Global Warming Increasing Faster Than Predicted

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RANDOLPH E. SCHMID | February 14, 2009 08:57 PM EST | AP

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CHICAGO — Despite widespread concern over global warming, humans are adding carbon to the atmosphere even faster than in the 1990s, researchers warned Saturday.

Carbon dioxide and other gases added to the air by industrial and other activities have been blamed for rising temperatures, increasing worries about possible major changes in weather and climate.

Carbon emissions have been growing at 3.5 percent per year since 2000, up sharply from the 0.9 percent per year in the 1990s, Christopher Field of the Carnegie Institution for Science told the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

"It is now outside the entire envelope of possibilities" considered in the 2007 report of the International Panel on Climate Change, he said. The IPCC and former vice president Al Gore received the Nobel Prize for drawing attention to the dangers of climate change.

The largest factor in this increase is the widespread adoption of coal as an energy source, Field said, "and without aggressive attention societies will continue to focus on the energy sources that are cheapest, and that means coal."

Past projections for declines in the emissions of greenhouse gases were too optimistic, he added. No part of the world had a decline in emissions from 2000 to 2008.

Anny Cazenave of France's National Center for Space Studies told the meeting that improved satellite measurements show that sea levels are rising faster than had been expected.

Rising oceans can pose a threat to low level areas such as South Florida, New York and other coastal areas as the ocean warms and expands and as water is added from melting ice sheets.

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And the rise is uneven, with the fastest rising areas at about 1 centimeter _ 0.39 inch _ per year in parts of the North Atlantic, western Pacific and the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica, she said.

Also, highly promoted efforts to curb carbon emissions through the use of biofuels may even backfire, other researchers said.

Demand for biologically based fuels has led to the growing of more corn in the United States, but that means fields were switched from soybeans to corn, explained Michael Coe of the Woods Hole Research Center.

But there was no decline in the demand for soy, he said, meaning other countries, such as Brazil, increased their soy crops to make up for the deficit.

In turn, Brazil created more soy fields by destroying tropical forests, which tend to soak up carbon dioxide. Instead the forests were burned, releasing the gasses into the air.

The increased emissions from Brazil swamp any declines recorded by the United States, he said.

Holly Gibbs of Stanford University said that if crops like sugar and oil palm are planted after tropical forests are burned, the extra carbon released may be balanced by lower emissions from biofuel in 40 to 120 years, but for crops such as corn and cassava it can take hundreds of years to break equal.

"If we run our cars on biofuels produced in the tropics, chances will be good that we are effectively burning rainforests in our gas tanks," she said.

However, there could be benefits from planting crops for biofuels on degraded land, such as fields that are not offering low productivity due to salinity, soil erosion or nutrient leaching.

"In a sense that would be restoring land to a higher potential," she said. But there would be costs in fertilizer and improved farming practices.

In some cases simply allowing the degraded land to return to forest might be the best answer, she said.

___

On the Net:

AAAS: http://www.aaas.org

CHICAGO — Despite widespread concern over global warming, humans are adding carbon to the atmosphere even faster than in the 1990s, researchers warned Saturday. Carbon dioxide and other gases a...
CHICAGO — Despite widespread concern over global warming, humans are adding carbon to the atmosphere even faster than in the 1990s, researchers warned Saturday. Carbon dioxide and other gases a...
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- Nooooorm I'm a Fan of Nooooorm 3 fans permalink

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=aIe9swvOqwIY

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- A glitch in satellite sensors caused scientists to underestimate the extent of Arctic sea ice by 500,000 square kilometers (193,000 square miles), a California- size area, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center said.

The error, due to a problem called “sensor drift,” began in early January and caused a slowly growing underestimation of sea ice extent until mid-February. That’s when “puzzled readers” alerted the NSIDC about data showing ice-covered areas as stretches of open ocean, the Boulder, Colorado-based group said on its Web site.

“Sensor drift, although infrequent, does occasionally occur and it is one of the things that we account for during quality- control measures prior to archiving the data,” the center said. “Although we believe that data prior to early January are reliable, we will conduct a full quality check.’’

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 02/26/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

1 out of every 4 people in China, dies from lung disease. This is mostly due to pollution. China has already begun focusing on how to design for sustainability using green technology. Since they have a water shortage, they have started collecting "gray" water to reuse it. In designing for the near future, they are looking at putting farms on top of buildings to grow food and produce oxygen. The government of China understands the importance of educating their people to help bring about the changes they need to adjust to the changes. An important fact; the US has 4000 industrial designers. China has 200,000.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 PM on 02/20/2009

why don't we develop and use tesla's technology for free energy? i don't get it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 02/19/2009

http://www.good.is/?p=14864>1=48001

If the debate over climate change is closed, why is John Coleman, the founder of the Weather Channel, still trying to prove it’s all a scam?

What “they” are talking about, and we have heard much about is that climate change is one of greatest challenges we face in our lifetime and that humankind is generally f**king up everything imaginable involving air, water, and land. John Coleman says it’s perpetrated by the media who loves it some Gore. “You’ve got Al Gore. You’ve got the environmentalists. And then all the networks come aboard, because they love gloom and doom, the-end-is-near,” he says. “From Y2K to killer bees—God, give us something to tell people their lives are coming to an end—cancer scare, HIV, whatever we’ve got—let’s go, Man, scare the hell out of people,” he says. “This is awful. Shame on them, scaring people. That’s deplorable.”
http://www.good.is/?p=14864>1=48001


P.S. Two other 'closed debates' :
*Oswald Shot JFK
*Evolution is a scientific fact

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 02/19/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

This is not about opinion. Everyone has one of those. This is about 82 % of scientists who have studied this and 90% of climatologists, which are not meteorologists who see this as a dangerous situation which could end up impacting on millions of people and perhaps wipe out among other species, human beings. Gore did not start this. He just heard about it and was hoping to be in a position to help. So, quit blaming Gore. Quit making it a political issue and ask yourself the question, if 80-90 percent of scientists who have studied this problem over a period of 2 decades, and are very concerned about it, then isn't it something I should also have some concern about? And if you can't get concerned about that, then it still makes sense to be concerned about people and other species having increased illness and death and in some species case, extinction, due to high levels of toxic pollution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:51 PM on 02/19/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

You seem to think science is a democracy. It isn't.

Lots of people agree that pollution should be controlled, dependence on foreign oil should be reduced, the environment should be protected, etc. These are all goals worthy of pursuing, in my humble opinion. But not because of global warming, at least not until the evidence is a lot more solid than it is today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 02/19/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Ubi says, "You seem to think science is a democracy. It isn't." For once he is correct, Scientists go where the information leads them. if it was a democracy scientists could hold any opinion they want despite the evidence, like Ubi does.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 02/24/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

The ones who are really scaring people are the ones in denial, because they are going to fight tooth and nail to go on destroying things. Won't G o d be pleased about that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 02/19/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

I don't think the skeptics are scaring anyone, except those "scientists" whose funding depends on perpetuating the global warming hoax.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 02/19/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Well, the "hoax" has not seemed to fool Ubi and he has not read any of the science. Don't let knowledge corrupt you, Ubi. Stay true to your principles of knowing nothing and being proud of it. It is the conservative way!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 02/24/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

You guys on the right are still debating evolution, too. Why do you guys hold science in such disdain? Do you think it promotes your political philosophy when you hold knowledge and science in such low esteem. It makes you seem like you are back in the Middle Ages burning heretics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 02/24/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

Database on Impacts Associated with Observed Changes in Climate Now Available



The fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released in 2008 concluded that it is likely that anthropogenic warming has had a discernible influence on many physical and biological systems. The database underlying this conclusion has now been made available through the IPCC Data Distribution Center (DDC), which is collaboratively operated by the British Atmospheric Data Centre in the United Kingdom, the Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum (DKRZ) in Germany, and CIESIN.

The Observed Climate Change Impacts Database was developed by an international team of scientists led by Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) and the Earth Institute at Columbia University. The database collates information from a wide range of scientific studies that document significant environmental changes such as diminishing glaciers, melting permafrost, earlier snowmelt, lake and river warming, and coastal erosion as well as changes in biological systems such as earlier leaf unfolding and blooming dates and alterations in species interactions. Studies included in the database were based on observational data for at least 20 years between 1970 and 2004, and in some cases drew on more than 35 years of data. In a paper published in Nature in 2008

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 02/18/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Of course, there are many hundreds of scientists who dispute the findings of the IPCC.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 02/18/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

There have been numerous follow up studies of their results and I have not found one done by a reputable group that disagreed with their results. A few hundred would be a small percentage at any rate and their discipline would have to be considered, therefore your post really isn't revealing anything that can be understood clearly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 02/18/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Good, would you show us who they are and present the studies where they point this lack of agreement out? And none of the cheap lists, please. Ubi, you yourself can debunk any of those cheap lists with a simple google search. Show me the studies where the climate change is debunked.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 02/24/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

"Something dramatic is happening," said Göran Ekström, a seismologist at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Ekström and colleagues report tomorrow in Science that glacial earthquakes—seaward lurches of glaciers—in Greenland have more than doubled in number since 2002.

Most of the glacial earthquakes occur in July and August, at the height of the Northern Hemisphere's summer melt.

The finding complements a study published in Science last month that found some of Greenland's glaciers have doubled in speed over the past five years, said Jay Zwally, a glaciologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

Zwally added that both findings are "alarming" given that Earth has only experienced the full effects of greenhouse gases for about a decade.

"As these changes take place, we're still in the process of learning what happens to the ice. We are discovering new things," he said.

Ancient Rise

About 130,000 years ago, global sea levels were 13 to 20 feet (4 to 6 meters) higher than they are today. Scientists have determined this by studying ancient coral reefs that now sit high and dry, and other so-called paleo-climate clues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 02/18/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

continued:

The University of Arizona's Overpeck and his colleagues wanted to understand what sort of climate conditions were necessary to create such high sea levels.

Scientists believe that Earth's orbit had shifted slightly at the time, giving the Northern Hemisphere greater exposure to the sun.

When Overpeck's team plugged those orbital conditions into a computer model, they found the Arctic warmed 5º to 8ºF (3º to 5ºC), sufficient to melt enough Arctic ice to explain the sea level rise.

But the researchers also know how much the Greenland ice sheet, which holds most of the Arctic water, melted at the time. When they plug that data into the model, the melt only accounts for 7.2 to 11.2 feet (2.2 to 3.4 meters) of the water rise.

"That means we got a substantial amount [of water] from Antarctica," Overpeck said. "And that is a big discovery."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 02/18/2009

you people ever hear of precession? the natural wobble of the earth? we make co2 by breathing? the more co2 the more plants grow? the fact no credible scientist not fearing loss of funding will sign on to this retarded notion of " fossil fuel" global warming? that "fossil fuel" has nothing to do with living matter? why else would jupiter have moons covered with methane? must be dino bodies! that this is political invasion into your life and choices.

a flock of sheep.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 AM on 02/18/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

Spoken like a true home schooled student who was left home alone, watching Fox network.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 02/18/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Rshrink, you are too funny. What do you have against home-schoolers? Care to share the big.oted stere.otypes that you carry around?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 02/18/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

John Roach
for National Geographic News

March 23, 2006

Water from melting ice sheets and glaciers is gushing into the world's
oceans much faster than previously thought possible, sending scientists
scrambling to explain why.

The unexpected deluge is raising global sea levels, which scientists say could eventually submerge island nations, flood cities, and expose millions of coastal residents to destructive storm surges.

By the end of this century the seas may be three feet (one meter) higher than they are today, according to a pair of studies that appear in tomorrow's issue of the journal Science.

"After that we'll be committed to multiple more meters of sea level rise that will occur at rates of up to a meter—or three feet—per one hundred years," said Jonathan Overpeck, an earth scientist at the University of Arizona in Tucson, who co-authored the studies.

"And it could go faster," he added.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 02/18/2009
- SFTor I'm a Fan of SFTor 11 fans permalink

how much have sea levels actually risen over the last 100 years? And what does the IPCC technical report site as their estimate?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 AM on 02/18/2009
- SFTor I'm a Fan of SFTor 11 fans permalink

I need to restate this somewhat:

how much have sea levels actually risen over the last 100 years? And what does the IPCC technical report site as their estimate for the next 100 years?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 AM on 02/18/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Is that your hair on fire, or are you just happy to see me?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 AM on 02/18/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Only the crowd who watches the Simpsons all day would be happy to see you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 02/24/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

The theory that global warming may be contributing to stronger hurricanes in the Atlantic over the past 30 years is bolstered by a new study led by a Florida State University researcher. The study will be published in the Sept. 4 edition of the journal Nature.

Using global satellite data, FSU geography Professor James B. Elsner, University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor James P. Kossin and FSU postdoctoral researcher Thomas H. Jagger found that the strongest tropical cyclones are, in fact, getting stronger — and that ocean temperatures play a role in driving this trend. This is consistent with the "heat-engine" theory of cyclone intensity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 02/17/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

If anyone wants to challenge Stanford University's; Stanford's Solar Center, here is the address:

Stanford SOLAR Center
Stanford University
Center for Space Science and Astrophysics
HEPL-4085
Stanford, California 94305-4085 USA
Phone: 1 - 650 - 723-1495
FAX: 1 - 650 - 725-2333
EMail: quake.stanford.eduford.edu
URL: http://solar-center.stanford.edu/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 02/17/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

Goddard Institute of Space Studies:

GISS Surface Temperature Analysis
Global Temperature Trends: 2008 Annual Summation
Originally posted Dec. 16, 2008, with meteorological year data. Updated Jan. 13, 2009, with calendar year data.

Calendar year 2008 was the coolest year since 2000, according to the Goddard Institute for Space Studies analysis [see ref. 1] of surface air temperature measurements. In our analysis, 2008 is the ninth warmest year in the period of instrumental measurements, which extends back to 1880 (left panel of Fig. 1). The ten warmest years all occur within the 12-year period 1997-2008. The two-standard-deviation (95% confidence) uncertainty in comparing recent years is estimated as 0.05°C [ref. 2], so we can only conclude with confidence that 2008 was somewhere within the range from 7th to 10th warmest year in the record.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 02/17/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

More from Stanford:

Greenhouse Gases
The increase in greenhouse gases caused by human activity is often cited as one of the major causes of global warming. These greenhouse gases reabsorb heat reflected from the Earth's surface, thus trapping the heat in our atmosphere. This natural process is essential for life on Earth because it plays an important role in regulating the Earth's temperature. However, over the last several hundred years, humans have been artificially increasing the concentration of these gases, mainly carbon dioxide and methane in the Earth's atmosphere. These gases build up and prevent additional thermal radiation from leaving the Earth, thereby trapping excess heat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 02/17/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

More from Stanford:

Solar irradiance changes have been measured reliably by satellites for only 30 years. These precise observations show changes of a few tenths of a percent that depend on the level of activity in the 11-year solar cycle. Changes over longer periods must be inferred from other sources. Estimates of earlier variations are important for calibrating the climate models. While a component of recent global warming may have been caused by the increased solar activity of the last solar cycle, that component was very small compared to the effects of additional greenhouse gases. According to a NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) press release, "...the solar increases do not have the ability to cause large global temperature increases...greenhouse gases are indeed playing the dominant role..." The Sun is once again less bright as we approach solar minimum, yet global warming continues.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 02/17/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

Here is another report on global warming published by Stanford University:


Global warming -- a gradual increase in planet-wide temperatures -- is now well documented and accepted by scientists as fact. A panel convened by the U.S National Research Council, the nation's premier science policy body, in June 2006 voiced a "high level of confidence" that Earth is the hottest it has been in at least 400 years, and possibly even the last 2,000 years. Studies indicate that the average global surface temperature has increased by approximately 0.5-1.0°F (0.3-0.6°C) over the last century. This is the largest increase in surface temperature in the last 1,000 years and scientists are predicting an even greater increase over this century. This warming is largely attributed to the increase of greenhouse gases (primarily carbon dioxide and methane) in the Earth's upper atmosphere caused by human burning of fossil fuels, industrial, farming, and deforestation activities

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 02/17/2009
- UbiVeritas I'm a Fan of UbiVeritas 3 fans permalink

Evidence supports all but the last sentence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 AM on 02/18/2009
- rshrink I'm a Fan of rshrink 58 fans permalink

You mean Limbaugh evidence don't you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 02/18/2009
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