WWF ReportPrepared by Dr. Tina Tin this report compiles the scientific outcome published after the latest IPCC report.

She points out the Arctic sea ice coverage was low this and last year and is stressed by an albedo feedback effect.

Findings lead to a new maximum sea level forecast this century. Other topics are the health of children suffering from Climate Change, long-term droughts in the Mediterranean region, damage of northern birch forests caused by leaf-chewing and leaf-mining insects and crops failures and the collapse of eco systems on both land and sea.

Ever wondered how something as little as a molecule of C02 can change the world? But more is different: CO2 turned Venus into a overheated hostile planet and without greenhouse gases Earth would be a snowball.

This post collects - without any special order - amounts, years and references and provides the facts needed to see the complete picture. Updates will happen when ever new information is available.

2005
7.85 billion tons
of carbon passed into the atmosphere Global Carbon Project
2005
379.1 ppm
Quantities of CO2 were measured at 379.1 parts per million (ppm) for 2005, up 0.53 per cent from 377.1 ppm in 2004, WMO said in its latest Greenhouse Gas Bulletin UN News Centre
1750
280 ppm
The CO2 concentration has risen from about 280 ppm in the year 1750 to about ~380 ppm today. Postdam Institute
2006
50,000 tons
UK traffic lights emit about 50,000 tonnes of CO2 per year through energy use. BBC Magazine Monitor
2006
400 litre
Just one cow gives off enough harmful methane gas in a single day to fill around 400 litre bottles. CBBC News Round
>1751
315 billion tons
Since 1751 roughly 321 billion tons of carbon have been released to the atmosphere from the consumption of fossil fuels and cement production. Half of these emissions have occurred since the mid 1970s. The 2004 global fossil-fuel CO2 emission estimate, 7910 million metric tons of carbon, represents an all-time high and a 5.4% increase from 2003 Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center

(more…)

Coalfinger

This animated Bond spoof features David Mitchell (C4s Peep Show) as secret agent Gaverson Green fighting to stop the evil plans of Coalfinger, voiced by Brian Blessed.

With a soundtrack by composer David Arnold (Quantum of Solace, Casino Royal).

More at : Coalfinger.com

Via: Ehrensenf.de

Satellite pictureNearly any activity consumes energy and therefore forces emissions of CO2.

Of course using green energy is different. However, it is useful to know the emissions generated by different goods or activities.

Kick the Habit is a excellent guide to climate neutrality. Provided and produced by UNEP it is full of maps, examples, graphic and this chart.

The graphic beside gives a descriptive overview and you may easily find a point where to save energy the easy way. The graphic is available in the explorer, so just click and use your mouse (wheel) to explore. All given amount are in kilograms of CO2 equivalent.

Credits: UNEP/GRID-Arendal. Examples of GHG emission amounts generated by different activities or goods. UNEP/GRID-Arendal Maps and Graphics Library. 2008. Available at: http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/examples-of-ghg-emission-amounts-generated-by-different-activities-or-goods. Accessed October 12, 2008.

Aquecimento Global

via: ptfolio.com

Agência: McCann
Anunciante: Quercus
Directores Criativos: Diogo Anahory / José Carlos Bomtempo
Redactor: Diogo Anahory
Director de Arte: José Carlos Bomtempo
Tv Producer: Nuno Calado
Produtora: Seagulls Fly São Paulo
Som: Indigo

more

Satellite picture The Google Earth Plugin turns browsers into full Earth browsers. Well, not supported is UNIX, Apple, but FireFox and Internet Explorer running on Windows 2000 or better. The API of the plugin is well supported and this site will have a progressing amount of features available in 3D. First achievement is the Daily Planet map provided by NASA’s OneEarth server.

The current implentation is far from complete and a lot of further work is ahead. Especially registered users will find out that the plugin does not allow to use the flyout menu any longer and switching maps is a challenge. Please log out in this case or prepare the geoLinks you need in advance. As an another aspect the overlays do not work with Google Earth as base map. However seeing the Planet is no longer flat is exciting. Expect far more improvement in usability and data soon.

The navigation is quite simple: just try all mouse buttons, double click or drag the globe.

geoLink 1515 links exclusively to the North Atlantic Ocean showing the daily status of upcoming hurricanes.

All started with a question @ CNN

Join the prediction game, check out north pole webcams and follow Lewis Gordon Pugh while paddling with a kayak to the North Pole.

Satellite picture

Shortly after Gustav made his landfall a fourth tropical storm developed in the Atlantic Ocean basin.

At 11:00 a.m. EDT Josephine was packing maximum sustained winds near 40 mph. She was located near latitude 13.2 north and longitude 25.3 west or about 125 miles south-southwest of the southernmost Cape Verde Islands, off the western African coast.

Credit: Rob Gutro/Goddard Space Flight Center

Image above links to latest daily updated cloud top satellite picture from the Naval Research Laboratory

The NOAA/NASA GOES Project provides a full Earth photo.

Electric Oyster Demo

Feeling the heat, missing snow, want to go skiing? Try out this interactive Antarctica simulation build with flash 3d.

via: Ehrensenf

100 month campaign Let’s raise some pressure and why not a bit too dramatic. There is something to loose.

Because in just 100 months’ time, if we are lucky, and based on a quite conservative estimate, we could reach a tipping point for the beginnings of runaway climate change. That said, among people working on global warming, there are countless models, scenarios, and different iterations of all those models and scenarios. So, let us be clear from the outset about exactly what we mean.

The concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere today, the most prevalent greenhouse gas, is the highest it has been for the past 650,000 years. In the space of just 250 years, as a result of the coal-fired Industrial Revolution, and changes to land use such as the growth of cities and the felling of forests, we have released, cumulatively, more than 1,800bn tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere.

Currently, approximately 1,000 tonnes of CO2 are released into the Earth’s atmosphere every second, due to human activity. Greenhouse gases trap incoming solar radiation, warming the atmosphere. When these gases accumulate beyond a certain level - often termed a “tipping point” - global warming will accelerate, potentially beyond control.

Andrew Simms, The Guardian, 1st August 2008

Get active, involve your friends and spread the message. Tick, tick, tick …

Hurricane Gustav over Haiti
1:44 raw footage from Associated Press

800 AM EDT SUN AUG 31 2008

TROPICAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL



THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER IS ISSUING ADVISORIES ON EXTREMELY DANGEROUS HURRICANE GUSTAV…

LOCATED OVER THE SOUTHEASTERN GULF OF MEXICO ABOUT 375 MILES SOUTHEAST OF THE MOUTH OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER…

AND ON TROPICAL STORM HANNA…LOCATED ABOUT 155 MILES NORTHEAST OF GRAND TURK ISLAND.

SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS HAVE INCREASED IN ASSOCIATION WITH A WEAK AREA OF LOW PRESSURE LOCATED ABOUT 850 MILES EAST-NORTHEAST OF THE LEEWARD ISLANDS.

AFP reports more than a million fled already Louisiana.

Artic Sea Ice Conditions
The Arctic sea ice conditions are now very similar to last year. The maritime shortcuts through the Artic Sea are almost open or already open. The total extent two days before - the NSDIC reported yesterday - was 5.47 million square kilometers.

Buoys indicate surface melting is coming to an end while bottom melting of the ice will continue a few more weeks.

Map: County Emissions 2004
I was quite excited while visiting this UN site: data.un.org. You’ll find a huge amount of figures provided by different UN agencies. The data is free to use, ready to download and presented by a slick WEB2.0 interface. Of cource data from the UNFCCC is there as well as from the american Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC).

The latter provides a data set with CO2 emissions from more than 200 countries ranging from 1980 to 2004. I’ve jumped at this chance and started to develop google maps overlayed with colored countries. SVG was a dead-end, so the next question was how to generate tiles without having any record in hand painting.

GMapCreator was developed by the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at University College London under the GeoVUE (Geographic Virtual Urban Environments) project which is funded as one of the research nodes of the National Centre for eSocial Science (NCeSS).

In short it picks a shape file, let you colorize the polygons according to their attributes and renders all the tiles down to the level you specify. The world borders shape file from thematicmapping.org (credits to: Bjorn Sandvik, Schuyler Erle, Sean Gilles) was the best solution for this job. The simple version has enough points for a use with level 4. Btw: Quantum GIS is an excellent application for beginners.

Colors mapped to emissionsSince human senses use logarithmic scales this is the way the map was designed. Also it is easier to distinguish different shades of green than blue. The values correspond to metric kilo tons of CO2.

Blue means no data, countries with an output over one billion tons are colored with dark red. Within these color groups GMapCreator shades the countries according to their past emissions. As a rule of thumb you may say the countries in the orange group emitted 10 times more C02 than the yellow countries.

At first sight the information provided by this interactive map is little: huge countries emit more C02 compared to smaller countries. But given the scale factor it indicates the countries with the most potential to fight Climate Change. Nevertheless the next map in this series will visualize emissions per capita and the United States will then - together with some litte arabian countries - lead this unreasonable competition.

However, this is not the end of this story. CO2 resides for approximatly 100 years in the atmosphere, so taken into account historical emissions will answer the question whose emissions are still heating the planet. Can responsibility-based politics really ignore past emissions?

Stay tuned on this channel.

Eurobarometer Report

Between the 9th of November and the 14th of December 2007, TNS Opinion & Social, carried out wave 68.2 of the EUROBAROMETER, on request of the EUROPEAN COMMISSION, Directorate-General for Communication, “Research and Political Analysis”.

Report: 127 pages, including fieldwork details, questionaire, data tables, technical specifications

Conclusion:

96% of Europeans say that protecting the environment is important for them personally. For two-thirds of this group it is even very important.

Aerial Tornado Damage In Atlanta

Uploaded by: WSBTVdotcom, March 15, 2008; 4:19min

A severe weather system moved into Georgia March 14 resulting in numerous injuries and major destruction and damage to areas of Atlanta and Fulton County, Ga.

The system produced one tornado, injuring at least 20 people and damaging dozens of homes and businesses, according to Georgia Gov. Sonny Purdue.

Participating countries

G20 is officially referred to as “The 4th Ministerial Meeting of G8 Gleneagles Dialogue on Climate Change, Clean Energy and Sustainable Development”, and was set up as a result of an agreement at the Gleneagles G8 Summit held in the United Kingdom in 2005.

At G20, issues such as global warming and climate change will be discussed by environment and energy ministers of the world’s 20 major greenhouse gas emitting nations as well as representatives from relevant international organizations, industries, NGOs and NPOs.

Chart Credit: Ministry of the Environment based on the Handbook of Energy & Economic Statistics in Japan (partially supplemented by UNFCCC data)

A Beautiful Lie

via: Hug-Lies and A Beautiful Lie

Nice collection of tips from abeautifullie.org helpful to reduce energy consumption.

1. Slow down to cut costs and cut carbon! Slowing down from 75 mph to 65 mph will drop your highway gasoline consumption 15 percent.

2. If everyone took 30 seconds to inflate their tires to the proper pressure we would save 200,000 barrels of oil a day!

3. Bring Your Own Bag: You’ll save one mile’s worth of petroleum for every 14 plastic bags you don’t use. Not to mention cut down on pollution-we throw away over 30 billion one time use bags each year. (more…)

Satellite picture

Though the eleven year solor cycle as well as the Southern Oscillation hit their minimum 2007 is recorded as second warmth year in the period of instrumental data.

More:
Wikipedia: Solar Cycle
Marshall Space Flight Center: NASA Satellites Capture Start of New Solar Cycle
Goddard Institute for Space Studies : Global Temperature Trends: 2007 Summation

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