Thursday, March 15, 2012
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Over 101 Ways to Adapt to Climate Change
March 22, 2012
Source: http://www.fnf.org.ph/news/over-101-ways-to-adapt-to-climate-change.htmA total of 124 entries were submitted to acCLICKmatize, a photo contest on adaptive measures on climate change organized by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom (FNF).
Dr. Neric Acosta, Secretary-General of the Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats (CALD); Rep. Mel Sarmiento, Member of the House Committee on Ecology; Dr. Ebinezer Florano, Assistant Professor of Environmental Governance in the University of the Philippines National College of Public Administration and Governance (UP NCPAG); and Ms. Kenny Lynn Tai, Faculty Member of the School of Design and Arts of the College of St. Benilde compose the jury that will select the top three entries. The photos will be presented at the conference on Changing the Climate Towards Good Governance on 27 March 2012 at Mind Museum, Taguig City.
The contest was open to amateur and professional photographers nationwide. Some of the photos highlight alternative energy source, disaster response, and citizens’ participation in risk management efforts.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
SCIENTISTS ADVANCE DOOMSDAY CLOCK NEARER TO MIDNIGHT
Source: GMA NEWS NETWORK (http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/244593/scitech/science/scientists-advance-doomsday-clock-nearer-to-midnight?ref=latest)
January 14, 2012 6:12pm
Lamenting continuing inaction on climate change and inadequate progress on nuclear weapons reduction and proliferation, scientists have moved the notional “Doomsday Clock” one minute closer to midnight.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, which maintains the “Doomsday Clock,” said this means the world is getting closer to annihilation.
“It is five minutes to midnight. Two years ago, it appeared that world leaders might address the truly global threats that we face. In many cases, that trend has not continued or been reversed. For that reason, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is moving the clock hand one minute closer to midnight, back to its time in 2007,” it said.
BAS said the last time the Doomsday Clock minute hand moved was in January 2010, when the Clock’s minute hand was pushed back one minute from five to six minutes before midnight.
A separate article on tech site CNET said that since the clock was turned on in 1947, its hands have moved back and forth several times.
“Starting off at 7 minutes to midnight, the clock was set to two minutes in 1952 after the first test of the hydrogen bomb ... It fell back as far as 17 minutes to midnight in 1991 when the U.S. and Russia began cutting down on their nuclear weaponry,” it said.
Climate change
The BAS said the global community may be near a point of no return in efforts to prevent a catastrophe from changes in Earth’s atmosphere.
It said the International Energy Agency (IAEA) projects that unless societies begin building alternatives to carbon-emitting energy technologies over the next five years, the world is doomed to a warmer climate.
This means “harsher weather, droughts, famine, water scarcity, rising sea levels, loss of island nations, and increasing ocean acidification,” it said.
“Since fossil-fuel burning power plants and infrastructure built in 2012-2020 will produce energy — and emissions — for 40 to 50 years, the actions taken in the next few years will set us on a path that will be impossible to redirect. Even if policy leaders decide in the future to reduce reliance on carbon-emitting technologies, it will be too late,” it warned.
Among the existing alternatives for producing base-load electricity with low carbon dioxide emissions is nuclear power, it said.
Russia, China, India, and South Korea will likely continue to construct plants, enrich fuel, and shape the global nuclear power industry, it added.
Countries that had earlier signaled interest in building nuclear power capacity, such as Vietnam, United Arab Emirates, Turkey, and others, are still intent on acquiring civilian nuclear reactors for electricity despite the Fukushima disaster.
However, a number of countries have renounced nuclear power, including Germany, Italy, and Switzerland. In Japan, only eight of 54 power plants currently operate because prefecture governors, responding to people’s opposition to nuclear power, have not allowed reactors back online.
In the United States, increased costs of additional safety measures may make nuclear power too expensive to be a realistic alternative to natural gas and other fossil fuels.
The hopeful news is that alternatives to burning coal, oil, and uranium for energy continue to show promise, BAS said.
It said solar and photovoltaic technologies are seeing reductions in price, wind turbines are being adopted for commercial electricity, and energy conservation and efficiency are becoming accepted as sources for industrial production and residential use.
“Yet, we are very concerned that the pace of change may not be adequate and that the transformation that seems to be on its way will not take place in time to meet the hardships that large-scale disruption of the climate portends,” it said.
“As we see it, the major challenge at the heart of humanity’s survival in the 21st century is how to meet energy needs for economic growth in developing and industrial countries without further damaging the climate, without exposing people to loss of health and community, and without risking further spread of nuclear weapons,” it added.
It added the challenges to rid the world of nuclear weapons, harness nuclear power, and meet the nearly inexorable climate disruptions from global warming are complex and interconnected.
But it said its Science and Security Board is heartened by the Arab Spring, the Occupy movements, political protests in Russia, and by the actions of ordinary citizens in Japan as they call for fair treatment and attention to their needs.
“For this reason, we ask other scientists and experts to join us in engaging ordinary citizens. Together, we can present the most significant questions to policymakers and industry leaders. Most important, we can demand answers and action. As the first atomic scientists of the Bulletin recognized in 1948, the burden of disseminating information about the social and economic ‘implications of nuclear energy and other new scientific developments rests with the intelligent citizens of the world; the intense and continuing cooperation of the scientists is assured,’” it said.
On the other hand, BAS called for urgent attention to avert catastrophe from nuclear weapons and global warming. Such measures include:
• Ratification by the United States and China of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and progress on a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty;
• Implementing multinational management of the civilian nuclear energy fuel cycle with strict standards for safety, security, and nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, including eliminating reprocessing for plutonium separation;
• Strengthening the International Atomic Energy Agency’s capacity to oversee nuclear materials, technology development, and its transfer;
• Adopting and fulfilling climate change agreements to reduce carbon dioxide emissions through tax incentives, harmonized domestic regulation and practice;
• Transforming the coal power sector of the world economy to retire older plants and to require in new plants the capture and storage of the CO2 they produce;
• Vastly increasing public and private investments in alternatives to carbon emitting energy sources, such as solar and wind, and in technologies for energy storage, and sharing the results worldwide.
Nuclear disarmament
Despite the promise of a new spirit of international cooperation, and reductions in tensions between the United States and Russia, the BAS Science and Security Board said the path toward a world free of nuclear weapons is not at all clear, and leadership is failing.
It said the ratification in December 2010 of the New START treaty between Russia and the United States reversed the previous drift in US-Russia nuclear relations.
“However, failure to act on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by leaders in the United States, China, Iran, India, Pakistan, Egypt, Israel, and North Korea and on a treaty to cut off production of nuclear weapons material continues to leave the world at risk from continued development of nuclear weapons,” it said.
It said the world still has approximately 19,500 nuclear weapons, enough power to destroy the Earth’s inhabitants several times over.
“Obstacles to a world free of nuclear weapons remain. Among these are disagreements between the United States and Russia about the utility and purposes of missile defense, as well as insufficient transparency, planning, and cooperation among the nine nuclear weapons states to support a continuing drawdown,” it said.
The resulting distrust leads nearly all nuclear weapons states to hedge their bets by modernizing their nuclear arsenals, it said.
“While governments claim they are only ensuring the safety of their warheads through replacement of bomb components and launch systems, as the deliberate process of arms reduction proceeds, such developments appear to other states to be signs of substantial military build-ups,” it said.
The Science and Security Board also reviewed progress in meeting the challenges of nuclear weapons proliferation.
It said ambiguity about Iran’s nuclear power program continues to be the most prominent example of this unsolved problem — centrifuges can enrich uranium for both civilian power plants and military weapons.
It said it remains to be seen how many additional countries will pursue nuclear power, but without solutions to the dual-use problem and without incentives sufficient to resist military applications, the world is playing with the explosive potential of a million suns and a fire that will not go out.
Also, it said the potential for nuclear weapons use in regional conflicts in the Middle East, Northeast Asia, and particularly in South Asia is also alarming.
“Ongoing efforts to ease tensions, deal with extremism and terrorist acts, and reduce the role of nuclear weapons in international relations have had only halting success. Yet we believe that international diplomatic pressure as well as burgeoning citizen action will help political leaders to see the folly of continuing to rely on nuclear weapons for national security,” it said.
Nuclear energy
The BAS said it is disheartening that the world has suffered another calamitous accident - the Fukushima disaster in March 2011, which raised significant questions that the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Science and Security Board believe must be addressed.
“Safer nuclear reactor designs need to be developed and built, and more stringent oversight, training, and attention are needed to prevent future disasters. A major question to be addressed is: How can complex systems like nuclear power stations be made less susceptible to accidents and errors in judgment?” it said. — TJD, GMA News
Labels:
climate change,
Doomsday Clock,
nuclear energy
Monday, December 19, 2011
PHILIPPINE GREEN PARTY (PARTIDO KALIKASAN) NEEDS YOU!

Dear Party Supporters,
We are now recruiting coordinators for the Party!
City/Town Coordinators for Partido Kalikasan (PK) can serve two purposes for the Party. In the long-term, it is to build the core group of the Party in forming our basic EcoSystem Chapters and eventually the Bio-Regional Assemblies. In the immediate, it is to build the organizational structure of the Party necessary for to prove our capacity to operate as a national political party. The latter is important as we file our petition for accreditation as a national political party this January 2012.
The coming together of various city/town coordinators into legislative district-level core groups will also form the basis for the local Governance Committees which will be mobilized as the main electoral campaigning machinery in 2012 through 2013 election process.
The target is to recruit coordinators from at least 61 cities and 756 municipalities which represent 50% of all cities and towns all over the country. We currently cover less than 200 cities and towns in 17 provinces nationwide.
In the meantime, we will already be circulating to all our members and supporters the directory if PK City/Town Coordinators to ask everyone interested to sign up.
May I request everyone to please sign up yourselves to the appropriate city/town that you will be accountable for in building Partido Kalikasan.
You can do that in this online excel form: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AsKNNw1B4HW0dGxtYXFOT2VUMWZtLS1VajdhU2Y5Q3c.
If you are having difficulty using the online excel form, kindly just email us at partidokalikasan@yahoo.com the following information:
City/Town: ____________
Province: ______________
Full Name (First, MI, Last): __________________
Home Address: _______________________
Mobile Phone: ________________________
Email: __________________________
Occupation: _____________________
Birthday: _________________________
Thanks!
PK National Secretariat
Labels:
Partido Kalikasan,
Philippine Green Party
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
RISK Award launched at the Global Platform for Disaster Reduction
The first RISK Award was launched during the 3rd Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction in Geneva this year. For the first time, the Global Risk Forum, Munich Re Foundation, and United Nations Secretariat for the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR) decided to join forces and offer a €100,000 award. The award will support the most promising proposal in risk reduction and disaster management. The award will be handed over at GRF Davos' biennial IDRC Davos conferences – for the first time on 26 August 2012 at the 4th IDRC Davos 2012.
The objective of the RISK Award is to increase people’s resilience to risks and disasters, especially in developing countries. A further objective is to stimulate new and innovative approaches towards improved disaster prevention.
The first 2012 award will focus on Early Warning in Urban Areas. Deadline is on 31 December 2011.
To apply to the Risk Award please download the proposal form at www.risk-award.org and send the complete form by 31 December 2011 to info@munichre-foundation.org
Also find additional information on the RISK Award on the Munich Re Foundation website www.munichre-foundation.org.
The objective of the RISK Award is to increase people’s resilience to risks and disasters, especially in developing countries. A further objective is to stimulate new and innovative approaches towards improved disaster prevention.
The first 2012 award will focus on Early Warning in Urban Areas. Deadline is on 31 December 2011.
To apply to the Risk Award please download the proposal form at www.risk-award.org and send the complete form by 31 December 2011 to info@munichre-foundation.org
Also find additional information on the RISK Award on the Munich Re Foundation website www.munichre-foundation.org.
Labels:
Munich Re Foundation,
RISK Award,
UNISDR
Monday, November 21, 2011
Record-high greenhouse gases to linger for decades —UN
By Tom Miles
Source: GMA News at http://www.gmanews.tv/story/239253/technology/record-high-greenhouse-gases-to-linger-for-decades-un(Viewed on 22 November 2011).
GENEVA - Concentrations of the three main greenhouse gases blamed for global warming reached record levels in 2010 and will linger in the atmosphere for decades, even if the world stops emissions output today, the U.N.'s weather agency said on Monday.
Carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, rose by 2.3 parts per million to 389 ppm in 2010 from the previous year, higher than the 1990s average (1.5 ppm) and the past decade (2.0 ppm), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in its annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin.
If the world is to limit global average temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius, scientists say emissions volumes must not have more than 450 ppm of carbon dioxide.
"The atmospheric burden of greenhouse gases due to human activities has yet again reached record levels since pre-industrial time," said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.
"Even if we managed to halt our greenhouse gas emissions today, and this is far from the case, they would continue to linger in the atmosphere for decades to come and so continue to affect the delicate balance of our living planet and our climate," he said.
The report adds to a number of warnings that time is running out to act on climate change and prevent worsening extreme weather as the Earth's temperature rises.
BP data earlier this year showed global carbon dioxide emissions grew at their fastest rate since 1969 last year, as countries rebounded from economic recession.
In 2010, countries agreed in Cancun, Mexico, that deep emissions cuts were needed to hold an increase in global average temperature below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, a threshold beyond which scientists say risks even more extreme weather, crop failure and major floods.
Delegates from nearly 200 countries will meet in South Africa next week for a U.N. summit but only modest steps towards a broader climate deal are seen as likely.
HOTTING UP
The WMO said greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere increased by 1.4 percent last year from 2009 and 29 percent since 1990, mainly driven by fossil fuel use and agriculture.
The WMO measured the overall amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, based on monitoring stations in more than 50 countries, including natural emissions and absorption processes - so-called sources and sinks - as well as emissions caused by human activity.
Three of the most dangerous gases, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, were more prevalent in the atmosphere in 2010 than at any time since the industrial revolution.
The second biggest greenhouse gas, methane, has been growing in the past five years after levelling off between 2000 and 2006, for reasons that are not fully understood.
The third biggest greenhouse gas is nitrous oxide, which can trap almost 300 times as much heat as carbon dioxide. Its main human source is the use of nitrogen-based fertilisers, which the report said had "profoundly affected the global nitrogen cycle".
The impact of fertiliser use is so marked that more nitrous oxide is detected in the northern hemisphere, where more fertiliser is used, than in the south.
The WMO data showed no pause in the growth of greenhouse gases and more work needs to be done to help understand which policies would have the most effect, the report's authors said.
So far, the clearest discernable impact of policies was a decrease in chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which were banned because they caused depletion of the ozone layer.
But hydrofluorocarbons, which have replaced CFCs, are also potent greenhouse gases and their abundance in the atmosphere, while still small, is rising at a rapid rate. — Reuters
Source: GMA News at http://www.gmanews.tv/story/239253/technology/record-high-greenhouse-gases-to-linger-for-decades-un(Viewed on 22 November 2011).
GENEVA - Concentrations of the three main greenhouse gases blamed for global warming reached record levels in 2010 and will linger in the atmosphere for decades, even if the world stops emissions output today, the U.N.'s weather agency said on Monday.
Carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, rose by 2.3 parts per million to 389 ppm in 2010 from the previous year, higher than the 1990s average (1.5 ppm) and the past decade (2.0 ppm), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in its annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin.
If the world is to limit global average temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius, scientists say emissions volumes must not have more than 450 ppm of carbon dioxide.
"The atmospheric burden of greenhouse gases due to human activities has yet again reached record levels since pre-industrial time," said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.
"Even if we managed to halt our greenhouse gas emissions today, and this is far from the case, they would continue to linger in the atmosphere for decades to come and so continue to affect the delicate balance of our living planet and our climate," he said.
The report adds to a number of warnings that time is running out to act on climate change and prevent worsening extreme weather as the Earth's temperature rises.
BP data earlier this year showed global carbon dioxide emissions grew at their fastest rate since 1969 last year, as countries rebounded from economic recession.
In 2010, countries agreed in Cancun, Mexico, that deep emissions cuts were needed to hold an increase in global average temperature below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, a threshold beyond which scientists say risks even more extreme weather, crop failure and major floods.
Delegates from nearly 200 countries will meet in South Africa next week for a U.N. summit but only modest steps towards a broader climate deal are seen as likely.
HOTTING UP
The WMO said greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere increased by 1.4 percent last year from 2009 and 29 percent since 1990, mainly driven by fossil fuel use and agriculture.
The WMO measured the overall amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, based on monitoring stations in more than 50 countries, including natural emissions and absorption processes - so-called sources and sinks - as well as emissions caused by human activity.
Three of the most dangerous gases, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, were more prevalent in the atmosphere in 2010 than at any time since the industrial revolution.
The second biggest greenhouse gas, methane, has been growing in the past five years after levelling off between 2000 and 2006, for reasons that are not fully understood.
The third biggest greenhouse gas is nitrous oxide, which can trap almost 300 times as much heat as carbon dioxide. Its main human source is the use of nitrogen-based fertilisers, which the report said had "profoundly affected the global nitrogen cycle".
The impact of fertiliser use is so marked that more nitrous oxide is detected in the northern hemisphere, where more fertiliser is used, than in the south.
The WMO data showed no pause in the growth of greenhouse gases and more work needs to be done to help understand which policies would have the most effect, the report's authors said.
So far, the clearest discernable impact of policies was a decrease in chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which were banned because they caused depletion of the ozone layer.
But hydrofluorocarbons, which have replaced CFCs, are also potent greenhouse gases and their abundance in the atmosphere, while still small, is rising at a rapid rate. — Reuters
Labels:
climate change,
greenhouse gasses
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
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