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Old 30-03-2022, 10:40 AM
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multiweb (Marc)
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Ice Shelf Collapse in East Antarctica

Pretty confronting rollover picture: https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/im...ast-antarctica
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Old 30-03-2022, 11:23 AM
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Very concerning indeed.

Byron now underwater and Lismore has flooded yet again. So much for it being a "one in hundred/thousand year flood"

Clearly pollies can't count.

Makes you wonder what it will take to motivate the hoi polloi finally demand major policy change.
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Old 30-03-2022, 11:29 AM
Rainmaker (Matt)
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That is a worrying trend, unfortunately I think we're well past the point of no return. Extreme weather events are going to be the new normal and we as a people are directly responsible for them......
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Old 30-03-2022, 11:31 AM
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There is no doubt that some coastal towns in low lying areas will have to be relocated to higher grounds. As an example in Sydney why there are so many new developments going up in Emu plain is just beyond belief. The old argument that population is growing and they need the room doesn't hold any water. No pun intended.
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Old 30-03-2022, 12:13 PM
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The annual summer to winter variation is around 2000gigatons(gt), the annual year on end lose is now getting up around 130+gt, on 94+gt lose over the decade.

2000gt of water can both add and remove a lot from the sea levels very easily. The near methodical reduction in annual ice and increasing decade averages are not good signs.

Four decades of Antarctic Ice Sheet mass balance from 1979–2017
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1812883116

Short version:
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Old 31-03-2022, 06:17 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by multiweb View Post
There is no doubt that some coastal towns in low lying areas will have to be relocated to higher grounds. As an example in Sydney why there are so many new developments going up in Emu plain is just beyond belief. The old argument that population is growing and they need the room doesn't hold any water. No pun intended.
While I agree I can also see the twisting of numbers to lay blame elsewhere unfortunately. Already our politicians have been laying the groundwork for blaming the current developing nations (ie former third world who are now starting to industrialise themselves because all us rich nations refused to help them build to the level they could have Levi's jeans, McDonalds and Iphones which we continue to advertise to the world that everyone needs to have a better life. Like our Humanitarian efforts are really about isolation and detention.Soon our detention centers (islands) will be underwater anyway.

At least China working with Solomons is a good thing, base or not China has the technology and willpower to create new artificial land which will certainly allow Solomon Islanders to continue to live on for longer on their own land. While our politicians do nothing to actually help except form committees and antagonise on behalf of America.

It also wont take too much for Australia to become a string of islands, everyone seems to behave like we have a continue wall of mountain ranges and a high continent to provide a physical barrier from rising ocean waters. We’ll be flooded out from the inside and it’ll happen sooner than people think and people are dumb to believe politicians need to do something. Its their job to do nothing, we see every time theres time of crisis that australians help each other, while politicians umm and ahh and spend tax dollars on fact finding trip yet not a single one every fills a sandbag to help build a levy and certainly never get in a rubber dingy to find trapped survivors or help remove bodies. The just do nothing but thats the system of government we have and are stuck with until its too late for australians to do something about it.

In the next few years we’ll have major record bushfires happening at once in many locations, likewise we’ll see more flooding happening in multiple locations at once. Its not like these things never happened in the past but what also never happened was automatic processes to start the physical aid without politicians having to take advice or weigh options etc. Eg When x amount of rainfall happens in a geographic (not political) region historically see flooding to this degree her and her and here, so when the weather stations record the rate has hit that threshold an analyst surveyor from the army engineers is sent out to monitor and access in real time the downstream effects and start to call in people and equipment to shore up areas, create high ground tent living, hospital etc, and boats to reach distant communities and to co-ordinate a real time logistic team on their own, no politicians needed and resources already assigned and pre approved in whatever eventuality. Easy to set up and should have been done decades ago, but no instead we want our politician to take days yo decide what to do each time and its always the same, too little and way too late.
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Old 31-03-2022, 11:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rainmaker View Post
That is a worrying trend, unfortunately I think we're well past the point of no return. Extreme weather events are going to be the new normal and we as a people are directly responsible for them......
We passed the point of no return about 20-25 years ago. No turning back.

However while some of what Sil (Steve) is correct about low lying areas along the entire east and south coast including Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne turning into a string of islands, it won't happen quickly, not even with recent developments in the Arctic and Antarctic. The historically fastest deglaciations occurred at rates of around 4-5 m per century. But this was low latitude deglaciation of ice age glacial advance caused by those glaciers being subject to higher insolation. Current polar caps are in darkness half the year.

Best current estimates are that it will take around 5000 years for 50 m of sea level rise due to polar melt. What will happen on a much shorter timescale, and we are already seeing it is that the number of normal years between extremes of heatwaves/firestorms and high rainfalls and floods will reduce and these extremes of weather will dominate.

If you download the 1990 IPCC report, it gives the following prediction for the average change across the entire Australian continent. But note the last statement, in bold.

"The warming ranges from 1 to 2°C in summer and is about 2°C in winter. Summer precipitation increases by around 10%, but the models do not produce consistent estimates of the changes in soil moisture. The area averages hide large variations at the sub-continental level." In addition to dark skies, I chose my retirement property location to be both fire and flood risk averse. We do get tornados in the region :-(

Last edited by OzEclipse; 01-04-2022 at 12:00 PM.
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Old 01-04-2022, 09:19 AM
SB (Chris)
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Hi Marc,
I’ve been watching the Arctic and Antarctica ice analysis for many years. See:
https://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/ In terms of the Antarctic the ice extent in Antarctica is highly variable depending on sea currents and wind circulation. According to the National Snow and Ice Data Centre the 2021 winter in Antarctica was the second coldest on record. Since then the sea ice dropped off quite rapidly to a record low in March this year.
“The February 25 timing of the minimum was*only a day later than the 1981 to 2010 median date of February 24 for the minimum. Over the satellite record, the Antarctic minimum has occurred as early as February 15 and as late as March 6.
Average austral summer air temperatures at the 925 mb level (about 2,500 feet above sea level) over Antarctic sea ice regions have been near average. However, winds*have been much stronger and generally in a more northward direction, helping to break up the ice and melt it in warmer ocean waters. One exception was the Weddell Sea, where winds came more from the north, but that served to push the ice edge southward, reducing extent near the Antarctic Peninsula.
Since the minimum on February 25, ice growth has progressed at a near-average rate with growth around most of the continent, except off the coast of Dronning Maud Land and Enderby Land, which lie to the south of Africa”

SB
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Old 01-04-2022, 10:51 AM
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The elephant in the room is Greenland, as according to Wiki:

" In July 2021, a new surge of widespread melting began, covering 340,000 square miles of the ice sheet, and melting more 8 billion tons of ice per day for several days.[72]

In August 2021, as high temperatures continued over Greenland, with the melt extent at 337,000 square miles, rain fell for 13 hours at Greenland's Summit Station (at 10,551 feet elevation.)[73]

Researchers had no rain gauges to measure the rainfall, because temperatures at the summit have risen above freezing only three times since 1989 and it had never rained there before"


Australians are the Pablo Escobar's of coal...happy to ship it to whoever wants it, no questions asked. Neither major party will be turning off the supply anytime soon.

Last edited by Peter Ward; 02-04-2022 at 11:23 AM. Reason: typo
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Old 01-04-2022, 10:59 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Ward View Post
Australians are the Pablo Escobar's of coal...happy to ship it to whoever wants it, no questions asked. Neither major party will be turning of the supply anytime soon.
Stuck between a rock and a hard place. We have nothing else but Gas maybe. Coal exports runs the whole joint unfortunately. We could do it but then all the lights would go off.
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Old 01-04-2022, 01:57 PM
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Coal export does not run the whole joint; More iron ore is exported than coal.
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Old 01-04-2022, 03:50 PM
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I've no idea what the plans are, but I note that our coal exports have dropped significantly over the last three years, whether that is due in some way to covid, or maybe to some countries starting to make an effort to wean
themselves off of coal, or for some other reason entirely, I have no idea.
Hopefully, end of hijack.
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Old 01-04-2022, 05:32 PM
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Some information - I've put some text in bold. Bear in mind that some information could be on the old side. I suggest taking numbers as a general indication only.



For most of the past decade, coal has been Australia's second largest resource export, after iron ore, and since 2015 has averaged around one-quarter of annual resource export values and 14 per cent of total export values (Graph 2). In 2018, the value of coal exports was $67 billion, equivalent to 3˝ per cent of nominal GDP.
Source https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/...lian-coal.html






Australia’s mining industry has delivered a 10.4 per cent share of the Australian economy in 2019-20, making it the largest economic contributor with a $202 billion GDP, according to The Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Source https://www.australianmining.com.au/...alian-economy/






Mining employs ~280 000, about 2.1% of the workforce

https://labourmarketinsights.gov.au/...industryCode=B






Who owns Australian mining Australia’s mining industry is 86% foreign owned

Source https://australiainstitute.org.au/re...-mining-lobby/
The Australia Institute appears to be a genuine, independent, think tank. Hopefully it is.





Taxes paid by mining companies seems to be difficult to work out. One bit of information I did come across, is that the mining companies often combine royalties and taxes together. It appears that this should not be done, because royalties are more like a cost of purchasing the the raw material (just like a baker buys flour).

See https://www.michaelwest.com.au/minin...id-45-billion/




My thoughts - we need to stop exporting the ground under our feet, and actually make things here. Especially as most of the benefit is going overseas. Also, even if we were stupid enough to shut down coal mining tomorrow, it ain't really that big! Near term (within 20 years), it's an industry that needs to die.





Philip
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Old 01-04-2022, 05:34 PM
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Antarctic temperatures

Vostok Base March average: -53C
Vostok Base March 2022: -17.7C

Concordia Station March average: -48.7C
Concordia Station March 2022: -12.2C

Dome C March average: -47.4C
Dome C March 2022: -10.2C

Article, ABC, 22 March 2022
"Antarctic and Arctic heat records have been smashed. What's going on?"

Quote:
Originally Posted by ABC Science / By environment reporter Nick Kilvert 22 March 2022
Antarctic and Arctic temperature records were sent tumbling over the weekend.

Parts of eastern Antarctica were reportedly around 40 degrees Celsius above average, with Concordia weather station at 3,234 metres above sea level recording its highest ever temperature of -11.5 degrees Celsius, according to tweets from meteorologist Etienne Kapikian from France-Meteo.

The March temperature record at Antarctica's Vostok station was broken by almost 15C and the Terra Nova Base on the Antarctic coast hit +7C, according to tweets by extreme weather tracker Maximiliano Herrera.

Meanwhile, at the other end of the planet, parts of the Arctic were reported to be experiencing extremes pushing 30C above the monthly average. Heat records were broken in Norway and extreme highs were recorded in Greenland.
Article here :-
https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/...ords/100926908
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Old 01-04-2022, 06:19 PM
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Ice

The Earth's ice is melting rapidly.
* The PIOMAS Arctic Sea Ice Volume, the September trend line, shows an alarming 75% decline since 1979.
* Research based on observations from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites (2002-2017) and GRACE Follow-On (since 2018 - ) shows that between 2002 and 2021, Greenland shed approximately 280 gigatons of ice per year.
* Satellite observations show that more than 6,100 billion tonnes of ice has melted from mountain glaciers since 1994.
* The GRACE and GRACE-FO data also shows Antarctica has shed approximately 150 gigatons of ice per year since 2002. (1 gigaton = 1 cubic km)
* Melting 1 cubic km of ice is very difficult, it is like heating 1 cubic km of water from 0C to 80C.
* Hydrogen and ammonia exports can, over time, replace thermal coal.
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Old 01-04-2022, 07:54 PM
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Most Andean glaciers are retreating rapidly too..
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Old 02-04-2022, 12:04 AM
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Both Mauna Loa and Cape Grim data show that gigatonnes of CO2 is still being dumped into the atmosphere with no sign of abatement.

The reason for a lack of meaningful policy and any emissions abatement is indeed money...which, due the trillions of dollars involved....buys policy.

I expect people eventually won't give a $..t about money when just having breathable air, food and drinkable water becomes your primary goal in life as you battle through 60 degree summers. (Not fanciful ...we saw 51.5C at Badgerys Creek in 2020). OK, then it rained. And rained, and rained some more.

Given the predictions of extremes in fire, floods and extreme weather events were made decades ago, and are now coming to fruition, you have to ask at what point do you take on climate reality.

Thinking of troublesome ice... I like this line from The Titanic.

Ismay: But this ship can't sink!
Thomas Andrews: She is made of iron, sir. I assure you, she can. And she *will*. It is a mathematical certainty!
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Last edited by Peter Ward; 02-04-2022 at 11:29 AM. Reason: clarification
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Old 02-04-2022, 07:04 AM
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The north west shelf project signed under the Howard government (2006) which exports 12 million tons on LPG a year to China for 3 cents a litre till 2031 is a prime example of global climate policies being token public pleasers'.

That's was the price set of the fuel and carbon offset(?) nearly 10 years after the Kyoto agreement was signed...
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Old 02-04-2022, 01:01 PM
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I have been dong a bit of research on how bad could the planet get if nothing is done to mitigate human induced CO2, methane, etc. emissions (which is the current reality) so it's business as usual until 2100....in terms of election cycles, who cares, but as I have two grandchildren, they will very likely see what our sad legacy has been.

2 billion people who live in the hottest parts of the world, will have to endure of 45 days per year of 60°C. The human body cannot be outside for longer than about six hours because it loses the ability to cool itself down at these temperatures. The same applies to flora an fauna.

Moving toward the poles will be required for the survival of any species. Equatorial regions of the planet will likely be uninhabitable except for hardy succulent plants and insects.

The oceans will have acidified by 125%. All coral reefs will be dead. Fish stocks will have collapsed. Thermal expansion of the oceans alone will account for a 1 metre sea-level rise. Major coastal cities such as Jakarta, Hong Kong, Rio de Janeiro and Miami will be abandoned.

All mountain glaciers will have melted. Flows of the Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra and Yamuna rivers which over 600 million people rely on for water, will have all but dried up.

Then there are the storms, bushfires, massive rain events & flooding, species extinctions (which are already going great-guns), loss of arable land, loss of fresh water......

Frankly I found it too depressing to delve into the details any further.

Its all bad.

The undeniable recent events in Australia so far...

-Massive repeated bleaching on the Great Barrier reef
-186,000 square kilometres destroyed by the megafire of 2020, along thousands of homes and 3 Billion animals.
-" Hundred year" floods in Lismore for the last two years in a row
-Hottest recorded temperatures ever
-Highest recorded rainfall ever

As I write The NSW Government has just given Whitehaven the tick of approval to construct a new coal mine at Narrabri...which will result in another half billion tonnes of CO2.

I've found when you are in a deep hole, the best course of action is to stop digging.

High time we took the shovels off these lunatics.
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Old 02-04-2022, 01:07 PM
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And the euro countries that shut down coal fired electricity now depend on russia to supply them with gas for heat and electricity and won't sanction russia to hard over the Ukraine invasion lest they freeze to death. Suddenly found out the wind and solar aren't reliable for baseload. We are just as bad with a lot our industries gone to china and relying on other countries to bail us out with petrol due to no refineries here and having to ship our oil to Singapore for processing and increasing our fuel prices. Our critical oil reserves are held in the US so a naval blockade and we're toast.
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