Feb 05 2010

Sea Level Rise in South Pacific Atolls

Published by bpotter under Climate Change, Sea Level Rise

Late last year, Dr. Arthur Webb of the Pacific Island Applied Geoscience Commission made a presentation on Atoll shoreline response to sea level rise over the last 50 years – Pingelap & Mokil Atolls, FSM (Federated States of Mictronesia).

Copies of the 75 megabyte Powerpoint presentation can be downloaded at

http://ftp.grida.no/poussart/Steph/

The somewhat surprising conclusions of this analysis of the historic record were (adapted and emphasis added):

• There is a poor understanding of the relationship between sea-level rise and shoreline response in our South Pacific region but Bruun (1963) does not appear appropriate in the case of Pacific Atoll coasts.

• Despite the rates of sea-level rise thus-far experienced, the atoll shores so far studied tell a story of considerable stability and the majority have net trends of accretion or growth at this time

• The broad assumptions regarding widespread erosion due to sea level rise are for the coastal manager unhelpful and may divert attention from appropriate management responses and with regards to Climate Change, risks mal-adaptation.

• Stress such as possible changes in wave climate, storm frequency, reef productivity / structure (bleaching, acidification, energy window) may ultimately be more important drivers of climate change related impacts on tropical “coral” coasts than sea level rise.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

This presentation is a valuable demonstration of the dangers inherent in the small islands’ over-reliance on sea-level rise as the overwhelmingly important consequence of climate change . . . for myself, in the Caribbean I think the issues are much more related to the inability to recover vital ecosystem services from already compromised coastal and near shore ecoregions, especially if the rising sea levels simply result in new shorelines that are hardened by anthropogenic structures such as roads, sea walls, buildings and other structures.


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Jan 21 2010

Jost van Dykes Preservation Society Releases JVD Environmental Profile

Published by bpotter under Uncategorized

Susan Zaluski, the Director of the Jost van Dykes Preservation Society, announces the on-line release of the ENVIRONMENTAL PROFILE for Jost van Dyke in the British Virgin Islands:


—– Forwarded Message —-
From: Susan Zaluski
To:
Sent: Wed, January 20, 2010 4:04:24 PM
Subject: Jost Van Dyke, BVI January 2010 Newsletter and Environmental Profile

Dear All:
Firstly, my apologies if you are receiving this e-mail for a 2nd time! We’ve been having some issues with our email system.

Attached please find our January 2010 edition of the JVD Green Newsletter, which chronicles “Jost Van Dyke’s Community-based Programme Advancing Environmental Protection and Sustainable Development” funded by the UK’s Overseas Territories Environment Programme (OTEP).

As you’ll notice from reading the newsletter, project partner, Island Resources Foundation (IRF) delivered the completed copies of the Environmental Profile to Jost Van Dyke in late 2009. You can read this comprehensive document, which provides a synthesis of the current state of the environment for Jost Van Dyke, British Virgin Islands (including information on history and culture of the island). You can view it online at http://www.jvdgreen.org/Final_Profile.html .

Finally, a belated Happy 2010 to you and yours from all of us on Jost Van Dyke!

Susan Zaluski
Director
Jost Van Dykes Preservation Society
Great Harbour, Jost Van Dyke VG1160
(284)540-0861
susan@jvdps.org
www.jvdps.org



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Jan 18 2010

Judith Towle’s Appreciation for the Dedication of the Dr. Edward L. Towle Island Systems Environmental Collection at HLSCC

Published by bpotter under BVI, Uncategorized

On January 12th, the H. Lavity Stoutt Community College at Paraquita Bay, Tortola, British Virgin Islands held a major ceremony to commemorate the dedication of the College’s Caribbean Environmental reference collection at the Dr. Edward L. Towle Island Systems Environmental Collection. Following is an excerpt from Mrs. Judith Towle’s (founding Vice President of Island Resources Foundation) letter of appreciation for the dedication ceremony.

Dear Dr. Wheatley:

On behalf of myself and the Board of Trustees and staff of Island Resources Foundation, I take this opportunity to express our deep appreciation for the renaming of the former IRF library in honour and memory of my late husband, Dr. Edward L. Towle, and for the dedication/renaming ceremony held at H. Lavity Stoutt Community College on 12th January.

It was an honor to be seated between two former presidents—Dr. O’Neal and yourself—to listen to the tributes to Edward and the history of IRF’s collaboration with the College; to hear from three distinguished HLSCC presidents; to learn more about the place of the Collection within the institution’s strategic planning; and to be surprised by Noni Georges’s depiction of her online discovery of the IRF library resources whilst this native daughter of the BVI was studying at a
faraway Canadian university.

Ms. Bernadine Louis, in her expert handling of the moderator’s duties, and then, along with members of her Learning Resource Centre staff, in the tour she organised of the Collection’s facility, added so much to the morning’s dedication, as did the remarks of Mrs. Eugenie
Glasgow, former Director of the LRC.  The musical contribution by student Jareem Williams and the always artfully and tastefully executed contributions from the College’s Culinary Arts staff all served to make what was for me one of my happiest days since my husband’s passing now more than three years ago.

Ed treasured his association with the British Virgin Islands and, in particular, with the H. Lavity Stoutt Community College.  It was an honour for him to serve on the governing board of the College, and he certainly was proudest of the final home the library collection found at the Learning Resource Centre at Paraquita Bay.

Some years prior to his death, Ed was recognised at a ceremony arranged by the College at the J.R. O’Neal Botanic Garden in Road Town.  Coming as it did at a time when his health was failing and his years of service to the Caribbean were drawing to a close, that evening meant so very much to Ed.  Often in our busy lives we do not take sufficient time to pause, to recognise, to say thank you.  The College, and the British Virgin Islands, did pause and recognize and say thank you on that evening, and it would remain one of Ed’s fondest memories in his final years.

And now, with the renaming of the Dr. Edward L. Towle Island Systems Environmental Collection in his memory and the dedication ceremony last week, the College has once again paused to recognise Ed’s service and his library, and to say thank you—and for this I am very grateful.

Yours sincerely,

Judith A. Towle, MPA
Vice President

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Nov 11 2009

The Big Squeeze –

Published by bpotter under Uncategorized

The Big Squeeze : Journal Watch Online

[This abstract is from the Journal Watch blob of Conservation Magazine, the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology. As a 35+year-old environmental NGO working with the global small island community, Island Resources Foundation believes that this issue — restoring coastal wetlands in the face of global climate change effects, including especially sea level rise — is the biggest challenge bar none arising from the climate change complex. bruce potter]


As the world’s sea levels inch upward over the next century, U.S. coastal wetlands have a possible escape route: migrate inland. But researchers say that much of the low-elevation land along the East Coast is slated for development, leaving little room for wetlands to retreat.

The team analyzed land use plans from 131 U.S. jurisdictions along the Atlantic Ocean and found that 57 percent of dry land under 1 meter was at least partially developed or due for development. Since developed land is usually protected with structures such as bulkheads, wetlands will be unable to move inland at these sites, the team says in Environmental Research Letters. Conservation lands, which are less likely to use protective structures, accounted for only 9 percent of the low-lying area.

Under current regulations, the environmental impact of shore protection is considered fairly low. But “[i]gnoring the habitat eventually lost by blocking wetland migration is unreasonable, in our view,” the authors write. They urge regulators to consider the environmental effects of sea level rise – which could exceed 1 meter under some global warming scenarios – in future coastal planning. – Roberta Kwok

Source: Titus, J., Hudgens, D., Trescott, D., Craghan, M., Nuckols, W., Hershner, C., Kassakian, J., Linn, C., Merritt, P., McCue, T., O’Connell, J., Tanski, J., & Wang, J. (2009). State and local governments plan for development of most land vulnerable to rising sea level along the US Atlantic coast Environmental Research Letters, 4 (4) DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/4/4/044008

Image © gacooksey, iStockPhoto.com

Filed Under Climate change, Habitat, Socio-political issues |


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Oct 20 2009

Nominations for Euan McFarlane Award Due November 20, 2009

Published by bpotter under Caribbean, Conservation

THE EUAN P. McFARLANE AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERSHIP IN THE INSULAR CARIBBEAN

The Euan P. McFarlane Award was established in 1987 to provide recognition for persons demonstrating initiative, resourcefulness and leadership in promoting conservation and enhancement of the environment in the insular Caribbean, with priority given to the smaller islands of the Eastern Caribbean.

Nominees for the McFarlane Award should be persons who have applied themselves to the preservation of the natural or built environment and whose career or avocation demonstrates an appreciation of and adherence to the advancement of environmental stewardship and balanced development in the Caribbean.

WHO IS ELIGIBLE?

Any resident of a Caribbean island is eligible for nomination, although priority consideration will be given to residents of the smaller Eastern Caribbean islands. Nominations may be made by an interested individual or organization familiar with the nominee. Self-nominations will not be accepted.

CASH AWARD

Each selected McFarlane Award recipient will receive a US$1,000 cash award (there are no restrictions on the use of the award).

NOMINATIONS

Nominations should consist of a letter application from the nominator, not to exceed three single-spaced typed pages, stating the background, accomplishments, and merits of the person nominated. The nominator must supply the names, addresses, telephone numbers and email addresses of at least 3 other persons familiar with the nominee’s work and accomplishments, who could be contacted for additional information. Attachments which support the nomination (e.g., press clippings, testimonials, copies of publications, letters of endorsement, etc.) may accompany the letter but are not required.

AWARD CRITERIA

Nominations will be reviewed by an impartial committee of individuals familiar with the region, and the award will be based on an assessment of how well the nominee meets some or all of the following:

· Nominee’s role in increasing public awareness about conservation issues.

· Nominee’s achievements in helping to formulate public policy that balances economic development objectives with sustainable development goals.

· Nominee’s accomplishments in strengthening public or private sector institutions and organizations concerned with conservation, preservation, or resource management issues.

· Nominee’s role in developing, promoting, or assisting programs or policies which conserve or protect key elements of the natural or built environment in the Caribbean.

· Nominee’s potential for future environmental leadership in the insular Caribbean.

SEND NOMINATIONS TO:

Euan P. McFarlane Environmental Leadership Award
ATTENTION: JUDITH TOWLE
Island Resources Foundation
1718 P Street Northwest, #T4
Washington, DC 20036
Fax: 202.232.0748
Email: jtowle@irf.org

Nominations must be postmarked by, or emailed or faxed no later than, November 20, 2009.

McFARLANE AWARD RECIPIENTS

Yves Renard, St. Lucia, in 1988

Mervin Williams, St. Lucia, in 1989

Ronald Charles and Arlington James, Dominica, in 1990

Alissandra Cummins, Barbados, in 1991

Kevel Lindsay, Antigua and Barbuda, in 1993

Jalaludin Ahmad Khan, Trinidad and Tobago, in 1995

Reginald Murphy, Antigua and Barbuda, and Maurice Widdowson, St. Kitts, in 1997

Andrew Simpson, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, in 1998

Ian Lambie, Trinidad and Tobago, in 1999

David Robinson, Nevis, in 2000

Charles Chavoudiga, Guadeloupe, in 2001

Jacqueline and Larry Armony, St. Kitts, in 2002

Dr. Brian Cooper, Antigua, in 2003

Dr. Joth Singh, Barbados, in 2004

Diana McCaulay, Jamaica, in 2005

Raymond Walker (posthumously), British Virgin Islands, in 2006

Dr. I. Earle A. Kirby (posthumously), St. Vincent and the Grenadines, in 2007


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Jul 17 2009

Sea Level Rise: Important Article in NewScientist, July 2009

From the July 4-10 NewScientist at http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20327151.300-sea-level-rise-its-worse-than-we-thought.html or http://sn.im/nf0lp [wwwnewscientistcom]

and following the article is a copy of the NewScientist Editorial on the same subject:

http://sn.im/nf19k [wwwnewscientistcom]

These reports are both a good reference (the NewScientist is a great UK science policy magazine ? for science what the Economist is for political economics), and AN IMPORTANT REMINDER that we need to feature future SEA LEVEL RISE issues in all of our reports. In fact, I regret not including a climate change/sea level impacts point in the “Lessons Learned” paper for our recent Nevis Peak Park Inventory and Management Plan. I would add only one thing from the perspective of small islands and our many years of natural resource conservation work: It’s even “MORE WORSER” than that! The NewScientist does not discuss the need to recover, restore and rebuild critical coastal ecosystems whose destruction has ALREADY badly compromised the ability of coastal and marine ecosystems to provide critical ecosystem services. For example, there is new evidence that coastal ecosystem losses are directly implicated in the catastrophic failure of reef and other marine ecosystems in the Caribbean.

Rebuilding these systems would be hard at any time; rebuilding them in the face of multi-meter seal level rise AND increasing storm frequency is going to be virtually impossible unless we build public acceptance and the legal and institutional reforms to enable public authorities to take the steps necessary to rebuild mangroves, wetlands and fringing reefs.

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Sea level rise: It’s worse than we thought
01 July 2009 by Anil Ananthaswamy
Magazine issue 2715.
For similar stories, visit the Climate Change Topic Guide

photo caption Greenland is already losing enough ice to raise sea level by 0.8 millimetres per year (Image: Nick Cobbing)

See our related editorial (appended below)

FOR a few minutes David Holland forgets about his work and screams like a kid on a roller coaster. The small helicopter he’s riding in is slaloming between towering cliffs of ice – the sheer sides of gigantic icebergs that had calved off Greenland’s Jakobshavn glacier. “It was like in a James Bond movie,” Holland says afterwards. “It’s the most exciting thing I have ever done.”

Jakobshavn has doubled its speed in the past 15 years, draining increasing amounts of ice from the Greenland ice sheet into the ocean, and Holland, an oceanographer at New York University, has been trying to find out why. Scientists like him are more than a little astonished at the rate at which our planet’s frozen frontiers seem to be responding to global warming. The crucial question, though, is what will happen over the next few decades and centuries.

That’s because the fate of the planet’s ice, from relatively small ice caps in places like the Canadian Arctic, the Andes and the Himalayas, to the immense ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica, will largely determine the speed and extent of sea level rise. At stake are the lives and livelihoods of hundreds of millions of people, not to mention millions of square kilometres of cities and coastal land, and trillions of dollars in economic terms.

In its 2007 report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) forecast a sea level rise of between 19 and 59 centimetres by 2100, but this excluded “future rapid dynamical changes in ice flow”. Crudely speaking, these estimates assume ice sheets are a bit like vast ice cubes sitting on a flat surface, which will stay in place as they slowly melt. But what if some ice sheets are more like ice cubes sitting on an upside-down bowl, which could suddenly slide off into the sea as conditions get slippery? “Larger rises cannot be excluded but understanding of these effects is too limited to assess their likelihood,” the IPCC report stated.

Even before it was released, the report was outdated. Researchers now know far more. And while we still don’t understand the dynamics of ice sheets and glaciers well enough to make precise predictions, we are narrowing down the possibilities. The good news is that some of the scarier scenarios, such as a sudden collapse of the Greenland ice sheet, now appear less likely. The bad news is that there is a growing consensus that the IPCC estimates are wildly optimistic.

The oceans are already rising. Global average sea level rose about 17 centimetres in the 20th century, and the rate of rise is increasing. The biggest uncertainty for those trying to predict future changes is how humanity will behave. Will we start to curb our emissions of greenhouse gases sometime soon, or will we continue to pump ever more into the atmosphere?

Even if all emissions stopped today, sea level would continue to rise. “The current rate of rise would continue for centuries if temperatures are constant, and that would add about 30 centimetres per century to global sea level,” says Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany. “If we burn all fossil fuels, we are likely to end up with many metres of sea level rise in the long run, very likely more than 10 metres in my view.”

This might sound dramatic, but we know sea level has swung from 120 metres lower than today during ice ages to more than 70 metres higher during hot periods. There is no doubt at all that if the planet warms, the sea will rise. The key questions are, by how much and how soon?

To pin down the possibilities, researchers have to look at what will happen to all the different contributors to sea level under various emissions scenarios. The single biggest contributor to sea level rise over the past century has been the melting of glaciers and ice caps outside of Greenland and Antarctica, from Alaska to the Himalayas. According to one recent estimate, the continued loss of this ice will add another 10 to 20 centimetres to sea level by 2100. It cannot get much worse than this: even if all this ice melted, sea level would only rise by about 33 centimetres.

Expanding waters

The second biggest contributor has been thermal expansion of the oceans. Its future contribution is relatively simple to predict, as we know exactly how much water expands for a given increase in temperature. A study published earlier this year found that even if all emissions stopped once carbon dioxide levels hit 450 parts per million (ppm) – an unrealistically optimistic scenario – thermal expansion alone would cause sea level to rise by 20 centimetres by 2100, and by another 10 centimetres by 3000. At the other extreme, if emissions peak at 1200 ppm, thermal expansion alone would lead to a 0.5-metre rise by 2100, and another 1.4 metres by 3000 (see “How high, how soon?”).

Then there are the great ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica, which hold enough water to raise sea level by about 70 metres. Until recently, their contribution to sea level rise was negligible, and the IPCC predicted that Greenland would contribute 12 centimetres at most to sea level rise by 2100, while Antarctica would actually gain ice overall due to increased snowfall. “A lot of new results have been published since then to show that this very conservative conclusion does not hold,” says Eric Rignot of the University of California, Irvine.

To study the ice sheets, Rignot and colleagues have combined satellite-based radar surveys, aircraft altimetry and gravity measurements using NASA’s GRACE satellite. They found that ice loss is increasing fast. Greenland is now losing about 300 gigatonnes of ice per year, enough to raise sea level by 0.83 millimetres. Antarctica is losing about 200 gigatonnes per year, almost all of it from West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula, raising levels by 0.55 millimetres. “The mass loss is increasing faster than in Greenland,” Rignot says. “It’ll overtake Greenland in years to come.”

If this trend continues, Rignot thinks sea level rise will exceed 1 metre by 2100. So understanding why Greenland and Antarctica are already losing ice faster than predicted is crucial to improving our predictions.

The main reason for the increase is the speeding up of glaciers that drain the ice sheets into the sea. One cause is the knock-on effect of warmer air melting the surface of the ice: when the surface ice melts, the water pours down through crevasses and moulins to the base of glaciers, lubricating their descent into the sea. Fears about the impact of this phenomenon have receded somewhat, though: Antarctica is thought to be too cold for it to be a big factor, and even in Greenland it is only a summertime effect. “It’s significant, but I don’t think it’s the primary mechanism that would be responsible for dramatic increases in sea level,” says glaciologist Robert Bindschadler at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

There is another way for surface melt to affect sea level, though. Meltwater fills any crevasses, widening and deepening the cracks until they reach all the way down to the base of the ice. This can have a dramatic effect on floating ice shelves. “Essentially, you are chopping up an ice shelf into a bunch of tall thin icebergs, like dominoes standing on their ends,” says Bindschadler. “And they are not very stable standing that way.” They fall over, and push their neighbours out to sea.

The most famous break-up in recent times – that of the Larsen B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula in 2002 – likely happened this way. While the break-up of floating ice shelves does not raise sea level directly, the disintegration of Larsen B had consequences that models at the time failed to predict. With little to resist their advance, glaciers behind Larsen B immediately began to move up to eight times faster. Five smaller ice shelves in the rapidly warming Antarctic Peninsula have also broken up and many others are disintegrating.

What lies beneath

Surface melt poses little threat in West Antarctica, as it is so much colder. Here the danger comes from below. Take the ice shelf holding back the massive Pine Island glacier, which is thinning in a strange pattern. Radar scans have revealed giant “ripples” up to 100 metres deep on its underside.

Bindschadler thinks that the currents created by winter winds raise relatively warm water from a few hundred metres down in the Amundsen Sea off West Antarctica. This melts the underside of the ice shelf and gets trapped in the space it carves out, thus continuing to melt the ice from below over a few seasons. As the ice shelf thins, the Pine Island glacier behind it is speeding up, from 3 kilometres per year three years ago to over 4 kilometres per year according to the latest unpublished measurements by Ian Joughin of the University of Washington in Seattle.

What does this have to do with global warming? Climate change, aided and abetted by the loss of ozone, has strengthened the winds that circle Antarctica. This is speeding up the Antarctic circumpolar current and pushing surface waters away from the coast, causing deeper, warmer water to well up.

Along with the Thwaites glacier and some smaller ones, Pine Island glacier drains a third of the West Antarctic ice sheet. This ice sheet is particularly vulnerable to ocean heat because much of it rests on the seabed, a kilometre or more below sea level. This submarine ice will not raise sea level if it melts, but if it goes a lot of higher-level ice will end up in the ocean. The vulnerable parts contain enough ice to raise sea level 3.3 metres – less than the 5 metres that was once estimated but more than enough to have catastrophic effects.

Any increase in the temperature of seawater in contact with ice can lead to relatively rapid melting, as with the cavities discovered by Bindschadler. “The ocean has an enormous amount of heat compared to the atmosphere,” he says.

Even in Greenland, where the ice sheet rests on land above sea level, ocean heat still matters. When not dodging giant icebergs, Holland has been trying to find out why Greenland’s Jakobshavn glacier started moving faster in 1997, speeding up from around 6 kilometres per year to more than 9 kilometres per year by 2000 and 13 kilometres per year by 2003. The glacier continues to drain ice from the Greenland ice sheet at a higher rate than before.

The increase had been attributed to lubrication by meltwater, but Holland’s team recently stumbled across data from local fishing boats, which deploy thermometers in bottom-trawling nets. One fact stood out: the temperature of the subsurface waters around West Greenland jumped in 1997, prior to the massive calving of Jakobshavn.

As the team reported last year, though, the real trigger lay in what happened in 1996. That year, the winds across the North Atlantic weakened, slowing down the warm Gulf Stream. The weakened current meandered aimlessly and hit west Greenland. “A modest change in wind gives you a big bang in terms of ice sheet dynamic response,” says Holland.

Findings like these suggest that predicting sea level rise is even trickier than previously thought. If relatively small changes in winds and currents could have a big impact on ice sheets, we need extremely good models of regional climate as well as of ice sheets. At the moment we have neither – and while regional climate models are improving, ice sheet models are still too crude to make accurate predictions.

“They are coarse models that don’t include mechanisms that allow glaciers to speed up,” says Rignot. “And what we are seeing today is that this is not only a big missing piece, this could be the dominant piece. We can’t really afford to wait 10 to 20 years to have good ice sheet models to tell people, ‘Well, sea level is actually going to rise 2 metres and not 50 centimetres’, because the consequences are very significant, and things will be pretty much locked in at that point.”

So climate scientists are looking for other ways to predict sea level rise. Rahmstorf, for instance, is treating the Earth as one big black box. His starting point is the simple idea that the rate of sea level rise is proportional to the increase in temperature: the warmer Earth gets, the faster ice melts and the oceans expand. This held true for the last 120 years at least. “There is a very close and statistically highly significant correlation between the rate of sea level rise and the temperature increase above the pre-industrial background level,” says Rahmstorf.

Extrapolating this to the future, based on IPCC emissions scenarios, suggests sea level will rise by between 0.5 and 1.4 metres – and the higher estimate is more likely because emissions have been rising faster than the IPCC’s worst-case scenario. Rahmstorf’s study got a mixed reception when it first appeared, but he can feel the winds of change. “I sense that now a majority of sea level experts would agree with me that the IPCC projections are much too low,” he says.

Could even Rahmstorf’s estimate be too low? It assumes the relation between temperature and sea level is linear, but some experts, most prominently James Hansen of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, argue that because there are multiple positive feedbacks, such as the lubrication of glaciers by meltwater, higher temperatures will lead to accelerating ice loss. “Why do I think a sea level rise of metres would be a near certainty if greenhouse gas emissions keep increasing?” Hansen wrote in New Scientist (28 July 2007, p 30). “Because while the growth of great ice sheets takes millennia, the disintegration of ice sheets is a wet process that can proceed rapidly.”

Hansen has made no specific prediction, however. So just how bad could it get? Tad Pfeffer of the University of Colorado in Boulder decided to work backwards from some of the worst-case scenarios: 2 metres by 2100 from Greenland, and 1.5 metres from West Antarctica, via the Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers. Just how fast would the glaciers have to be moving for the sea level to rise by these amounts? Pfeffer found that glaciers in Greenland would need to move at 70 kilometres per year, and Pine Island and Thwaites glaciers at 50 kilometres per year, from now until 2100. Since most glaciers are moving at just a few kilometres per year, to Pfeffer and many others, these numbers seem highly unrealistic.

Worst case

So what is possible? For scenarios based on conservative assumptions, such as a doubling of glacier speeds, Pfeffer found sea level will rise by around 80 centimetres by 2100, including thermal expansion. “For the high end, we took all of the values we could change and we pushed them forward to the largest numbers we imagined would be reasonable,” says Pfeffer. The answer: 2 metres.

These estimates fit well with recent studies of comparable periods in the past, which have found that sea level rise averaged up to 1.6 metres per century at times. There is a huge caveat in Pfeffer’s number crunching, though. “An important assumption we made is that the rest of West Antarctica stays put. And this is the part of West Antarctica that is held behind the Ross ice shelf and the Ronne ice shelf,” says Pfeffer. “Those two ice shelves are very big, and very thick, and very cold. We don’t see a way to get rid of those in the next century.”

Holland is not so sure. He has been studying computer models of ocean currents around Antarctica, and he doesn’t like what he sees. The subsurface current of warm water near the frozen continent, known as the circumpolar deep water, branches near the coast, and one branch hits Pine Island – which is probably why the ice there is thinning and speeding up. “Another branch of it comes ever so close to the Ross ice shelf,” says Holland. “In some computer simulations of the future, the warm branch actually goes and hits Ross.”

While it is impossible to predict exactly what will cause this, the lessons from Jakobshavn show that a small change in the wind patterns over Antarctica might be enough to shift the warm current towards and eventually underneath the Ross ice shelf. Then even this gigantic mass of ice – about the size of France – becomes vulnerable, regardless of how cold the air above it is. Pfeffer agrees that the Ross and Ronne ice shelves are the wild cards. “If we pull the plug on those two, then we create a very different world.”

Is there really a danger of a collapse, which would cause a sudden jump in sea levels? Paul Blanchon’s team at the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Cancun has been studying 121,000-year-old coral reefs (pictured above) in the Yucatan Peninsula, formed during the last interglacial period when sea level peaked at around 6 metres higher than today. His findings suggest that at one point the sea rose 3 metres within 50 to 100 years.

We just don’t know if this could happen again in the 21st century. What is clear, though, is that even the lowest, most conservative estimates are now higher than the IPCC’s highest estimate. “Most of my community is comfortable expecting at least a metre by the end of this century,” says Bindschadler.

Most glaciologists who study Greenland and Antarctica are expecting at least a metre rise by the end of the century

And it will not stop at a metre. “When we talk of sea level rising by 1 or 2 metres by 2100, remember that it is still going to be rising after 2100,” Rignot warns.

All of which suggests we might want to start preparing. “People who are trying to downplay the significance say, ‘Oh, the Earth has gone through changes much greater than this, you know, in the geological past’,” says Pfeffer. “That’s true, but it’s completely irrelevant. We weren’t there then.”

What it all means If a 1 metre rise in sea level doesn’t sound like much, consider this: about 60 million people live within 1 metre of mean sea level, a number expected to grow to about 130 million by 2100.

Much of this population lives in the nine major river deltas in south and southeast Asia. Parts of countries such as Bangladesh, along with some island nations like the Maldives, will simply be submerged.

According to a 2005 report, a 1-metre rise in sea level will affect 13 million people in five European countries and destroy property worth $600 billion, with the Netherlands the worst affected. In the UK, existing defences are insufficient to protect parts of the east and south coast, including the cities of Hull and Portsmouth.

Besides inundation, higher seas raise the risk of severe storm surges and dangerous flooding. The entire Atlantic seaboard of North America, including New York, Boston and Washington DC, and the Gulf coast will become more vulnerable to hurricanes. Today’s 100-year storm floods might occur as often as every four years – in which case it will make more sense to abandon devastated regions and towns than to keep rebuilding them.

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Now is the time to prepare for the great floods

01 July 2009 Magazine issue 2715. For similar stories, visit the Editorials Topic Guide

THREE key facts about rising sea levels need to be hammered home to the world’s politicians and planners: sea-level rise is now inevitable, it will happen faster than most of us thought, and it will go on for a very long time.

Even if greenhouse gas emissions stopped tomorrow, the oceans will continue to swell as they warm, and as glaciers and ice sheets melt or slide into the sea (see “Going, going?”). The growing consensus among climate scientists is that the “official” estimate of sea-level rise in the last report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – 0.2 to 0.6 metres by 2100 – is misleading. It could well be in the region of 1 to 2 metres, with a small risk of an even greater rise. And barring a megaproject to cool the planet, it could take several thousand years for the system to reach equilibrium – by which time sea level will be somewhere between 10 and 25 metres higher than it is today.

For many islands and low-lying regions, including much of the Netherlands, Florida and Bangladesh, even small rises will spell catastrophe. Most countries, however, will only lose a tiny percentage of their land, even with a very big rise. The problem is what has been built on that land: large parts of London, New York, Sydney and Tokyo, to mention just a few cities. Unless something can be done, great swathes of urban sprawl will vanish beneath the waves. It will take a massive engineering effort to protect these cities – an effort that may be beyond economies that have been brought to their knees by climate change.

In a few hundred years, large parts of London, New York and Sydney will vanish beneath the waves

None of this means we should despair, and stop trying to curb emissions; the more we pump into the atmosphere, the higher and faster the seas will rise. But alongside these efforts, we need to start acting now to minimise the impact of future sea-level rise. That means we must stop building in the danger zone.

Countless billions are being spent on constructing homes, offices, factories and roads in vulnerable coastal areas. For instance, the glittering skyscrapers of Shanghai, China’s economic powerhouse, are being built on land that is a mere 4 metres above sea level on average, and which is sinking under the weight of its buildings and as water is extracted from the rocks beneath them.

In cities that have been around for hundreds of years, this sort of development may be understandable. But planning for new coastal developments is to fly in the face of reality. If we want to build a lasting legacy for our descendants, we should do so on the plentiful land that is in no danger from the sea. It is one of the easiest ways to mitigate climate change, and we should be acting on it now.

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May 21 2009

Golf Green Technology: Should be Mandatory on Small Islands

Published by bpotter under Conservation

from the NY TImes:
Greens Technology – Sensors Help Save Water – NYTimes.com

[We’re not a great fan of golf courses on small tropical islands, but it seems the market demands them for certain kinds of tourism. One of the biggest problems created by golf courses is water use -- especially in the smaller, drier islands, and the fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides that are carried to the sea by over-watering. The new sensor-based technologies described in this article are not a cure-all, but they seem to help with many water-use related problems, and the technology is certainly cheap enough to be afforded by ANY modern proposed development.

The main article in the NY Times has some diagrams that may be worthwhile, but after May 28, 2009, there may be a charge to access the story. Bruce Potter]

May 21, 2009


On Golf Courses,
Sensors Help Save Water

By LARRY DORMAN

In seven years of overseeing every root and blade of grass on the grounds at the Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa., Matt Shaffer has built a reputation on innovation and conservation. An early advocate of course playability over aesthetics, he long lived by the maxim “the drier, the better.”

But when a stifling heat wave threatened the club’s greens before the 2005 United States Amateur Championship — a record 17th U.S.G.A. championship at Merion — Shaffer turned to his old boss, Paul R. Latshaw Sr., for advice. Latshaw told him there was one way he could continue to cut down water use while keeping his turf dry and as fast as a microwave: sensors.

Wireless sensors were little more than a rumor in those days, but Shaffer trusted Latshaw, followed the advice and installed a product called RZ Wireless before the championship. The technology helped him enjoy four years of successful water conservation. Although doubtful he could improve on what he had, Shaffer decided last month to upgrade his system with a promise of even greater savings.

“I am probably known as one of the best waterers,” Shaffer, the club’s director of golf operations, said in a recent interview. “And I thought, man, I don’t know why I’m getting these sensors because I know I’m dry.”

He added: “Well, what I thought was dry isn’t even my baseline. These sensors are just so much more sensitive, so much better, so much more complete. I am now hooked. I’m a sensor addict.”

This is a green addiction with the potential to spread, with more than 20 states affected by some form of drought and water restrictions a daily reality in cities across the nation.

At least three companies are competing in the market for subterranean wireless sensors, which monitor moisture, temperature and salinity in the soil and feed the data to a software network accessed remotely on a laptop, a handheld device or a desktop computer. The system could be used far beyond the golf course — on other athletic fields, in agriculture, in both home and commercial landscaping, and in parks.

The leader in the clubhouse so far is a system called UgMo, a network of wireless sensors that mine subsurface data and link to a software package developed by Advanced Sensor Technology of King of Prussia, Pa., the original manufacturers of the RZ system. The company announced its updated system in February and made it available in early April, installing it at golf meccas like Merion, Desert Mountain outside Scottsdale, Ariz.; and Card Sound Golf Club on Key Largo, Fla.

Early adopters say they will cut an average of 10 percent of their typical water use, amounting to millions of gallons of water each year. At that rate, the system would pay for itself within the first year, depending on the volume of water a course uses.

“We were a very efficient operation to start with,” said Shawn Emerson, the superintendent at Desert Mountain Golf Club, a complex of six courses with 500 acres of turf in the desert Southwest. “With these sensors, we only water when the soil tells us it needs to be watered.”

He said the club would save a total of more than 100 million gallons of effluent water, or an average of between 18 million and 20 million gallons per course for the year. That would mean roughly $130,000 in savings based on current prices.

Advanced Sensor’s competitors include the industry giant Toro, of Bloomington, Minn.; and Environmental Sensors, Inc., based in Victoria, British Columbia. Each has introduced wireless systems designed for golf courses within the past four months.

The competition has, predictably, spawned litigation. Advanced Sensor filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Toro in January 2008. The case, which involves the movement of a former Advanced Sensor wireless system designer to Toro, is scheduled for trial July 30 in federal court in Philadelphia, barring a settlement.

Walter Norley, the founder and chief executive of Advanced Sensor, said his company was well positioned to grow and had begun making inroads in the sports turf market. He pointed to his company’s recent installation of the UgMo system at the Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif., a complex of athletic fields that is home to the Los Angeles Galaxy and Chivas USA of Major League Soccer. He also mentioned legislation pending in Florida — which last week declared a drought emergency — that would mandate water conservation measures by irrigators that could provide his company with a large number of customers.

“The reality is that that the water situation itself is very significant,” Norley said. “There is usage legislation in a number of states, and when it comes to mandates, the golf world will be the lowest-hanging fruit of all the irrigation applications. If decisions are to be based on who gets water, crops for food or someone’s green, green, green fairways, it’s pretty obvious who will get the water.”

Golf accounts for 0.5 percent of annual water usage in the United States, according to a study released this year by the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America. Golf courses are all but weaned from municipal fresh-water systems, with 86 percent now using some other source, liked recycled effluent water, surface water or water treated by reverse osmosis. Significantly, 70 percent of superintendents surveyed said they were keeping their turf drier.

But fewer than 100 of the estimated 15,700 golf courses in the United States have sensors installed. The introduction of relatively cheap and highly accurate systems could change that.

For slightly more than $11,000, a golf course could install an UgMo subsurface system that would include 18 wireless sensors, 3 routers and gateways, software and help from an agronomy support staff.

Norley said his company would have 48 completed installations by the end of June, with 14,000 sensors back-ordered for installation in sports fields and golf courses by the end of the year. Toro, with the bulk of its 2008 revenue of $1.9 billion generated by turf and landscape maintenance equipment and irrigation systems, is just getting started. Environmental Sensors announced its entry into the wireless sensor and software market for golf earlier this month.

In the Florida Keys, the Card Sound Golf Club installed wireless sensors in April. The club uses recycled water from reverse osmosis to irrigate the grounds. It has a high salt content, meaning that the club superintendent, Sean Anderson, must regularly have his greens flushed with fresh water.

Before the installation, Anderson said, the job required 150,000 gallons, took an hour and had to be done every two weeks.

“We have actually cut in half the amount of water we were using,” he said. “To me, it sort of shows that the sky is the limit with this technology.”

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

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May 07 2009

Two Articles re: BIODIVERSITY and Small Island Interests

from the MEA Bulletin from IISD Reporting Services

- Subscribe to IISD Reporting Services’ free newsletters and lists for environment and sustainable development policy professionals at http://www.iisd.ca/email/subscribe.htm

TWO articles of importance for small islands — ESPECIALLY the HARMONIZATION of REPORTING for Biodiversity (and OTHER MEA’s too!!) multilateral environmental agreements (and I see VERY LIITLE ISLAND INTEREST in MEA Reporting Harmonization, and EVEN LESS participation by islands in the international fora, such as the ASEAN meeting reported below. . . )

The second article is about the need to link Biodiversity, climate change, and sustainable development.

BIODIVERSITY SECRETARIATS AND UNEP-WCMC CONTRIBUTE TO WORKSHOP ON
HARMONIZATION OF REPORTING

Held from 15-17 April 2009, in Hanoi, Viet Nam, a workshop on harmonization of reporting to biodiversity-related conventions gathered representatives of seven Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) countries and Australia. Its goal was to provide a venue to develop a framework to harmonize national reporting to the CBD, CITES, CMS, the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, and the World Heritage Convention. A strong focus was put on building the capacity of ASEAN countries to improve and streamline national reporting as an output of implementation of global conventions. The workshop was lead by the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity, in partnership with the Vietnam Environment Administration and with the support of the UN Environment Programme-World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) and the biodiversity-related convention secretariats (http://www.aseanbiodiversity.org/index.php?option=com_content&view =article&id=322:asean-member-statesto-streamline-reporting-to-global-environmental-agreements&catid=65:acbnews&Itemid=92).

this is that press release

ASEAN Member States to Streamline Reporting to Global Environmental Agreements

Resolving global issues require international agreements, and this is particularly important in environmental Conservation. Loss of Species and habitats, Biodiversity conservation, wildlife trade, pollution, and Climate change are concerns requiring concerted global effort in addressing them.

A number of international conventions and agreements have been developed to establish wide-ranging cooperation in protecting the environment, including the Convention on Biological Diversity CBD), Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar), Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES), Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) and the World Heritage Convention (WHC). 

These multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) require national reporting from all signatory countries (Parties) to create a global picture of environmental efforts as well as provide directions for the future. Reports often require data from different national agencies covering a wide range of bio-geographical, social, economic, legal and political information. These have to be meticulously prepared by the focal points or reporting agencies and crafted according to formats set by the secretariats of MEAs. 

In some cases, there are similar reporting agencies for different MEAs. Some also require similar information, such as Habitat coverage, species inventory, composition of local communities, human activities that may affect the local environment, protected area status, number of rangers, and others. Since a number of issues may need to be presented in reports to various MEAs, there is a need to harmonize the gathering of and management of data. Streamlining reporting to MEAs will reduce reporting burdens on Parties, encourage more data sharing, and create synergy in environmental work among concerned national and international agencies. 

To facilitate national reporting to MEAs, the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) will conduct the ASEAN Workshop on Harmonization of Reporting to Biodiversity-Related Conventions on 15 – 17 April 2009 in Hanoi, Vietnam. The workshop will focus on the development of a framework to harmonize reporting on the implementation of efforts to conserve inland waters biodiversity for the CBD and the Ramsar Convention.

Ms. Rusyan Coburn, Policy Research Specialist of ACB, said the workshop aims to promote national and regional efforts to harmonize or synergize reporting to biodiversity-related conventions; strengthen national capacities in harmonized reporting by providing training on use of relevant tools and approaches; and discuss possible ways and means for harmonization of reporting at the global level.

“The workshop will emphasize information exchange and active learning. This will allow ASEAN Member States to analyze and strengthen national processes and capacities for synergizing reporting to biodiversity-related conventions, as well as provide recommendations for harmonization at the global level, Ms. Coburn explained. 

ACB will lead the organization of the workshop in partnership with the Vietnam Environment Administration (VEA) and with the support of the United Nations Environment Programme-World Conservation Monitoring Centre; the Secretariats of the CBD, CITES, CMS, Ramsar and the World Heritage Convention; and the Government of Australia.  For more information, log on to www.aseanbiodiversity.org.

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CBD SECRETARIAT WELCOMES SYRACUSE CHARTER ON BIODIVERSITY

On the occasion of the G8 Environment
Ministers Meeting Opening Working
Session on Biodiversity, held on 23
April 2009, in Syracuse, Italy, Ahmed
Djoghlaf, Executive Secretary of the
Convention on Biological Diversity
(CBD), stressed that the Syracuse Charter
on Biodiversity provides an outline
for the way ahead in addressing unprecedented
biodiversity challenges. He
underscored the INTERLINKAGES BETWEEN
CLIMATE CHANGE, BIODIVERSITY, FORESTS AND
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, and drew attention
to the upcoming International
Year of Biodiversity 2010 (http://www.cbd.int/doc/speech/2009/sp-2009-04-23-g8-en.pdf).

In a communiqué issued by the CBD
Secretariat following the conclusion of
the G8 Environment Ministers meeting,
Djoghlaf notes the Charter marks a new
era in the environmental dialogue of the
G8 and their partners, adding that their
commitment to work together for the
completion of the international regime on
access and benefit sharing by 2010 and
finalize a post-2010 biodiversity strategy
should be applauded (http://www.cbd.int/doc/press/2009/pr-2009-04-23-g8-en.pdf; http://www.cbd.int/doc/g8/g8-2009-04-23-chair-summary-en.pdf).

In related news, the Global Environment
Facility has recently approved
Phase III of a medium-sized project to
FUND THE PREPARATION OF THE FOURTH NATIONAL REPORT. This phase can support a total
of 40 countries, with up to US$20,000
for each country (http://www.cbd.int/doc/notifications/2009/ntf-2009-043-nr4-en.pdf).

The CBD Secretariat has posted the
electronic versions of the promotional
material related to this year’s celebrations
of the International Day for Biological
Diversity under the theme “Invasive
Alien Species,” to be celebrated
on 22 May 2009, at: http://www.cbd.int/idb/2009/.

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Mar 27 2009

Fourth of Four Jost van Dyke NEWSLETTERS for the JVD Environmental Profile: February 2008

Published by bpotter under BVI, Conservation, Jost van Dyke

Schedule for review of the Environmental Profile

http://irf.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/February2009Newsletter1.pdf

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Mar 27 2009

Third of Four Jost van Dyke NEWSLETTERS for the JVD Environmental Profile: December 2008

Published by bpotter under BVI, Conservation, Jost van Dyke

This issue focuses on marine issues, as assessed by Clive Petrovic — and lots of other stuff, too . . .

http://irf.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/December2008Newsletter1.pdf

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