Friday, December 29, 2006

Drought a result of natural causes, says researcher




New research from the CSIRO suggests the current drought is due to natural variation in climate, not the greenhouse effect.


Barrie Hunt, an honorary research fellow at the CSIRO's atmospheric
research centre in Melbourne, has studied 10,000 years of climate
variability in Australia.


His research shows about 30 periods of drought which occur at random
times and he says the length of each drought does not follow a
predictable pattern.



Mr Hunt says this drought is not caused by the greenhouse effect.


"I think it's probably a bit too early yet to say we're having a
greenhouse effect on rainfall, rainfall's a very difficult climatic
term to get to grips with," he said.



"There's definitely a greenhouse effect on temperature; I'm not sure we're having one on rainfall yet.


"This drought will break and it's important for people to say, 'Well, I
understand that when the drought breaks, it's not the greenhouse
effect. It's a load of rubbish, of course - it's rained again'.


"Everyone says this thing's due to the greenhouse effect and therefore
they expect it to go on forever in a way, the naive people do."



















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Lagos pipeline blast kills scores

At least 260 people have been killed and 60 injured

in an oil pipeline blast in Nigeria's commercial capital, Lagos,

Nigerian Red Cross (NRC) officials say.




Officials say they are still counting bodies and it is feared the death toll could be much higher.



The blast in the Abule Egba area happened as hundreds of

people were scooping fuel from a pipeline punctured by thieves,

officials said.



Some 2,000 people have died in similar incidents in the past decade.





Bodies 'scattered'



NRC officials said they had counted 260 dead so far,

adding that efforts to recover the bodies were being hampered by the

intense heat.

























NIGERIA PIPELINE DISASTERS











May 2006: At least 150 killed in Lagos






Dec 2004: At least 20 killed in Lagos






Sept 2004: At least 60 killed in Lagos






June 2003: At least 105 killed in Abia State






Jul 2000: At least 300 killed in Warri






Mar 2000: At least 50 killed in Abia State






Oct 1998: At least 1,000 killed in Jesse












































"We can only recognise them through the skulls, the

bodies are scattered over the ground," NRC's Ige Oladimeji was quoted

by the Associated Press as saying.



Akintunde Akinkleye, a Reuters news agency photographer at the scene, said he had counted about 500 bodies.



NRC secretary general, Abiodum Orebiyi, told the BBC

that a number of houses had been destroyed, along with a mosque and a

church.



He said the blaze had now been brought under control.

















Map





















Some of those injured in the blast are believed to have

gone into hiding to avoid arrest. Others may not have gone to hospital

because they lack money to pay for treatment.



Lagos journalist Adeyinka Adewunmi witnessed the aftermath of the explosion.



"The pipelines are in a popular neighbourhood, very

close to the express road, which I normally use for my journey to

work," he told the BBC News website.



"I could see fire, state ambulances, ambulances of the

Red Cross, firefighters, government officials. There were scores of

dead bodies on the ground and injured people being carried into

ambulances.



"I heard officials saying that the nearby hospitals were full."



Despite being Africa's largest oil producer, Nigerians

often suffer fuel shortages because of corruption, poor management and

infrastructure problems.



Pipelines often pass through poor communities, who break them to steal the fuel.



"There hasn't been a regular oil supply in Lagos for

more than a week now," said Mr Adewunmi. "This has led to people's

agitation and some poor people have become determined to get fuel by

all means, including by bursting the pipes."





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Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Georgia in gas deal with Turkey

Georgia plans to buy 800 million cubic metres of gas
from Turkey next year, almost half of its needs, Georgian Energy
Minister Nika Gilauri says.


The price it will pay for the gas under this deal has not been disclosed.


Georgian officials have made clear their desire to reduce the country's dependence on Russian gas.


But the BBC's Matthew Collin in Tbilisi says Georgians
cannot be certain they will be receiving gas from other sources until a
deal has been signed.


Last week, Georgia agreed to buy a little more than half
of the gas it will need next year from Russia, even though Gazprom had
doubled its price.


The Georgian prime minister said he had been forced to accept the deal as Gazprom had threatened to cut off supplies otherwise.


There was a similar complaint last week from Azerbaijan,
where President Ilham Aliyev responded to his prices for Russian gas
being doubled by threatening to reduce the amount of Russian gas he
buys, or even to stop buying it altogether.


He may in fact be in a position to do this one day, as
the gas which Turkey is to sell to Georgia will come from the huge new
Shah Deniz field just coming on stream in the Caspian Sea, off the
coast of Azerbaijan.


Russia has faced repeated charges of bullying its former Soviet neighbours who rely on it for their energy supplies.


A year ago, it halted all supplies to Ukraine in a
dispute that was ostensibly about prices, but which many observers felt
in fact reflected political differences.













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Lagos pipeline blast kills scores

At least 260 people have been killed and 60 injured
in an oil pipeline blast in Nigeria's commercial capital, Lagos,
Nigerian Red Cross (NRC) officials say.


Officials say they are still counting bodies and it is feared the death toll could be much higher.


The blast in the Abule Egba area happened as hundreds of
people were scooping fuel from a pipeline punctured by thieves,
officials said.


Some 2,000 people have died in similar incidents in the past decade.


Bodies 'scattered'


NRC officials said they had counted 260 dead so far,
adding that efforts to recover the bodies were being hampered by the
intense heat.













NIGERIA PIPELINE DISASTERS





May 2006: At least 150 killed in Lagos



Dec 2004: At least 20 killed in Lagos



Sept 2004: At least 60 killed in Lagos



June 2003: At least 105 killed in Abia State



Jul 2000: At least 300 killed in Warri



Mar 2000: At least 50 killed in Abia State



Oct 1998: At least 1,000 killed in Jesse























"We can only recognise them through the skulls, the
bodies are scattered over the ground," NRC's Ige Oladimeji was quoted
by the Associated Press as saying.


Akintunde Akinkleye, a Reuters news agency photographer at the scene, said he had counted about 500 bodies.


NRC secretary general, Abiodum Orebiyi, told the BBC
that a number of houses had been destroyed, along with a mosque and a
church.


He said the blaze had now been brought under control.









Map










Some of those injured in the blast are believed to have
gone into hiding to avoid arrest. Others may not have gone to hospital
because they lack money to pay for treatment.


Lagos journalist Adeyinka Adewunmi witnessed the aftermath of the explosion.


"The pipelines are in a popular neighbourhood, very
close to the express road, which I normally use for my journey to
work," he told the BBC News website.


"I could see fire, state ambulances, ambulances of the
Red Cross, firefighters, government officials. There were scores of
dead bodies on the ground and injured people being carried into
ambulances.


"I heard officials saying that the nearby hospitals were full."


Despite being Africa's largest oil producer, Nigerians
often suffer fuel shortages because of corruption, poor management and
infrastructure problems.


Pipelines often pass through poor communities, who break them to steal the fuel.


"There hasn't been a regular oil supply in Lagos for
more than a week now," said Mr Adewunmi. "This has led to people's
agitation and some poor people have become determined to get fuel by
all means, including by bursting the pipes."





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Monday, December 25, 2006

Azeris warn Russia on gas prices

The president of Azerbaijan has threatened to stop
importing gas from Russia after Gazprom said it would more than double
the price of its supplies.


Ilham Aliyev's statement came a day after neighbouring
Georgia agreed to pay the same increased price for gas from the Russian
state-backed company.


Critics say Moscow is using gas as a political weapon, but Gazprom insists the new price reflects market rates.


Azerbaijan is the latest country to complain about Russian gas price rises.


These were unusually strong words from President Aliyev,
who said the suggested increase was against the spirit of Azeri-Russian
relations.


'Commercial blackmail'


Azerbaijan is an ally of the United States, but has also tried to maintain good relations with Moscow.


It is rich in oil, but still needs to import gas.


President Aliyev warned that if Azerbaijan could not
make a deal with Gazprom, it might reduce its oil exports to Russia to
compensate.


"I have decided to find a way out of the situation with
minimum losses for Azerbaijan, and at the same time with dignity. I
cannot allow Azerbaijan to be turned into a country subject to elements
of commercial blackmail," he said.


In recent weeks, Azerbaijan's neighbour, Georgia, had also expressed defiance.


The Georgian government initially rejected the price
increase, saying it was being punished by Moscow for its pro-Western
policies.


But it was not able to find alternative supplies
immediately, and with Gazprom threatening to cut off the gas at the end
of this year, Georgia eventually gave in and agreed to pay Russia's
price.


The Russian gas company says it is simply ending the subsidies it used to give to former Soviet republics.


But critics argue that Moscow is aggressively seeking to
consolidate its economic power, at a time of widespread fears about
possible energy shortages.





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Azeris warn Russia on gas prices

The president of Azerbaijan has threatened to stop
importing gas from Russia after Gazprom said it would more than double
the price of its supplies.


Ilham Aliyev's statement came a day after neighbouring
Georgia agreed to pay the same increased price for gas from the Russian
state-backed company.


Critics say Moscow is using gas as a political weapon, but Gazprom insists the new price reflects market rates.


Azerbaijan is the latest country to complain about Russian gas price rises.


These were unusually strong words from President Aliyev,
who said the suggested increase was against the spirit of Azeri-Russian
relations.


'Commercial blackmail'


Azerbaijan is an ally of the United States, but has also tried to maintain good relations with Moscow.


It is rich in oil, but still needs to import gas.


President Aliyev warned that if Azerbaijan could not
make a deal with Gazprom, it might reduce its oil exports to Russia to
compensate.


"I have decided to find a way out of the situation with
minimum losses for Azerbaijan, and at the same time with dignity. I
cannot allow Azerbaijan to be turned into a country subject to elements
of commercial blackmail," he said.


In recent weeks, Azerbaijan's neighbour, Georgia, had also expressed defiance.


The Georgian government initially rejected the price
increase, saying it was being punished by Moscow for its pro-Western
policies.


But it was not able to find alternative supplies
immediately, and with Gazprom threatening to cut off the gas at the end
of this year, Georgia eventually gave in and agreed to pay Russia's
price.


The Russian gas company says it is simply ending the subsidies it used to give to former Soviet republics.


But critics argue that Moscow is aggressively seeking to
consolidate its economic power, at a time of widespread fears about
possible energy shortages.















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Australia ponders climate future

Parts of Australia are in the grip of the worst drought in memory.


Rainfall in many eastern and southern regions has been
at near record lows. On top of that, the weather has been exceptionally
warm.


The parched conditions have sparked an emotional debate about global warming.


Conservationists insist the "big dry" is almost
certainly the result of climate change and warn that Australia is on
the brink of environmental disaster.


Other experts believe such hysteria is wildly misplaced and that the country shouldn't panic.


'A war-like scenario'


The drought in Australia has lasted for more than five years.


The worry for some is that this could be the start of a protracted period of low rainfall that could go on for decades.


"The really scary thing is last time we had a drought of
this intensity that lasted about five years - it lasted for about 50
years," cautioned Professor Andy Pitman from Macquarie University in
Sydney.


















I can imagine Australia being a desert in a few decades' time











Cate Faehrmann














"The politicians truly believe this is a five-year or
six-year drought that will break sometime in 2007 or 2008. But it might
not break until 2050 and we aren't thinking in those terms at this
stage," Professor Pitman told the BBC.


Global warming, the drought and the future of dwindling
water supplies will undoubtedly dominate talk at barbeques and dinner
parties this festive season in Australia.


"We're in a state of emergency," said Cate Faehrmann
from the Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales. "We need to
treat this as a war-like scenario. The people are really worried that
we are going to run out of water."


She added: "I can imagine Australia being a desert in a
few decades' time in some of these agricultural areas. The soil is
blowing away, the rivers are drying up.


"I think there will be plots of land abandoned and perhaps whole agricultural practices abandoned."


Massive losses


The drought has affected farmers worse than anyone else.


Jock Lawrie, president of the New South Wales Farmers' Association, paints a dismal picture.


"There are people out in some parts of our state that
have gone to work for four or five years and haven't even earned an
income.


"With the winter crop failing to the extent it did,
there have been some massive losses. It is really hard on the emotions
of people, there's no doubt about that."









Australian drought
Farmers have been hard hit by lack of rain and soaring temperatures










Australia has some of the world's most erratic rainfall-patterns.


This vast continent has experienced very dry periods
before: the "Federation Drought" of the late 1800s was a disaster for
many communities.


However, some climate experts believe this drought will also pass and Australians shouldn't be too alarmed.


Veteran meteorologist Bill Kinimonth insists the gradual
warming of the earth is part of a natural cycle: "The climate follows
patterns which we can read back from our instrument records for about
150 years, and from a lot of the proxy records they go back thousands
of years.




"The ice cores show the fluctuations of the climate over 100,000-year cycles."


He told the BBC News website: "We're presently in what
we might call the optimum period, where the Earth is warmer than it has
been for the last 20,000 years, and I think we should be making the
most of it.


"The alternative is not very good - a cold, dry Australia."


The Australian Prime Minister John Howard, who refused
to sign the Kyoto Protocol insisting it would damage the economy, now
believes, however, that serious environmental trouble is brewing.


Professor Andy Pitman says the drought has forced politicians to look at the bigger picture.


"The Australian government has absolutely jumped on greenhouse bandwagon in the last three or four months," he said.

"Although it won't sign Kyoto, it's now
saying it wants to lead the drive for greenhouse gas emissions globally
in a very aggressive leadership way.


"That's largely due to the drought and the Stern report."












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Friday, December 22, 2006

Battle for power and energy looms in Turkmenistan

ASHGABAT (AFP) - The sudden death of Turkmenistan's president Saparmurat Niyazov has prompted predictions of a power struggle inside the ex-Soviet republic and a no less fierce contest among major world powers coveting the desert nation's natural gas deposits.


In a deceptive semblance of normality, portraits and statues of the autocratic Niyazov, who controlled every aspect of this mostly Muslim central Asian republic for 20 years, continued to look down from buildings throughout the capital Ashgabat.

State-run television broadcasted funeral music, as it had all day Thursday following the announcement that Niyazov had died of a heart attack. New Year's decorations were gone from the streets and black ribbons attached to flags.

But beneath the outward calm, there is a gaping power vacuum waiting to be filled, left by the death of a man who declared himself president for life and ruled like an absolutist king in a country that is of growing geopolitical interest to major powers such as China, Russia and the United States.

Turkmenistan not only has massive gas reserves of its own, but is positioned as a key link in the energy corridor the United States wants to build from Central Asia, across the Caspian Sea and the Caucasus and to Western markets -- bypassing Russia.

"His death has launched a vicious fight for power in Turkmenistan and, what is more important, a new stage of struggles between Russia, China, the
European Union and other interested parties for Turkmen gas," the respected Kommersant daily wrote in Moscow.

Ahead of Sunday's state funeral, residents here expressed shock about the loss of their leader, as well as jitters about what lies ahead.

"I feel kind of empty," said Batyr Ishankuliyev, 48, a civil servant. "You can hardly believe that our leader, who we saw as having been sent to us forever by the Almighty, suddenly died like an ordinary person."

"I am afraid for the future. The most important thing now is that no conflict arises," said Lyudmila 58, at one of the city's markets.

The most likely successor appeared to be the new interim president, deputy prime minister Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov, who promised to steer a steady course.

He was shown on television sitting in Niyazov's chair, declaring: "We have today lost a great man. Our country is orphaned."

"Turkmenistan will continue Turkmenbashi's policy. Turkmenistan's people will always be loyal to the lessons and plans of its leader, it will continue and complete what he began," Berdymukhammedov pledged.

But as an early sign of the political infighting that many analysts predict, Berdymukhammedov's nomination as interim leader coincided with news that the speaker of parliament -- who should have become interim leader according to the constitution -- faced a criminal investigation.

Berdymukhammedov said that an extraordinary session of the country's Popular Council, made up of more than 2,500 Turkmen officials, would take place Tuesday to set a date for a presidential election and introduce presidential candidates.

Under the constitution, an election is due to take place within two months.

The international community urged calm in Turkmenistan, but Washington also made clear its interest in boosting close relations with the key country, despite widespread accusations that the Turkmen authorities routinely violate human rights.

"We look forward to continuing to expand our relations with Turkmenistan, to a bright future for that country and to a government that provides justice and opportunity for its people," US National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said. "We convey our condolences to the family of President Niyazov and to the people of Turkmenistan."

The European Union urged Turkmenistan to manage the political transition "in accordance with international standards" following the long-time president's death.

"The presidency calls on the Turkmen authorities to make every effort to ensure that the succession to President Niyazov proceeds in accordance with international standards," the Finnish presidency of the bloc said in a brief statement.
Researchers identify a 'heartbeat' in Earth's climate

A few years ago, an international team of researchers went to the middle of the Pacific Ocean and drilled down five kilometers below sea level in an effort to uncover secrets about the earth's climate history. They exceeded their expectations and have published their findings in the Dec. 22 edition of the journal Science.

The researchers' drilling produced pristine samples of marine microfossils, otherwise known as foraminifera. Analysis of the carbonate shells of these microfossils, which are between 23 million to 34 million years-old, has revealed that the Earth's climate and the formation and recession of glaciation events in the Earth's history have corresponded with variations in the earth's natural orbital patterns and carbon cycles. The researchers were particularly interested in these microfossils because they came from the Oligocene epoch, a time in Earth's history known for falling temperatures. "The continuity and length of the data series we gathered and analyzed allowed for unprecedented insights into the complex interactions between external climate forcing, the global carbon cycle and ice sheet oscillations," said Dr. Jens Herrle, co-author of the paper and a micropaleontology professor at the University of Alberta. The authors also show how simple models of the global carbon cycle, coupled to orbital controls of global temperature and biological activity, are able to reproduce the important changes observed after the world entered an "ice-house" state about 34 million years ago.


In the early half of the 20th century, Serbian physicist Milutin Milankovitch first proposed that cyclical variations in the Earth-Sun geometry can alter the Earth's climate and these changes can be discovered in the Earth's geological archives, which is exactly what this research team, consisting of members from the United Kingdom, the U.S. and Canada, has done. "This research is not only concerned with the climate many millions-of-years-ago. Researching and understanding 'extreme' climate events from the geological past allows us to better tune climate models to understand present and future events, and the response to major perturbations of Earth's climate and the global carbon cycle, Herrle added. Source: University of Alberta
Ramp up the Rhetoric - Tone down the Skepticism .... This is the Credo of today's mainstream Climate Scientist

With thirteen thousand people at a confab of geophysicists and geophysicists-in-training, a few thousand of whom work on something related to the climate system, you expect to hear about climate change. In perhaps a short decade, climate change has rapidly surpassed seismology as the primary membrane between the public and the geophysics research world. Climate is now what most makes the American Geophysical Union relevant to non-members; climate is now what essentially drives the meeting despite the presence of dozens of other specialties represented.
As a physical oceanographer (which by definition also means "climatologist")- become-enviro policy guy, though, I wasn't so much interested in the details of climate science at this year's AGU. What I was (and am) interested in is seeing the conference as a whole. My interest in AGU has strayed from the hardrock science, moving into something more to do with feelings and hunches. That's right, feelings. Hunches. Intuition. The squishy, soft underbelly of the human mind; the part we want to ignore in pursuing geophysical data analysis. What I want to know is attitude. More than the state of the science, I now want to know about the state of the scientists.
I will grant that talking to the people I did at AGU represents a small fraction of all the attendees. I will grant that there is no way to know whether my averaging of attitudes in the climsci world, as sensed by talking with a few people over a few days, scales up to represent the true feelings of the collective. But I will tell you what I found, and what I felt, and whether you think it might represent the current attitude of climsci world is up to you.
To sum the state of climsci world in one word, as I see it right now, it is this: tension.
What I am starting to hear is internal backlash. Sure, science is messy and always full of tension between holders of competing positions, opinions and analyses. That has always been the nature of science, and of course extends to climate science. Tensions come out at meetings, on listservs, on letters pages, and in the press. But these tensions normally surround a particular paper, or a particular question. While much more broadly-based tensions have existed for years on the state of understanding on global warming, they haven't really been tensions internal to the climsci community, but tensions between the climsci community and interested outsiders.
What I am sensing now is something much broader and more diffuse, something that has less to do with particular components of the science in the field and is much more about how the field is composing itself.
What I see is something that I am having a hard time labeling, but that I might call either a "hangover" or a "sophomore slump" or "buyers remorse." None fit perfectly, but perhaps the combination does. I speak for (my interpretation) of the collective: {We tried for years – decades – to get them to listen to us about climate change. To do that we had to ramp up our rhetoric. We had to figure out ways to tone down our natural skepticism (we are scientists, after all) in order to put on a united face. We knew it would mean pushing the science harder than it should be. We knew it would mean allowing the boundary-pushers on the "it's happening" side free reign while stifling the boundary-pushers on the other side. But knowing the science, we knew the stakes to humanity were high and that the opposition to the truth would be fierce, so we knew we had to dig in. But now they are listening. Now they do believe us. Now they say they're ready to take action. And now we're wondering if we didn't create a monster. We're wondering if they realize how uncertain our projections of future climate are. We wonder if we've oversold the science. We're wondering what happened to our community, that individuals caveat even the most minor questionings of barely-proven climate change evidence, lest they be tagged as "skeptics." We're wondering if we've let our alarm at the problem trickle to the public sphere, missing all the caveats in translation that we have internalized. And we're wondering if we’ve let some of our scientists take the science too far, promise too much knowledge, and promote more certainty in ourselves than is warranted.}
I came to this place in a few ways. One was a colleague describing a caveat he put into his poster abstract out of fear --- yes, fear! (He strongly called into question widely-quoted data supporting a decline in snowpack and advance in spring peak runoff in the northern Rockies.) Another was multiple colleagues giving me independent but similar blistering accounts of the GCMs they work on (upcoming post on this). Yet another was listening to competing ideas presented by Torn (GC22A-02) and Knutti (-04) in this session. It was in these and other events and conversations that a theme arose that pervaded my meeting.
None of this is to say that the risk of climate change is being questioned or downplayed by our community; it's not. It is to say that I think some people feel that we've created a monster by limiting the ability of people in our community to question results that say "climate change is right here!" It is to say that a number of climsci people I heard from are not comfortable enough with the science to want our community to push to outsiders an idea that we have fully or even adequately bounded the risk. I heard from a few people a sentiment that we need to stop making assumptions and decisions for decision-makers; that we need to give decision-makers only the unvarnished truth with realistic bounds on our uncertainty, and trust that the decision-makers will know what to do with it. These feelings came of frustration that many of us are downplaying uncertainties for fear of not being listened to.
I don't play in the weeds of climate change anymore, I play in the weeds of how the science gets to policy makers and how the nature of policy-making gets back to the scientists. My own feeling of self-responsibility in this field is to be that translator in any small way I can; to hear what each sides thinks and needs and to play go-between. (I am certainly not the only one, but there aren't many of us, either.) It is for that reason that what I heard concerns me greatly, because I see negative implications for the credibility of the climsci world.
In upcoming posts I will give concrete examples of events and discussions from which I draw these conclusions. For now I leave the concerned climsci community with the thoughts of one former Congressional science fellow who is now back in research science (with some additions of my own): dealing with uncertainty is exactly what Congresspeople do, and they do it a lot better than we do. For scientists, uncertainty is an abstract concept, something that feeds into an academic study, a place where the stakes are low and time-scale is long-term. For politicians and unelected decision-makers, uncertainty is life-or-death, yet decisions must still be made. Politicians constantly make decisions amid levels of uncertainty that would stifle the publication of any academic climate change paper. We need to realize that, give the politicians their due, and get the hell out of their way. Give them the science and the uncertainties and let them make the decisions. Overplaying our hand is a dangerous gambit, and may spell big trouble for us in the future.
I realize that many of you will disagree with the notion that we are overplaying our hand, or are not giving full voice to our uncertainties. I'm not sure the answer to this question myself. But I write all this because I sense a sea change in attitudes amongst climsci people that I know as good scientists without agendas. These are solid scientists, and some told me in no uncertain terms that we are not giving full voice to uncertainties; others implied as much. Therein lies the tension. Where we go from here is anybody's guess, but I tend to agree with the Oracle in the second Matrix movie: we already know the answer to that question, our task is to understand why we are going to do what we are going to do.Posted on December 20, 2006 02:16 PM
Comments
Let us hope cooler heads are prevailing. I'm quite sure the vast majority of climate scientists, dedicated to their work, see the underhandedness of carbon traders donating $300,000 to a website proclaiming to clear the air, or a website developed to covering up bad science, or even a politician running around like Chicken Little when he has a financial stake in spreading that fear.
It could be as bad as many think, or it could be a non-event. Right now, with our ignorance of feedbacks, crippling the ability of society to fund scientific research is far from the ideal solution. It would certainly be better, for the sake of knowledge as a start, to fill the holes in our understanding of climate rather than dogmatically pursue a luddite-like existence, where real problems like malaria etc. would certainly be worse than a world with the resources to fight such problems.
Posted by: Steve Hemphill at December 20, 2006 08:57 PM
Thank you for this thoughtful post. We need more discussion of this nature.
My impression (as a lay observer) is that the discussion has been hijacked by those with an agenda, and who acknowledge (Stephen Schneider, Al Gore) that the problem for us all is so serious that they are compelled to exaggerate the issues so that they can get attention focussed on AGW issues.
Problem is, the open discussion and hard questioning that is facilitated by the emergence of blogs on the internet is exposing sloppy science that is now leading to a serious loss of credibility for many "climate scientists" who have taken the lead in scaring the public.
This is probably an intermediate phase, a time of change, as all involved begin to understand the power of open communication, especially with the opportunity for learned people to contribute without exposing their real names.
Hopefully the end result will be a dramatic improvement in what real science involves, and lead away from the current situation where an individual (I have in mind Phil Jones) can drive the debate by presenting to the world processed data without revealing any detail of how they have adjusted for the changing population of temperature stations, Urban Heat Island effects etc. "Trust me", says Phil, "I have made appropriate adjustments."
The blinding insight that emerges from the new information age is that many of us are saying "True science doesn't involve us trusting you Phil. Show us the data, show us the methods. Explain what you have done. Prove to us that what you say is true."
All this is good. Very very good. With this new age of open communication, we will hopefully get to the real answers much more quickly than might have been possible before. Whatever they are.
Posted by: bruce at December 21, 2006 01:08 AM
Clearly your impressions are your own,and just that, impressions, but you are emphasising only one end of the uncertainty spectrum, here. Recent papers (Barrie Pittock's springs to mind) and recent model output has also suggested to some in the climsci community that the scientists concerned haven't gone far enough; in attempts to moderate the possibility of media-induced 'panics' (which clearly hasn't worked), the 'big picture' might well have underplayed the real risk that temperatures (and associated by-products) might well reach levels greater than +4C, especially given the recent increases in CO2 output globally, and the unlikeliness of any policy change in at least two, and more likely five years from now.
This, of course, only goes to underline what you say about uncertainty, but might cast a different slant on what the source of doubt is.
Another, completely different interpretation could be that this 'tension' you speak of is a 'frontlash' response to what is anticipated to be in the AR4, and the likely public and political responses to this. If, as seems likely, the AR4 is more forceful than ever on the role of CO2, is more precise on the likely range of warming, and more detailed in its record of observed change since about 1970, then there's going to be a very large spotlight placed on decision-makers and the people who provide them with information in the coming year - even more so than currently. Perhaps, in the words of the song, climsciers are aware that 'there may be trouble ahead...'
Posted by: Fergus Brown at December 21, 2006 03:31 AM
Bruce, thanks for the comment.
Fergus, thanks to you as well. You may be right, of course, and I was very careful to indicate that this is my reading only, based on talking to only a few people. Sometimes small samples represent the population well, sometimes they don't, but I do honestly believe that anybody hearing what I heard last week would have come to the same or similar conclusions. As far as the frontlash on AR4, here's something to think about: what I did not bring out in my post but which was an underlying subtext is that I think this is in part a generational dichotomy. I spoke mostly (but not exclusively) with junior scientists -- still very good scientists, but out of their PhDs only within the past ten years. None of these are involved in AR4 and most don't even care about it. (In fact, of all the people I talked to I think I'm the only one involved in AR4 -- I was expert reviewer on two WGII chapters.) This may actually bolster your argument -- that junior people in the field (probably in some unarticulated way) do not fully trust the IPCC process and want to distance themselves from it. I highly doubt anybody I was talking to thinks this explicitly though.
Posted by: kevin v at December 21, 2006 12:06 PM
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'The null hypothesis says global warming is natural'

Part of the How to Talk to a Global Warming Skeptic guide)
Objection: Natural variability is the null hypothesis; there must be compelling evidence of an anthropogenic CO2 warming effect before we take it seriously.
Answer: The null hypothesis is a statistical test, and might be a reasonable approach if we were looking only for statistical correlation between increasing CO2 and increasing temperature. But we're not -- there are known mechanisms involved whose effects can be predicted and measured. These effects are the result of simple laws of physics, even if their interactions are quite complex.

But putting aside inappropriate application of the null hypothesis, we are indeed well outside the realm of natural global variability, as seen over the last 2,000 years and even over the last 12,000 years. We can go back several hundreds of thousands of years and we still see that the temperature swings of the glacial/interglacial cycles were an order of magnitude slower than the warming rate we are now experiencing.
In fact, outside of catastrophic geological events like the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum there are no known precedents for warming this fast on a global scale. I'd say the case for "it's all natural" is the one that needs explaining.
Oh, and by the way, we do in fact have compelling evidence.
< Traditional journalism struggles with complex issues Trash talking the airline industry >
For story: 'The null hypothesis says global warming is natural'3 Comments Post a Comment

isn't the null hypothesis...That global warming isn't occuring?
And what does it matter what the causes? If the earth was cooling, people in areas that get a lot of snow would be terrified, regardless of the causes. They'd want something done.
What we're up against isn't the deniers that deny on principle, it's the deniers that deny, because, frankly, they don't think it matters if the earth warms, or that it'll be a good thing.
by banana republican at 6:33 AM on 21 Dec 2006
Now wait one minute hereDoes the distinction of human-induced vs. "natural" really matter? Does it change the consequences if the change is human-induced or due to natural variation? No, not in the least.
Implicit in this distinction is the idea that "nature", when perturbed, will return to a human species friendly optimum, that this intersection of human life enabling conditions exists precisely for humans. That if through our actions we push one or more metastable parameters in this dynamic system we call earth over a threshold to a different human life unfriendly optimum, Gaia or some higher being will come running in to save us from the consequences of our behavior.
Or, alternatively, that anything we humans do we can undo simply because we did it. This either represents supreme overconfidence in our intelligence to both recognize signals and develop solutions or a failure to understand the implications of lagged positive feedbacks in dynamic systems on timeframes.
Finally, that nature is so big we puny humans really can't alter its course. Oh, really?
Nope, all these are flawed ideas based on misperceptions, misunderstandings or outright ignorance.

by JMG3Y at 6:56 AM on 21 Dec 2006
GW is ongingYour first argument seems to rely on a notion that GW has been triggered so now does it matter why. GW is onging and will stop once the GHG levels in the atmosphere have been stabilized for a couple of decades.
That is an oversimplification but it is a reasonable first order approximation of the situation. This is not an implicit assumption it is a highly reasonable expectation based on well established theories of climate and very sophisticated modeling.
We may of course be wrong, but any doubts that there are about the models only mean we are incurring greater risks.
GW is very clearly caused primarily by human actions, it is trivially obvious that is we thing GW is a bad thing we should stop causing it.Invent a clever saying, and your name will live forever! -- Anonymous
by Coby Beck at 11:02 AM on 21 Dec 2006
Australian firm seeks partners for pipeline -

SYDNEY: Australian Pipeline Trust, a Sydney-based owner of natural gas pipelines, said Wednesday that it received "positive" responses from potential overseas partners to build a pipeline from Papua New Guinea to Australia.
The company has contacted some "major international" pipeline companies with the view to forming a venture that may replace an AGL Energy-led group to build and own the Australian part of the pipeline, the company's managing director, Mick McCormack, said Wednesday in a briefing document filed with the Australian Stock Exchange. He declined to name the companies.
AGL Energy said in August it was no longer interested in building the 4 billion Australian dollar, or $3.1 billion, Australian part of the pipeline because it was not economically viable amid rising construction costs and a lack of customers. Oil Search, which would be the biggest supplier of gas for the pipeline, said earlier this month it and AGL invited other companies to replace the group.
"We've already put in a few calls around the world to some of the major international pipeline players who might like to play a part in realizing this fantastic project," McCormack said in the document. "The response to those calls has been positive."
The Malaysian Petroliam Nasional, known as Petronas, has a stake in Australian Pipeline and was part of the original Papua New Guinea pipeline group with AGL Energy.

Azman Ibrahim, a spokesman for Petronas, which cites its interest in the Papua New Guinea venture on its Web site, could not be reached for comment.
McCormack declined to say whether Enbridge, the second-largest Canadian pipeline operator with whom Australian Pipeline in 2004 bid unsuccessfully for a Western Australian pipeline, was one of the companies Australian Pipeline contacted.
"We have had some dealings with Enbridge in the past and they were good to deal with then," McCormack said in a telephone interview. "It's one of those projects that if we can gauge some interest from parties around the world or even Australia it may be best progressed on a consortium basis."
McCormack said Oil Search wanted to find a replacement pipeline venture before the market opportunity in Australia for Papua New Guinea gas disappears.
"They recognize, as we do, that for these big projects the window stays open for only so long, so time is becoming of the essence," he said.
Ann Diamant, a spokeswoman for Oil Search, could not be reached for comment.
Oil Search and AGL are working on a revised plan for the Australian part of the proposed pipeline, involving building a main link in eastern Australia between Townsville and Gladstone, with a connecting line to Gove in northern Australia. The line would start delivering gas in 2010. A spur line to the Australian town of Mt. Isa would start up in 2012, while gas would be delivered to Moomba in central Australia through an upgrade of an existing line from Mt. Isa to Ballera, Australia, said the Papua New Guinea Chamber of Mines and Petroleum this month.
Exxon Mobil, which is to operate the gas supply portion of the project, said earlier this month that it was examining whether developing Papua New Guinea gas fields for liquefied natural gas exports might be more profitable than piping fuel to Australia.
DirectLink power line sold
Australian Pipeline said Wednesday that it had agreed to buy the DirectLink electricity cable in eastern Australia for 170 million Australian dollars, or $133 million, adding to its power transmission assets.
Australian Pipeline said the cable linking the Australian states of New South Wales and Queensland would be acquired from a venture comprising Country Energy, Hydro Quebec International Group and Fonds de SolidaritƩ FTQ. The price is 1.44 times the value of the asset as estimated for the purpose of price regulation, it said.
The latest acquisition "is consistent with their past practices of paying top dollar for assets," said Nathan Lim, a utilities analyst at Aegis Equities Research in Sydney. Australian Pipeline "has clearly been on the acquisition rampage, using shareholders money for what they deem to be the best outcome for shareholders, which I have difficulty understanding as these acquisitions are mildly accretive, if accretive at all."
The competitive bidding process for the asset, which involved at least two other bidders, necessitated the price paid, Australian Pipeline officials said.
The purchase price is 15.3 times forecast earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization and should add to dividends in the first full year after completion of the transaction, the company said.
You've Heard of Ethanol; Here Comes 'Grassahol':


"You've Heard of Ethanol; Here Comes 'Grassahol'
By Ted Landphair
Stillwater, Oklahoma
21 December 2006

Landphair report (MP3) 922 k
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In his State of the Union address early this year, President Bush urged a speed-up of research into energy sources other than fossil fuels. And he mentioned one that many Americans had never heard of: switchgrass. It's a hardy wild plant that thrives on America's Great Plains, from Texas north to Canada.

As Oklahoma State professor Ray Huhnke demonstrates, switchgrass can reach just as high as the corn that grew 'as high as an elephant's eye' in the musical 'Oklahoma.'

Millions of Americans are already driving cars powered principally by ethanol made from corn, or biodiesel made from soybeans. But switchgrass, a perennial with thick, hard stems that grows up to three meters tall, may have more long-term potential as a fuel source. Charles Taliaferro, an Oklahoma State University emeritus professor of agriculture, has helped breed high-yielding varieties of the tenacious grass. 'It produces seeds that are valued by wildlife, particularly birds,' he says. 'So it's environmentally friendly. It's more easily established than some of the other major perennial grasses. It grows on non-crop soils where corn and other row crops cannot be produced. It has relatively high biomass production capability with minimal fertilizer and water.'
Corn and beans from which most ethanol is made today must be planted annually on farmland with rich soil, and they're in constant demand as food sources. Meanwhile, not even cattle go out of their way to munch on "
No Dramatic U-Turn Seen on US Climate Change Policy


LONDON - Washington is likely to stay out of the UN Kyoto Protocol for curbing greenhouse gases beyond 2012 even with a shift in power to Democrats from Republicans, a former top US trade and economics official said.
Stuart Eizenstat, lead negotiator for former US President Bill Clinton on the Kyoto Protocol for curbing greenhouse gas emissions, said changes were afoot at state and business level but the mere mention of Kyoto was a red rag and would remain so.
"In the United States there is growing interest and growing concern but no chance of joining Kyoto," he told Reuters by telephone. "The word is radioactive."
Clinton, a Democrat, did not present Kyoto to the Republican dominated Senate in 1998 knowing it would be defeated.
Clinton's Republican successor US President George W. Bush turned his back on the treaty -- the only legally binding global accord on climate change -- arguing that it would be economic suicide to sign up to Kyoto while allowing major developing nations like China and India to be exempt.
Kyoto obliges 35 developed nations to cut greenhouse gases by at least 5 percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12. Governments are now wrangling over how to extend the protocol beyond 2012.
Bush is entering the last two years of his administration, but is not expected to change course on the environment.
Mid-term elections last month gave Democrats control of Congress by a tiny margin, reawakening speculation of a shift towards accepting Kyoto-style caps.
But for Eizenstat, a former US deputy treasury secretary and under secretary of commerce for international trade, the numbers simply do not add up because it needs a two-thirds majority to get laws through -- and that looks unlikely given most Republicans' ideological hatred of Kyoto.
"With the changeover in Congress we really do have the potential for greater interest but not really legislation. It hasn't changed the dynamic," he added.
And that is despite the introduction in California by Republican governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of tough climate laws, and a carbon emissions trading deal between seven other states.
"California has a formal Kyoto-type emissions law. It is very important to see what they do on emissions trading," Eizenstat said. "The whole history of environmental laws is that they start in California and head east."
There is a chance the Senate might agree a less strict goal.
It has voted down calls to set mandatory caps on emissions at 2000 levels -- an easier target than Kyoto. But backers of that bill say they will try again in 2007.
However, a law passed in 1997 barred the US from making international commitments on carbon emission cuts unless developing countries did likewise -- and that, according to Eizenstat, cuts across party lines.
"It would be very difficult to get the US into some sort of Kyoto commitment without China," he said. "Unless China undergoes a metamorphosis you would have real difficulty."
Talks to extend Kyoto have made little headway -- due partly to US meddling and partly to uncertainty over the intentions of China, which builds one coal-fired power plant a week.
Most scientists agree that temperatures will rise by between two and six degrees Celsius this century due mainly to carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels for power and transport, putting millions of lives at risk from floods and famines.
Former World Bank chief economist Nicholas Stern said in October that urgent action on global warming was vital, and that delay would multiply the cost 20 times.
Eizenstat said one possibility was that the United States would at some stage be forced by the spreading patchwork of business and state actions to bring in federal emissions laws.
But the key would be extending that to the international level, and the hatred of Kyoto made that less than likely.
Story by Jeremy Lovell
Ambrose, Strahl announce new biofuel regulations

Environment Minister Rona Ambrose has announced a $345 million funding and regulatory package to promote renewable fuels such as biodiesel and ethanol as part of the clean air plan.
Ambrose unveiled plans to require that diesel fuel and heating oil contain 2 per cent renewable biodiesel content by 2012, and that gasoline and diesel fuel contain five per cent renewable content by 2010.
The move is part of the government's bid to improve its environmental image.
She made the announcement alongside Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl in Saskatoon, saying the plan would result in a major reduction in Canada's greenhouse gas emissions.
"The regulations that I'm announcing today will have a real impact, reducing greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated four megatons annually. Translate that into something we can all relate to and it's like we're moving the equivalent of almost one million vehicles off the roads every year," she said.
Strahl announced funding commitments of $345 million designed to promote bioproducts research and development. He said the government's focus on biofuels will create new economic opportunities for farmers.
He said $200 million would go towards a program under which farmers can obtain part ownership in biodiesel plants expected to sprout in coming years.
However, details were sketchy about how the plan will unfold.
He also announced $145 million over five years towards an agricultural bioproducts innovations program to help farmers move into the future.
Biofuels are a renewable energy source produced from organic materials such as canola, wheat and soy.
Ambrose stressed the renewable fuel legislation will only move forward if the opposition parties support the government's unpopular Clean Air Act.
Barb Isman, president of the Canola Council of Canada, told The Canadian Press the new measures are welcome but will not kickstart the renewables industry unless there are tax changes in the next federal budget to make Canadian farmers competitive with those in the United States and Europe.
CTV's Roger Smith said the announcement could be Ambrose's last as environment minister. Speculation is that she will be moved from her post in a possible cabinet shuffle in January.
Q&A: Europe's carbon trading scheme

Europe's Emissions Trading Scheme unites the 25 states of the European Union in an attempt to cut emissions of the gases fuelling climate change.
What is carbon trading?
Since the beginning of 2005, about 12,000 energy-intensive plants in the EU have been able to buy and sell permits that allow them to emit carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere.
Companies that exceed their individual limit are able to buy unused permits from firms that have taken steps to cut their emissions.
Those who exceed their limit and are unable to buy spare permits are fined 40 euros (£27) for every excess tonne of CO2.
Industries included in the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) include power generation, iron and steel, glass and cement. Overall, the ETS covers about 40% of the EU's total CO2 emissions.
Why is it needed?
Under the UN Kyoto Protocol, a legally binding global agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, industrialised nations are obliged to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases being released into the atmosphere.

The EU is required to cut its emissions by 8% from 1990 levels by 2012. The ETS is Europe's main mechanism to achieve this.
It works by each nation agreeing a National Allocation Plan (NAP) with the European Commission. The NAPs allocate individual limits for the plants covered by the scheme.
By setting the total number of permits below the current level of emissions, the ETS should lead to a reduction in the amount of CO2 being emitted.
Has it been successful?
The idea behind Europe's trading scheme has been hailed as a positive step in the effort to tackle human-induced climate change.
Organisations such as the UN and the World Bank have praised the ETS, and say it can form the basis of a global system.
However, in practice, the ETS has had a rough ride. Nations have issued more permits to pollute than required in the first phase, which runs until the end of 2007.
This has resulted in carbon prices falling as low as eight euros (£5) per tonne. This means that it has been cheaper for firms to buy spare permits than pay the 40-euro fine, or take steps to reduce their emissions.
Talks are currently underway for NAPs covering the second phase, but a number of nations, including Germany, have expressed concern that the European Commission is setting limits too low.
However, Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas has said the EU had to show leadership if it was to convince other nations, especially Australia and the US, that carbon trading schemes worked.
Why is aviation now being included in the ETS?
EU emissions from the international air transport sector are increasing faster than any other sector, says the European Commission.

Emissions from EU commercial flights are set to subject to limits
Although aviation only accounts for 3% of the EU's greenhouse gas emissions, the sector has seen an 87% increase in CO2 since 1990 following the emergence of cheap air travel.
According to the Commission, someone taking a return flight from London to New York will generate about the same amount of CO2 as an average person heating their home for a year.
Under the proposals, the ETS will cover commercial flights within the EU from 2011, and all flights to and from the EU in 2012. Domestic flights (eg. London to Manchester) are already subject to national limits set by the Kyoto Protocol.
Airlines favour carbon trading rather than taxes on fuel or emission charges.
The Commission says it expects any increase in ticket costs to be limited, and much lower than rises resulting from soaring oil prices in recent years.
What happens next?
The European Commission is currently negotiating with national governments over the limits to be set in the second phase of the ETS, which runs from 2008-2012, with the final NAPs to be in place by the summer of 2007.
In January, the Commission is expected to announce a new target to cut to carbon emissions. It is set to call for a 30% reduction from 1990 levels by 2020, and the ETS will play a key role in delivering this target.
Internationally, Australia's Prime Minister John Howard has set up a task force to look at carbon trading.
Australia along with the US refused to sign the 1997 Kyoto protocol, fearing it would damage their economies while not requiring developing countries such as China and India to reduce emissions.
Such a move could pave the way for an international carbon trading scheme to form the central pillar of a post-2012 Kyoto agreement.
Investing in uranium: The nuclear energy power of the future

Concern over declining supplies of oil and gas, and the greenhouse effect of burning coal has put nuclear power right back in the spotlight. And this is one reason why the price of uranium, the basic ingredient of nuclear power, has quadrupled over the last four years...
Tom Bulford - Other articles Wed 20 Dec, 2006
Given the hysteria that accompanies any discussion of nuclear power in this country, it may come as a surprise to know that France generates three quarters of its electricity from this source. While we worry about future energy supplies, other countries seem to have no such misgivings. Today there are 440 nuclear power reactors in 31 countries and together they provide 16% of the world’s electricity supply. Another 30 are currently under construction in 11 countries, notably China, South Korea, Japan and Russia, and a similar number are proposed.
Investing in uranium: Uranium price quadruplesConcern over declining supplies of oil and gas, and the greenhouse effect of burning coal has put nuclear power right back in the spotlight. And this is one reason why the price of uranium, the basic ingredient of nuclear power, has quadrupled over the last four years. It’s a move that is generating plenty of bullishness for producers and would-be producers of uranium. So let’s learn a few basic facts about nuclear power and uranium... Recently you may have seen that ministers from the European Union, the USA, China, India, Japan, South Korea and Russia gave the go-ahead to a £7bn 10-year project to build an experimental nuclear fusion reactor in the south of France. The project will attempt to produce power by fusing atoms of deuterium, an element that can easily be extracted from sea water, and tritium, which comes from a fairly commonly occurring metal, lithium. If it works – and it is a big if – it could lead to commercial production of power by the second half of this century, in a manner that is both cleaner and safer than that produced by today’s reactors.
Investing in uranium: Bomb making and ice-breakersToday’s nuclear reactors do not work by fusion, but by fission. This means the splitting of uranium atoms. The process was first developed during the Second World War as a way of making bombs. After the war, attention turned to more constructive purposes. Nuclear electricity production is foremost of these, but 56 countries now have nuclear reactors for civil research. These are a source of neutron beams, used for scientific research and the production of medical and industrial isotopes. Nuclear reactors are also in use to propel 150 ships around the oceans, including eight Russian ice-breakers. So concern about radioactive waste has clearly not prevented the use of nuclear reactors, and now its economic and environmental attractions suggest that this use could be accelerated. The basic economic attraction of nuclear power plants is that, while they are very expensive to build, their fuel costs are low compared to coal, oil and gas. One kilogram of natural uranium will yield about 20,000 times as much energy as the same amount of coal. Less than 20% of the cost of producing nuclear energy is down to the cost of uranium. The rest is all spent on plant construction and operation, and the extraordinarily expensive business of decommissioning old plants.To illustrate that nuclear power production is relatively insensitive to the underlying input cost, the World Nuclear Association has calculated that while a doubling of the price of uranium adds only 7% to the price of electricity, a doubling of the gas has a 70% impact. This cost structure of high capital costs, but low fuel costs, also means that it makes sense to keep nuclear power plants running at high capacity, while coping with demand fluctuations, by varying the output of fossil fuel power plants.
Investing in uranium: Cheaper, cleaner and more efficientThe rising prices of oil, gas and coal in recent years has made the economics of nuclear power production more attractive. But producing nuclear energy is complex. The uranium has to be processed, enriched and fabricated into fuel elements. And afterwards there is the problem of disposing of the radioactive spent fuel. The main wastes produced by burning uranium in a nuclear reactor are very hot and radioactive, but they are modest in quantity. Handling and storing them safely is quite straightforward, so long as they are shielded from human exposure, and cooled. Shielding can be by water, concrete, steel or other dense material, cooling is by air or water. For instance, when spent fuel is removed from a typical reactor, it is done under water and the spent fuel is transferred to a large storage pool where it may remain for up to 50 years. During this time its radioactivity progressively decays and diminishes, so that after 40 years, one thousandth of the initial radioactivity of spent fuel remains, making it much easier to handle and dispose of. Despite this lengthy and expensive process, most studies – and there have been several – conclude that nuclear electricity now costs less than that generated from coal or gas, except perhaps in places like Australia where low cost fossil fuels are close at hand. To this economic advantage we now have to factor in nuclear status as a clean energy.
Investing in uranium: Comparative studies have so far failed to attribute any value to the fact that nuclear produces no carbon emissions, and quite how this will be factored into comparative cost studies is a problem for economists. But this merit can only enhance the attractions of nuclear. Add in concerns about security of supply, and it is little wonder that nuclear power is gaining adherents. Uranium is the raw material for nuclear power generation, and The World Nuclear Association, (www.world-nuclear.org) predicts demand for uranium out to 2030. Its central case in what is a very wide range (on its most pessimistic assumptions demand actually declines) has demand going from today’s 68,000 tonnes to 110,000 tonnes in 2030. This amounts to a less than stellar 2% per annum growth in the demand for uranium. This slow rate is influenced by the increasingly efficient use of uranium, which over the last 20 years has seen a 25% gain in the amount of power produced from a fixed amount of uranium. However, primary production of uranium will have to rise faster than 2%. This is because at present, about 45% of supply is coming out of stockpiles built up by the Russians and Americans during the Cold War. These are now diminishing fast, and are likely to be empty within 10 years. So... increased demand for uranium must be met by a disproportionately large increase in primary production from the mines.
Investing in uranium: Uranium price soarsAt present, 73% of uranium production comes from just 10 mines. The largest three, the McArthur River mine in Canada, and the Ranger and Olympic Dam mines in Australia account for 38% of global production. But already the hunt is on for new reserves, and exploration expenditure has quadrupled, albeit from a very low base, over the last five years. Fortunately uranium is a relatively common metal and, expressed in terms of their contained energy value, oil is about 300 times more expensive to find than uranium. So although the price of uranium has shot up to about $60.00 per tonne from $10 in 2000, this tells us more about the possibility of a tight market in the immediate future... and probably of a speculative element in the price, than it tells us about the likely long-term equilibrium price for uranium.On this score, a study by International Nuclear Inc, suggests that a price of no more than $20 is required to economically meet needs in the foreseeable future. So, while today the market mechanism is working by driving up the spot price of uranium and encouraging exploration for new supplies, the likelihood is that the price will settle back in a few years time once production has increased to the required level. Regards,Tom Bulfordfor The Daily Reckoning
Gazprom grabs Sakhalin gas stake

State-owned Russian energy giant Gazprom has wrested control of a massive oil and gas field from Anglo-Dutch rival Shell.
Gazprom will pay $7.5bn (£3.8bn) for a 50%-plus-one-share stake in the Sakhalin-2 project after Shell was accused of breaking environmental laws.
The deal was signed by President Vladimir Putin and top executives from Royal Dutch Shell and Gazprom.
Analysts said the deal was better than expected for Shell.
Shell and Japanese companies Mitsui and Mitsubishi will see their stakes in the $22bn project on the Pacific island halved.
Holdings cut
Shell will now be left with a 27.5% stake, after it had been widely expected to see its holding reduced to 25%.
"They (Shell) seem to be receiving cash upfront which is positive and the purchase price is a little better than expected. Gazprom is effectively paying cost," said MAN Securities oil analyst Niell Morton.
However it still remains unclear whether Shell will continue to lead theSakhalin-2 project.
A statement from the firm said it would "continue to significantly contribute to the (consortium's) management and remain as technical adviser".
Legal wrangle
In October, Russia's environment agency, RosProdNadzor, had asked for more time to investigate the project saying it differed significantly from the original plans.
The country's environmental minister later claimed it had broken five criminal laws.
Shell has always denied the claims, while some analysts said the way the Sakhalin issue had been handled was designed to strengthen the government's position in renegotiating the development of the field.
After the deal was signed, President Putin said he was "glad" the issue had been resolved.
"Issues of principal importance are already as good as settled, while approaches to their solution - coordinated," he added.
Due to be finished in 2008, Sakhalin-2 will be the largest integrated oil and gas field in the world.
India and China in warming study

India and China have agreed to send an expedition to the Himalayas to study the impact that global warming is having on glaciers there.
They fear that melting glaciers could threaten rivers which support the lives of millions of people.
Scientists and mountaineers from the two countries are now planning to head for the source of two rivers.
Last week a report said that Asia's greenhouse gas emissions would treble over the next 25 years.
The Asian Development Bank report provided detailed analysis of the link between transport and climate change in Asia.

Asia's greenhouse gases to treble
Air pollution and congestion would seriously hamper the ability to move people and goods effectively, it warned.
It pointed out that China was already the world's fourth largest economy, and the number of cars and utility vehicles could increase by 15 times more than present levels to more than 190 million vehicles over the next 30 years.
In India, traffic growth is likely to increase by similar levels over the same time period, the report said.
Carbon dioxide emissions from vehicles could rise 3.4 times for China and 5.8 times for India.
Melted ice
The BBC's Mark Dummett in Delhi says that scientists and mountaineers from the two countries are now planning to head for the source of two rivers, the Sutlej and the Brahmaputra.
These flow from the mountains of Tibet, and along with the Ganges and Indus rivers, provide water to millions of people in the plains of north India and its neighbouring countries.
The expedition's organisers are worried that global warming is melting the glaciers that sustain them.
In the short term, this could cause flooding as the rivers swell with melted ice.
But later if the glaciers disappear, the rivers might too, for part of each year.
The Director of the Indian Mountaineering Foundation, which is leading the Indian side of the expedition, HPS Ahluwalia, said that the melting of the ice sheets and the glaciers is "a crisis in the Himalayas".
He said the last attempt the chart the area around Mount Gang Rinpoche, known by Indians as Mount Kailash, was carried out a century ago.
The scientists say their findings will help the management of water resources for the whole region.
Shell pulls families from Nigeria after car bomb

LAGOS (Reuters) - The largest oil operator in Nigeria, Royal Dutch Shell, evacuated expatriate staff dependants from the Niger Delta on Thursday after militants planted a car bomb in a residential compound, the company said.
The withdrawal began hours after armed militants stormed an oil facility operated by France's Total, killing three police officers, and another group of gunmen invaded an oilfield run by Italy's Agip, a unit of ENI.
Shell's pullout involves about 400 foreign family members from residential compounds in Port Harcourt, Warri and Bonny Island. Staff will stay put and oil and gas production will not be affected, officials said.
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"We are not sure if this thing is going to deteriorate. If it deteriorates we will have fewer people to contend with," a senior Shell executive said.
A Total spokesman said the company had also begun to repatriate dependants numbering up to about 100 people in the wake of the car bombs.
Attacks on oil facilities and kidnappings of workers have become an almost a weekly occurrence in the world's eighth largest oil exporter. But Monday's car bomb attacks -- one in the car park of a Shell residential compound and the other outside Agip's operations base in the region's largest city Port Harcourt -- brought the violence closer to home.
No one was killed or injured, but nine cars were damaged in the Shell bombing. Continued...

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Year of extreme weather: Is it global warming?

GENEVA (dpa) - Flooding in the Horn of Africa, typhoons in Asia, drought in Australia, and the latest prediction that Arctic ice may melt completely in the summer months as soon as 2040.
Extreme weather appears to be happening in every corner of the globe and signs of global warming seem more glaring but no one is certain how far the two are related.
Scientists predict the Earth will warm by 1.4 to 5.8 degrees Celsius by 2100.
Though climate change is nothing new, what is different is the possible impact of man in releasing carbon dioxide gases, that most scientists believe contribute to heating the atmosphere artificially, by burning fossil fuel and other activities.
The year 2006 was the sixth warmest year on record, according to the latest report on the global climate published by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
The warmest year so far was 1998, followed by 2005.
However, the warming up of the planet is erratic. The sharpest rise in the 20th century was from 1976, with the 90s proving the warmest decade.
Extreme temperatures were recorded around the world in 2006. Many European countries experienced the hottest autumn since records began in the 17th century.
Parts of the United States saw flooding and others heatwaves.
The Horn of Africa, hit by severe drought in 2005, became a humanitarian disaster zone in October and November 2006, this time due to severe floods following heavy rainfall in Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya.
Typhoons wreaked record damage in South-East Asia. For China it was the worst typhoon season in a decade causing 1,000 deaths and 10 billion dollars of damage.
Typhoon Durian affected some 1.5 million people in the Philippines at the end of November, with more than 500 dead and hundreds more still missing.
However, the experts are reluctant to draw firm conclusions. ‘’It is always difficult to talk about trends,’’ WMO Secretary General Michel Jarraud said.
Jarraud declined to say if he believed freak weather was occurring more frequently.
Certainly the pattern of ferocious Atlantic hurricane seasons, which peaked in 2005, was broken in 2006. Despite predictions to the contrary by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA, 2006 saw near normal seasonal activity.
Dr. Gerry Bell, a forecaster at NOAA, said, ‘’El Nino developed quickly and the atmosphere responded rapidly, reducing hurricane activity during an otherwise active era that began in 1995.’’
El NiƱo is a periodic warming of the ocean waters in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific which influences weather around the world.
Predicting the weather remains an imprecise science, but assessing the aftermath is more certain.
Natural disasters, including weather phenomena such as hurricanes Katrina and Stan, cost 160 billion dollars in 2005, according to the World Disasters Report published by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in December. The amount was more than double the decade’s annual average.
Meanwhile in October a report spelt out the gloomiest prediction so far of the impact of global warming on the world economy.
Former World Bank chief economist Nicholas Stern said failure to tackle climate change would risk economic and social upheaval comparable to the great depression of the 1930s.
It could shrink the world economy by 20 per cent, equivalent to an estimated 6.95 trillion dollars by 2050. ‘’Without action, droughts, floods and rising sea levels would mean that up to 200 million people could be displaced and become refugees,’’ Stern said.
He called for 1 per cent of global gross domestic product (GDP) to be spent immediately on tackling climate change.
Global warming throws up almost daily news headlines. In mid December, a report co-authored by Cecilia Blitz of the University of Washington claimed if greenhouse emissions continue at the present rate, large areas of the Arctic would be totally ice free in the summer months by 2040.
Her colleague, Peter Rhines, said, ‘’The emerging global-warming signal seems to be more and more potent, more and more believable, and more and more certain.’’
Professor Martin Beniston of the University of Geneva said, ‘’Global warming is underway, and the general scientific consensus is that human influence on the climate system has emerged as a key element of the observed warming since probably the 1960s. It is a long-term problem that cannot be rapidly reversed.’’
The WMO is not prepared at this time to say how far severe weather is caused by global warming.
‘’The last report by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) looked into possible links between climate warming and drought, rainfall and heatwaves, but we are still in a phase of doing more research to find the answer,’’ WMO Secretary General Jarraud said. ‘’It is something they will have more on in their next report.’’
Fortunately the IPCC, set up in 1988 by the WMO and UN Environment Programme to follow global climate change, is due to report next in 2007.
The hefty number of reports on global warming are seemingly only outweighed by incidents of severe weather.
Whether human action causes global warming and the resulting catastrophic weather is not clear.
If it does, then a consensus on remedial action can be reached, although this remains a distant possibility.
If it is not manmade, then there is little we can do about global warming apart from preparing policies to mitigate the very worst consequences.
Either way the forecast is a bleak one
Warming fears do not add up

A FRIENDLY word of advice this Christmas: relax and enjoy it. Don't feel guilty about taking home your Christmas turkey in a plastic shopping bag or turning on the lights on the Christmas tree. They aren't acts of environmental vandalism, or likely to accelerate global warming.
You could, of course, be forgiven for thinking otherwise. Since the publication of the Stern review on the economics of climate change, global warming hysteria has reached fever pitch.
Which is not surprising, as the review was presented in terms carefully calculated to engender alarm. It warns that climate change poses risks "on a scale similar to those associated with the great wars and the economic depression of the first half of the 20th century" and requires immediate action.
There has been something of a political and media frenzy ever since. But, surprisingly, little publicity has been given to a paper by a recognised authority on the economics of climate change, William Nordhaus of Yale.
Nordhaus is not a climate change sceptic, and he starts out with academic courtesy for the work of another toiler in the vineyard of climate change economics.
The Stern review, he says, is an impressive document, and although he questions some of its modelling and economic assumptions, he says its results are fundamentally correct "in sign if not in size".
However, that seemingly modest qualification about the size of the economic effects of climate change in fact hides a fundamental disagreement. Before he is done, Nordhaus punches a huge hole below the water line of Nicholas Stern's analysis.
What immediately strikes Nordhaus, who has built his own models of climate change, is how radically different Stern's policy recommendations are from earlier economic models that use the same basic data and analytical structure.
He explains that one of the main findings of climate change economics has been that the efficient or optimal economic policies to slow climate change involve modest rates of reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in the near term, followed by sharp reductions in the medium and long term.
In other words, policies to slow global warming tighten or ramp up over time.
He says that although scientists have sounded many sombre warnings about the long-term peril of unchecked climate change, Stern attempts to justify strong current action in a cost-benefit framework. That is, act now and the cost will be a lot less than acting later.
"Is this radical revision of global warming economics warranted?" Nordhaus asks. His answer is no, it isn't.
Looking into the climate impact boxes of the Stern review, Nordhaus finds some strange things. Basically, the assumptions used and the studies selected all work to give maximum damage estimates.
But his fundamental objection is the use by Stern of a social discount rate of almost zero. Without going into technicalities, this effectively results in a willingness to heavily punish the present generation for the benefit of generations hundreds of years ahead.
To illustrate, Nordhaus feeds into the Stern model a climate impact in 2200 that causes damage equal to 0.01 per cent of output in 2200 and continues at that rate.
He then asks how large an economic impact would be justified today to avoid this damage starting after two centuries. His answer is that a payment of 15 per cent of current world consumption (about $US7 trillion) would pass Stern's cost-benefit test.
"This seems completely absurd," Nordhaus says, as indeed it is. "The bizarre result arises because the value of the future consumption stream is so high, with near-zero discounting, that we would trade off a large fraction of today's income to increase a far-future income stream by a very tiny fraction."
In short, the Stern review is a very shaky foundation on which to base climate change policy.
"The radical revision of the economics of climate change proposed by the review does not arise from any new economics, science, or modelling," Nordhaus concludes. "Rather, it depends decisively on the assumption of a near-zero social discount rate.
"The review's unambiguous conclusions about the need for extreme immediate action will not survive the substitution of discounting assumptions that are consistent with today's marketplace. So the central questions about global warming policy - how much, how fast and how costly - remain open."
So does the science. Despite claims of overwhelming consensus, crystal clarity and so on, there is no shortage of dissenting voices.
The truth is the debate about the science of global warming has been taken over by the politicians and their placemen.
There are too many of examples of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change trying to suppress dissenting voices, and it isn't the only one.
Recently, Britain's Royal Society wrote to Exxon Mobil demanding that it cease funding for groups that "misrepresented" the science of climate change by denying the evidence.
This is appalling behaviour by a supposed premier scientific academy. Since when has science proceeded by enforced consensus, other than when controlled by the church or state? Too often the dissenters have proved right.
Particularly objectionable is the use of the term climate change denier to describe dissenting voices: a deliberate attempt to draw a parallel with Holocaust deniers. Indeed, the parallel has been made explicit by various green extremists.
The truth is neither the science nor the economics of global warming is settled. The increasingly shrill attempts to suppress critics suggests a rising insecurity in the carriages of the global warming gravy train, and the exposure of the dubious economics of the Stern review can only increase it.