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Tiempo Climate Newswatch

Week ending September 11th 2005



 

Featured sites

The Blue Carbon Portal brings together the latest knowledge and resources on the role of oceans as carbon sinks.

WalkIt provides walking routes between user-defined points in selected British cities, with an estimate of the carbon savings.

Joto Afrika is a series of printed briefings and online resources about adapting to climate change in sub-Saharan Africa.

And finally,

The CoolClimate Art Contest presents iconic images that address the impact of climate change.

More featured sites...

About the Cyberlibrary

The Tiempo Climate Cyberlibrary was developed by Mick Kelly and Sarah Granich on behalf of the Stockholm Environment Institute and the International Institute for Environment and Development, with sponsorship from the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.

While every effort is made to ensure that information on this site, and on other sites that are referenced here, is accurate, no liability for loss or damage resulting from use of this information can be accepted.

Hurricane Katrina left 80 per cent of New Orleans under water and the neighbouring Gulf Coast of the United States reeling this past week. One million people have been rendered homeless. Three breaches opened up in the levee system protecting New Orleans, much of which lies below sea level, as the hurricane, with winds at 145 miles an hour, created a 20 foot storm surge. It may take 80 days to pump the floodwater out of the city. Many thousands are feared dead, though no official death toll has been released. President George Bush has described Katrina's impact as "one of the worst national disasters in our nation's history."

Mayor Ray Nagin issued a "desperate SOS" to help the thousands of people left stranded in New Orleans without food and water. While most of the city's population left before the storm struck, as many as 200,000 people remained. New Orleans was described as descending into anarchy, with bodies left lying in the streets, as fires, fighting and looting diverted the attention of the emergency services away from the relief effort. The city is being totally evacuated.

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Eighteen leading scientists from Princeton and Harvard universities have written to Congressman Joe Barton, chair of the United States House of Representatives energy and commerce committee, expressing "deep concern" at his demand for information on the research activities of three climate scientists. Barton has asked for details of all sources of funding and ressearch methods and everything ever published from Michael Mann at Pennsylvania State University, Ray Bradley at the University of Massachusetts and Malcolm Hughes at the University of Arizona. The three climatologists published an assessment of temperature trends prior to the industrial period, the so-called hockey stick graph, showing that the 20th century warming was without recent precedent.

Alan Leshner of the American Association for the Advancement of Science described the inquiry as "a search for basis to discredit the particular scientists rather than a search for understanding." Democrat Henry Waxman complained that it was a "dubious" inquiry, which many viewed as a "transparent effort to bully and harass climate change experts who have reached a conclusion with which you disagree." Republican Sherwood Boehlert, chair of the House science committee, has written to express his "strenuous objections" to what he sees as a "misguided and illegitimate investigation."

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Comment


The soil-dwelling microbes that make Asian rice farming a major greenhouse gas contributor have been identified. Yahai Lu of the China Agricultural University and Ralf Conrad of the Max-Planck-Institut for Terrestrial Microbiology in Germany used radioactively-labelled carbon dioxide to determine the "central importance" of the Rice Cluster I group of microbes in producing methane.

"Once scientists know which organisms are involved in a particular process, they can focus right down on them and design experiments to work out how important they are," commented Andrew Whiteley of the Centre of Ecology and Hydrology in the United Kingdom. Rice fields release 50 to 100 million tonnes of methane a year.

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Background


Bright Ideas

GE cuts solar costs

General Electric plans to cut solar installation costs by half

Project 90 by 2030

Project 90 by 2030 supports South African school children and managers reduce their carbon footprint through its Club programme

Smart street lighting

Bath & North East Somerset Council in the United Kingdom has installed smart LED carriageway lighting that automatically adjusts to light and traffic levels

Longwood Gardens

The United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the American Public Gardens Association are mounting an educational exhibit at Longwood Gardens showing the link between temperature and planting zones

Crowne Plaza Copenhagen Towers

The energy-efficient Crowne Plaza Copenhagen Towers hotel is powered by renewable and sustainable sources, including integrated solar photovoltaics and guest-powered bicycles

El Hierro

El Hierro, one of the Canary Islands, plans to generate 80 per cent of its energy from renewable sources

Remarkables Primary School green roof

The green roof on the Remarkables Primary School in New Zealand reduces stormwater runoff, provides insulation and doubles as an outdoor classroom

Weather Info for All

The Weather Info for All project aims to roll out up to five thousand automatic weather observation stations throughout Africa

SolSource

SolSource turns its own waste heat into electricity or stores it in thermal fabrics, harnessing the sun's energy for cooking and electricity for low-income families

Wave House

The Wave House uses vegetation for its architectural and environmental qualities, and especially in terms of thermal insulation

Mbale compost-processing plant

The Mbale compost-processing plant in Uganda produces cheaper fertilizer and reduces greenhouse gas emissions

Frito-Lay Casa Grande

At Casa Grande, Frito-Lay has reduced energy consumption by nearly a fifth since 2006 by, amongst other things, installing a heat recovery system to preheat cooking oil

More Bright Ideas...

Tiempo Climate Newswatch
Updated: April 12th 2013