Archive for April, 2013

China Confirms Their Warming is Human Caused

Climate News Network: Chinese scientists have just confirmed that greenhouse gas emissions have sent the thermometer soaring in one country -- China. This is, they say, the first study to directly link warmer daily minimum and maximum temperatures with climate change in one single nation, rather than on a global or hemispheric scale. "Actually seeing a warming trend in a single location is hard', said Xuebin Zhang from Environment Canada in Toronto. "It's like trying to see the tide change when you're in a rowing...

As flood threats rise, federal reform to diversify the insurance risk sinks

ClimateWire: It was a few hours before Sharron Voorhees was scheduled to sign a new home loan when her bank canceled the closing appointment because she had private flood insurance. Two more cancellations followed, both on the morning of her closing dates, based on the bank's concern that Voorhees had purchased coverage from Lloyd's of London rather than the U.S. government. "It just doesn't look like a flood policy," a loan officer told her last fall. For months, the retired lawyer from a low-lying...

Global warming: Forest timberline impacts not so clear

Summit Voice: For residents of high-elevation regions, including Colorado -- the impacts of global warming include a potentially radical change in the composition of plant communities. In mountainous areas, the distribution of many species is limited by factors related to elevation, including temperature. With warmer and drier conditions potentially limiting growth at lower elevations, scientists have already documented the treeline creeping upward in some areas, but there are additional factors to consider,...

Report: Extreme weather events more likely, more often

West Deptford Patch: On an interactive map of the United States that records the number of extreme weather events that have taken place over the last several years, New Jersey might as well be the black eye. The red, purples and magentas that color each of New Jersey’s 21 counties make up the wrong end of the weather-related disaster spectrum, marking the entire state as a recurring extreme weather target. Should nothing be done to curb pollution and carbon emissions, a recent report from Environment New Jersey Research...

Secrets of the forest floor

Living on Earth: When we think about carbon sinks, we usually picture dense forests packed with big trees. But new research from Sweden suggests that tiny fungi in the soil may deserve a little more credit for slowing global warming. Host Steve Curwood talks mushrooms with ecologist Karina Clemmensen. Transcript CURWOOD: It's Living On Earth, I'm Steve Curwood. If you hear the words "carbon sequestration", you might well think of dense forests filled with mighty trees. But new research reported in Science magazine...

Before Disney, Florida’s Silver Springs Lured Tourists

National Public Radio: Before Disney World, Silver Springs in Central Florida was for decades one of the state's most popular tourist destinations. Even if you've never visited Silver Springs, you might have seen it - if you're old enough. The 1960s television show Sea Hunt was filmed here, as were countless movies including Tarzan and Creature from the Black Lagoon. The crystal clear water of Silver Springs made it invaluable to Hollywood. Guy Marwick, the founder of the Silver River Museum, says it drew over a million...

Climate change to take its toll on Zim

NewsDay: Nhekairo said this yesterday to legislators who were attending a Southern African Development Community parliamentarians’ climate change workshop in Harare. “Several climate studies suggest that water resources in the country are expected to dwindle and the evergreen forests of the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe can be reduced to seasonal forests,” said Nhekairo. “Southern Zimbabwe may result (sic) in desert conditions if climate change continues at current rates, and according to crop forecasts...

Residents Living Near Arkansas Oil Spill Site Concerned for Their Health

KATV: Homeowners in Mayflower's Northwoods subdivision were not the only ones affected by the ExxonMobil oil spill. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the neighborhood surrounded by Lake Conway and the cove adjacent to it also remains an area of concern. Sherry Appleman is one of the residents who lives in that neighborhood. When KARK's crew arrived at her home, the smell of fumes was prevalent, but Appleman has to take our word for it. "I can't smell it anymore," she said,"It's embedded...

Canada: Natural Resources Minister under fire for climate-change comments

Globe and Mail: Just as one federal cabinet minister is urging a more sophisticated tone to the climate-change debate, a second cabinet minister has found himself trying to prove he is not a climate-change denier. Environment Minister Peter Kent this week said the federal government would never opt for a carbon pricing scheme itself, but would be open-minded about pricing arrangements set up by the provinces. "We need to add a bit of subtle differentiation when we talk about carbon pricing," Mr. Kent said...

Global Health Plan Aims to End a Third of Childhood Deaths

Inter Press Service: The United Nations has unveiled a major framework aimed at, for the first time, coordinating worldwide efforts to work simultaneously to end childhood pneumonia- and diarrhoea-related deaths by 2025. Together, these two diseases account for around 30 percent of all deaths of children under five years old, around two million every year. According to new data released by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF), most such deaths are taking place due to "piecemeal"...