Showing posts with label climate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate. Show all posts

Climate after Growth – Book Review

Review by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

Climate after Growth
by Asher Miller & Rob Hopkins
A Report published 2013 by Post Carbon Institute and Transition Network
27 Pages A4 PDF

Downloadable free a Post Carbon Institute (http://www.postcarbon.org/publications/climate-after-growth/)

Climate-After-Growth-300This report states what I have been saying as well, and that for years already, namely that simply replacing fossil fuels with renewables is not going to work, however nice this would be. Especially as there is no, as such, replacement for fossil fuel in aviation and maritime transportation unless, that is, in the case of the latter, we would go back to sail (and we may actually have to).

The authors drive a coach and horses through the notion of the possibility of the continuation of the perpetual growth economy and also throw some rather large spanners – wrenches, to our American cousins – into the works of those in the “green” movement who believe in the idea of “green growth”.

The ship of “green growth” to solve the climate crisis and to grow the economy is not going to sail. Robust, long-term growth, in overall economic activity, as measured by GDP, is a thing of the past, as the authors say and explain.

The reading of this report is highly recommendable as it will bring enlightenment to many – or so, at least, one should hope.

The one thing that is somewhat annoying, to me, at least, in this report is that the author(s) keep harping on about the things that we need government and institutions to do.

Do we really? People power does not need government! In that respect the authors are missing the point as government is very much the problem and not the solution as regards to change. Otherwise, however, a brilliant report and enlightening read.

© 2014

Severe winters and climate change

Whatever happened to global warming?

by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

Severe winter storms and cold snaps in the US, with temps then going up again well above winter temps, and frost even in southern California and New Mexico, threatening, in southern CA the citrus crop.

Rain, rain, and still more rain, for most of last year, followed by snow, in the UK and also the coldest winter – on record, almost – predicted for Syria with temps of -10C.

So, what exactly happened to the global warming that they were talking about – and still do – that was going to end all snowy and cold winters in (southern) Britain and which would the UK, especially the south, to have a climate much like southern Italy?

Britain was going to be, so it was said, the next wine growing region of Europe but, I guess, we will just have to wait and see, don't we.

The world's climate is changing, that much appears to be the case, but in which way and direction is still a question and while a great percentage of it is due with man's activity and pollution – please not I say pollution and not CO2 emissions as they are not the be all and end all here – some of it is also due to other causes. But we must not talk about those things. The Church of Global Warming will not permit it.

The world's climate is, definitely, in a total mess and in an upheaval and this is also evident by the recent very hot spell in Australian with devastating wild fires followed storms with tons of rain. OK, that put out the fires but also caused serious flooding everywhere where it hit.

In North America during the winter of 2012/2013 for about two weeks a cold area was moving down and then up and then down the country again, and it is this cold front that caused the serious frosts even as far south as southern California.

2012 and the beginning of 2013 certainly have shown that the climate all around the world is going, more or less, haywire.

The wettest drought in history, as the spin doctors of the British government called it (don't ask me how you can have a wet drought, but hey, I am no spin doctor) has caused serious and severe crop failures and farmers are still not even in a position to drill in the next season's seeds into their fields as they are so water logged that they cannot even get onto them.

The same goes for woods and forests and it is hard to do work in those environments in the first months of 2013 also. Everything is just a bog wherever one goes.

Farmers and growers were told, only a year or two ago, that they would to adapt to global warming and to very dry summers and thus should be looking to plant and sow drought-resistant varieties and foods that have, until now, been grown in the warmer areas of Europe and such. Now it would appear that farmers and growers may have to find some water-resistant crops instead.

The wet weather of the so-called summer of 2012 had the potato blight run rampant and the blame was given to people growing food at home in their gardens or in allotment. That some of the blight-resistant varieties of potatoes were the first to succumb no one wants to know. It was not so much the blight escaping from home gardens and allotments to the farmers' fields but the other way round.

In the beginning of February 2013 the umpteenth violent blizzard, this one called Nemo, hit the United States, and dumped many feet of snow on New York, Boston and other places on the East Coast. And in Britain, while no real extreme winter weather materialized as in the last couple of years, at least not at the time of writing, the fact that everything is waterlogged is causing problems.

Glacial melting, once directly blamed on rising temperatures the world over and thus global warming has now been found to be caused by what they call black carbon which, in fact, is nothing more that soot from our industries. But the word carbon sounds so much better since we have now developed a way of trading in carbon credits, those modern indulgences.

The climate around the globe is throwing a wobbly and, methinks, Mother Earth is trying to tell us something and that something is that we need to change our ways and live with Nature and not fight Nature. Man is a part of Nature and cannot be apart of Nature.

© 2013

No more sun in 2012 predicted... people preparing for winter already.

People are predicting that 2012 will see barely any sun and as a result temperatures will begin to plummet even earlier in the year than normal

by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

Several experts have so far predicted that the current ‘rainy season’ that we are experiencing in Britain is entirely down to global warming; whilst others are pinpointing these climate shifts and dramatic seasonal changes on other phenomena. Regardless of the cause, most reckon that the sun won’t make a dramatic appearance for the rest of 2012 and as a result, winter and a drop in temperature will come much sooner than the UK is used to.

The other phenomenons that experts blame for these climate shifts and seasonal changes are, amongst others, the fact that this summer the jet stream did not arrive at the British shore and instead has been heading further south, giving temperatures in the high 40s Celsius in the Mediterranean areas.

The shift in the jet stream can be as a result of geomagnetic changes brought about by a continental shift, resultant from the earthquake off the shores of Japan that cause the Fukushima reactor meltdown, according a to a source at the USGS and also due to the relocation of the magnetic north pole in relation to true north due to a possible change Earth axis' tilt.

If it is the case that we won't be seeing much, if any, of the sun in any significant measure, in the coming months then the best advice to people can but be to prepare now and those that have to buy in additional heaters and especially winter fuel in the form of heating oil, propane gas, or firewood, should do this now before the prices with rocket later.

Even if the weather predictions are wrong for the rest of 2012, you won’t have lost out on anything. Winter will eventually come around in one way or another and when the cold temperatures set in

When winter eventually arrives, as it will, though it could be an entirely different scenario than we expect, even if we do not end up with freeing temperatures for much of the time a prolonged spell of cooler and colder than normal will mean that we will have to heat our homes and if you can buy your fuels, such as firewood now, at a lower rate than you may have to pay later, and the same for those who heat with oil or propane, the better.

Remember, be prepared. No matter how unlikely something seems, nothing’s impossible when it comes to the weather... especially in the UK.

© 2012