Showing posts with label bihar earthquake relief NGO india. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bihar earthquake relief NGO india. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Turning Climate Change Data into Policy Is No Easy Feat


(Sacramento, CA)
Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Data suggest climate change is bringing an increased risk of more severe forest fires, but warming temperatures may cause other complex ecosystem changes. Local agencies are already planning ways to mitigate and adapt, but making policy based on models that show global trends over the next century is not an easy task.

On a recent brisk sunny morning at Lake Tahoe, the waters sparkling their iconic blue. Scientists from UC Davis's Tahoe Environmental Research Center take the boat out to Tahoe Buoy Three, a floating concrete island about 10-feet in diameter with scientific instruments bolted to its tripod structure.

"When you have a long-term record, especially going back more than 40 years , you can start to see these long-term trends," said Geoff Schladow, the director of theTahoe Environmental Research Center. "So now springtime defined by the peak of the spring runoff, is occurring two weeks sooner than it did 40 years ago."

Warming Could Lead to Cascade of Changes

Data from these buoys show that the lake has warmed about 1 degree Fahrenheit on average over the last four decades.

But it's not the average that's worrisome. The concern is that the surface has warmed much more than the depths. So that makes the surface water much lighter.

"We're finding on average that density difference is getting larger, meaning more energy is needed to mix that water," Schladow said.

Historically Lake Tahoe mixes all the way from top to bottom about once every three or four years. The mixing helps move oxygen throughout the lake's water.

"What the model suggests is that in the coming decades, it's going mix to that depth less often," Schladow said. "And possibly in the second half of the century, that mixing may cease altogether."

Less water mixing could bring a cascade of changes to the ecosystem. There have already been some periodic increases in surface algae. This could reduce zooplankton, which are a critical food source for fish. And reduced mixing could cloud Tahoe's famous water clarity.

0626KM_HOTAHOE2

Planning For Extremes

That's the tricky thing about climate change. Science can point to some concrete trends -- water and air temperature warming; or more precipitation falling as rain, not snow -- but scientific models can't tell what will happen next year. Or exactly how climate changes might affect the ecosystem.

Andy Wirth, CEO of Tahoe's Squaw Valley Ski Resort, says they can't base their business plan on suggestions that snowpack might be reduced by half in the next 50 years.

"Those are horizons that are very difficult to manage to. And I would really make effort to have everyone understand how seriously we take this," Wirth said.

Wirth says the company's working on initiatives to reduce its carbon footprint, but when it comes running a business based on snow, decisions must be made day by day.

"We've seen that scientific information doesn't make it into decision making and policy, very easily," said Jeremy Sokulsky, president of Environmental Incentives, a consulting firm based in Lake Tahoe. His firm uses scientific data to suggest tangible actions businesses can actually take.

For example, since scientific models are predicting more rain and less snow, there's a potential for springtime flooding in the basin.

Sokulsky's group has developed checklists so when engineers design for construction near streams they build larger drain pipes than earlier standards.

"Climate change provides this conundrum where you can't look back and predict the future anymore. So having to use modeled predictions of what the world's going to be like in the future, is kind of culturally difficult."

The Tahoe basin provides a good laboratory to try new strategies.

"Because of it's clarity, it makes it a very sensitive instrument," said Geoff Schladow of UC Davis. "A change here of a few percent will be magnified, a change of a few percent in some of the lower elevation lakes may even be hard to measure.

Lake Tahoe is one of the most studied lakes in the world, because it's a rare laboratory. Scientists say the changes we see there could provide clues of what's coming elsewhere in the Sierra and around the world.



Source:- http://www.capradio.org/articles/2012/06/26/turning-climate-change-data-into-policy-is-no-easy-feat

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Renewable energy will power responsible development

Renewable energy will power responsible development



June 12, 2012 | News covering the UN and the worldSign up | E-Mail this | Donate

Wirth: Renewable energy will power responsible development

Initiatives arising from the Rio+20 summit will benefit from the idea that "energy is essential for development, and sustainable energy is essential for sustainable development," writes Timothy E. Wirth, president of the United Nations Foundation. The three key objectives of the UN are ensuring universal access to energy, a 100% increase in the rate of energy efficiency gains and doubling renewable energy's global share, Wirth writes.AOL Energy (6/8) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story



Women & girls are key! RT@UnivAccessProj: Empowering women & girls is key to sustainable development #rioplussocial"

@UNFoundation


"Changing the attitudes that underpin the abuse of women and girls will happen over decades of education and advocacy -- in the span of generations, not projects. And addressing the consequences of violence against Afghan women will require long term political and financial investments by the international community, whether or not a settlement to the conflict is reached anytime soon."

UN Dispatch


United Nation
  • UN report accuses Syria of abuses against children
    The United Nations has accused Syrian government forces and allied militias of using children, some as young as 9, as human shields, in addition to subjecting them to arbitrary arrest, murder, torture and sexual assault. The UN's annual report on children and armed conflict, which identifies 32 "persistent perpetrators" and 20 other countries as abusers of children -- more than twice as many as in 2010. "Rarely have I seen such brutality against children as in Syria," said Radhika Coomaraswamy, a special representative for the world body. The Globe and Mail (Toronto)/The Associated Press (6/12), Deutsche Welle (Germany) (6/12) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Ivorian cocoa farmers flee after area attack
    The assault last week in Cote d'Ivoire that killed seven United Nations peacekeepers and 11 others has also led hundreds of people to abandon cocoa farms along the western border with Liberia. There are at least 1,500 among the displaced, according to the UN. Reuters (6/12) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Other News
Health and Development
  • The hows and whys of intractable polio in Nigeria
    This analysis explains why Nigeria remains among the few countries endemic with polio. Beyond the traditional culprits of politics and economics are the refusal of the country's elite to allow their children to be vaccinated and a distrust of health programs that immunize children against polio for free but charge for malaria treatment. Daily Trust (Nigeria) (6/12) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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Climate and Energy
  • Tutu seeks to hold leaders to account at Rio+20
    Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace laureate and chairman of the group The Elders, writes of the frustration he feels over the indifference of world leaders toward social injustice and climate change two decades after the first Earth Summit. He is heartened, however, by his ongoing debatewith four young leaders from countries spanning the continents, people for whom " 'sustainability' is not just a word, it is a system that will ensure the well-being and prosperity of the planet they will inherit." The Huffington Post (6/8) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • Study: Warming forests could warm the world
    A study reports that the world's forests could become carbon emitters -- and not carbon sinks, as had been hoped -- as temperatures rise globally. Temperatures that were increased by 20 degrees Celsius resulted in carbon dioxide production from the topsoil of U.S. forests increasing eight times over, according to research by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, Irvine. The New York Times (tiered subscription model)/Green blog (6/11) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
  • $140 trillion in spending is needed to slow climate change
    If governments are serious about checking the global rise in temperatures at less than 2 degrees Celsius, then they would have to invest $23.9 trillion by the end of the decade and $140 trillion by 2050, according to the International Energy Agency. Spain and the U.S. are among leaders in working on concentrated solar power, but carbon capture and storage has been slow to develop. AlertNet/Reuters (6/11) LinkedInFacebookTwitterEmail this Story
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Peacekeeping and Security
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