … whitehorse [yukon], for example, has 16 cm of snow this year compared to an average of 28 cm”. the averages referenced would have factored in all the mild & harsh winters since 1955 & still this winter has had snowfall “below average” & its still the first winter in that dataset that hasn’t had a white christmas where most people live. la nina or el nino prevailing.

    the article stimulated an interesting set of responses from readers; less of the climate topic vitriol and more anecdotes & reflections on personal experiences of winter. not “scientific” to be sure, but “social” evidence of a sort. some of the comments:-
    - It’s not just the lack of snow that worries me in northern ontario – it is the lack of precipitation winter and summer. our precipitation levels have dropped so much over the last decade. the great lakes levels, inland lakes, rivers are all way down.

    - we have a good blanket of snow in the yukon [whitehorse?], but temperatures are bizarrely mild for this time of year – nice for us, but I do worry about the polar bears 600 mi further north.

    - thirty-five years ago, when I first moved to ottawa, there was always a bit of snow on the ground by remembrance day.

    - here on the west coast, there has been light snow in the 3 to 5 day forecast for almost the entire month of december. kinda like “free beer tomorrow”.

    and, yeah, that ice wine sounds like an enterprise born of desperation. but with new york city so close, where already they pay a premium for jamaican coffee that bats have eaten & shat, then maybe there a little niche for it, after all. apparently, the concept’s got some traction in germany, too, as you might expect. but its too pricey for me, too.
    yours sincerely
    alfred venison

  56. BilB

    Over the break I was able to catch up with current Coalition internal “thinking” on Global Warming. This is the thinking that allows these “great” minds to walk confidently in public.

    There are 2 main threads. The first is that Climate Change is simply natural fluctuation. Everyone “knows” that climate fluctuates, and this occurs on a 40 year cycle, according to the best Liberal/National scientific thinking.

    This “best” science has the aura of Barnaby Joyce about it. Fourty years is a period long enough for all political responsibility to be annulled, and for most “players” to have collected their pensions and be well retired.

    I just reviewed the graphs at CC 57. No 40 year trend even vaguely evident there.

    The second thread is an old one. “Barack Obama is the most dangerous politician in the world today”. Why is that?????

    He secretly aims to achieve Global Domination!!!!….and Julia Gillard is part of the plot. Their stealth weapon to achieve this is Global Climate Change Action.

    There you have it. The core Coalition environmental and political evaluation at the start of this 21st century, according to the very best science that business money can buy.

  57. Wozza

    Brian @ 51: I apologise if I misunderstood the background to the discussion on temperature in Toronto. Since the New Scientist article you link to is behind a paywall, it is quite possible.

    The exchanges on Toronto etc began (@ 32 and 36) in a reference back to your brief discussion of that link. I took it therefore as less to do with a concern about whether your deer friend in Canada had wasted his expenditure on woolly underwear this winter, than as relating winter temperaures in a few similar latitude northern cities to climate change, as it appeared to me from its allusion to Arctic warming that the New Scientist was talking about climate change. That is, that the Toronto discussion was predicated on a confusion of weather with climate.

    I am pleased to learn it was not.

    The 2011 UAH temperature summary is here

    http://www.drroyspencer.com/2012/01/uah-global-temperature-update-for-dec-2011-0-13-deg-c/

    There is discussion of it at a number of what you would describe I suppose as sceptic sites. Surprisingly enough the Skeptical Sciences of this world seem to have been mute. The tale of James Annan’s losing bet on made in 2007 on the probable 2007-11 temperature record (albeit on HadCrut) is amusing though, given his urging that sceptics should take a more odds-driven view along the lines of financial markets. The warmist assessed odds didn’t do him any financial favours.

    http://www.thegwpf.org/the-observatory/4748-winning-a-climate-bet.html

    I suppose Skeptical Science did have a post crying triumphantly “2011 expected to be second warmest year on record for the UK”, so I shouldn’t accuse it of ignoring 2011 temperatues. Only those of 99.5% of the globe. Nothing to do with habitual cherry-picking to its preferred narrative of course.

  58. David Irving (no relation)

    Well, that proves it, Brian. If Australia was 0.14 degrees below average last year, global warming has stopped (or wasn’t ever happening, depending on how much more you care to cherry-pick).

    I’m glad that’s settled!