Evidence supporting the ‘Hockey Stick’ graph continues to accumulate

By JOHN COLLINS RUDOLFSeptember 23, 2010, 8:12 am Few images in the climate change debate have stirred as much controversy as the storied “hockey stick” graph, which shows average temperatures in the northern hemisphere holding roughly steady for 900 years or so, until the 20th century, when they rise sharply. First unveiled in 1998 by […]

Kilimanjaro’s vanishing ice due to tree-felling

New Scientist25 September 2010 AGGRESSIVE tree-felling on mount Kilimanjaro could be partly to blame for its vanishing ice cap. The ice on Kilimanjaro’s summit has shrunk to just 15 per cent of its extent in 1912, leading campaigners to hold it up as a symbol of climate change. But other factors are also at play. […]

Colossal coral bleaching kills up to 95 percent of corals in the Philippines

By Pierre Fidenci, president of Endangered Species InternationalSpecial to mongabay.com September 23, 2010I It is one of the most worrisome observations: fast massive death of coral reefs. A severe wide-scale bleaching occurred in the Philippines leaving 95 percent of the corals dead. The bleaching happened as the result of the 2009-2010 El Niño, with the […]

UK shipping emissions six times higher than expected

Carbon dioxide emissions produced by UK shipping could be up to six times higher than currently calculated, according to new research from The University of Manchester. (Full report, pdf) As the shipping industry’s emissions are predicted to continue to grow in the future, the UK will fail to meet its commitment to avoid dangerous climate […]

Down the memory hole: Rolling Stone erases ‘Climate Killers’ story

By Richard Pauli, guest blogger23 September 2010 Every so often, Rolling Stone magazine presents some outstanding journalism. This is just my opinion. The recent issue has an exciting read about the science of ice. I am reading it now…It’s about glaciers and ice sheets and how ice is controlled by atmosphere and then how oceans […]

Graph of the Day: Total Land Area Affected by Mountain Pine Beetle in BC, 1981-2005

Mountain Pine Beetle in BC (1981-2005) 2, 3 The area of BC forest affected by the Mountain Pine Beetle (MPB) has more than doubled, from 4 million hectares in 2003 to 8.7 million hectares in 2006, with much of this in the Fraser Basin. The MPB reduces trees’ nutrient and water uptake, resulting in defoliation […]

UN: Pakistan flood impact assessment, September 2010 — ‘Evolving crisis on an unprecedented scale’

Full Report [pdf – 3.8 Mbytes] United Nations World Food Programme (WFP)Date: 22 Sep 2010 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The monsoon induced flooding in Pakistan constitutes an evolving crisis on an unprecedented scale. The impact of the flood has varied: The flash floods in the mountainous north (KPK) were intense and highly destructive. This was also largely […]

More Pakistan villages underwater

UPIPublished: Sept. 22, 2010 at 10:44 AM ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Sept. 22 (UPI) — Breaches in Pakistan’s largest freshwater lake have flooded 75 villages in southern Sindh Province and displaced thousands of residents, the government says. Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority said Wednesday nearly 1.5 million people are living in relief camps in the province after […]

Risk of beetle outbreaks rise, along with temperature, in the warming West

ScienceDaily (Sep. 8, 2010) — The potential for outbreaks of spruce and mountain pine beetles in western North America’s forests is likely to increase significantly in the coming decades, according to a study conducted by USDA Forest Service researchers and their colleagues. Their findings, published in the September issue of the journal BioScience, represent the […]

Pakistan floods continue to drive tens of thousands of people from their homes every day

By Jasper Fakkert, Epoch Times Staff Sep 21, 2010 Seven weeks after floods submerged large parts of Pakistan, thousands of people continue to flee their homes every day, the United Nations said on Tuesday. “The flood waters are rising, and every day we are seeing 20,000 to 30,000 people newly displaced,” said Andy Pendleton, a […]

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