The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: Our Carbon Pollution Effects Could Last 50,000 Years
Dear Diary. Think about this. Ever since writing was invented, civilization has been going on for roughly 5,000 years. What we are doing now to our environment could last ten times that long…long after the pyramids have been weathered into dust. In eons past sharp upticks of carbon in the atmosphere from volcanoes have produced extinction level events. Some have described this time as the beginning of the sixth great extinction event, and I have no doubt that mankind, especially since the 1800s is responsible for a great number of animal species to no longer exist.
This situation will only get worse until we stop putting carbon from the burning of fossil fuels and other pollutants into the atmosphere. Here are more details from the Conversation:
The climate change we caused is here for at least 50,000 years – and probably far longer
Authors:
- Jan Zalasiewicz Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leicester
- Colin Waters Honorary Professor, Department of Geology, University of Leicester
- Jens Zinke Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leicester
- Mark Williams Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leiceste
Published: December 5, 2023
In February 2000, Paul Crutzen rose to speak at the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme in Mexico. And when he spoke, people took notice. He was then one of the world’s most cited scientists, a Nobel laureate working on huge-scale problems – the ozone hole, the effects of a nuclear winter.
So little wonder that a word he improvised took hold and spread widely: this was the Anthropocene, a proposed new geological epoch, representing an Earth transformed by the effects of industrialised humanity.
The idea of an entirely new and human-created geological epoch is a sobering scenario as context for the current UN climate summit, COP28. The impact of decisions made at these and other similar conferences will be felt not just beyond our own lives and those of our children, but perhaps beyond the life of human society as we know it.
The Anthropocene is now in wide currency, but when Crutzen first spoke this was still a novel suggestion. In support of his new brain-child, Crutzen cited many planetary symptoms: enormous deforestation, the mushrooming of dams across the world’s large rivers, overfishing, a planet’s nitrogen cycle overwhelmed by fertiliser use, the rapid rise in greenhouse gases.
As for climate change itself, well, the warning bells were ringing, certainly. Global mean surface temperatures had risen by about half a degree since the mid-20th century. But, they were still within the norm for an interglacial phase of the ice ages. Among many emerging problems, climate seemed one for the future.
Death Valley in California recently recorded one of the highest temperatures ever.
A little more than two decades on, the future has arrived. By 2022, global temperature had climbed another half a degree, the past nine years being the hottest since records began. And 2023 has seen climate records being not just broken, but smashed.
By September there had already been 38 days when global average temperatures exceeded pre-industrial ones by 1.5°C, the safe limit of warming set by the UN Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in the Paris agreement. In previous years that was rare, and before 2000 this milestone had never been recorded.
With this leap in temperatures came record-breaking heatwaves, wildfires and floods, exacerbated by other local human actions. Climate has moved center stage on an Anthropocene Earth.
Why this surge in temperatures? In part, it’s been the inexorable rise in greenhouse gases, as fossil fuels continue to dominate human energy use. When Crutzen spoke in Mexico, atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were about 370 parts per million (ppm), already up from the pre-industrial 280 ppm. They’re now around 420 ppm, and climbing by some 2 ppm per year.
In part, the warming results from cleaner skies in the past few years, both on land and at sea, thanks to new regulations phasing out old power stations and dirty sulphur-rich fuels. As the industrial haze clears, more of the sun’s energy makes it through the atmosphere and onto land, and the full force of global warming kicks in.
In part, our planet’s heat-reflecting mirrors are shrinking, as sea ice melts away, initially in the Arctic, and in the last two years, precipitously, around Antarctica too. And climate feedbacks seem to be taking effect, too. A new, sharp rise in atmospheric methane – a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide – since 2006 seems to be sourced from an increase in rotting vegetation in tropical wetlands in a warming world.
There is about 50% more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere compared to before the industrial revolution. Bilanol / shutterstock
This latest warming step has already taken the Earth into levels of climate warmth not experienced for some 120,000 years, into those of the last interglacial phase, a little warmer than the current one. There is yet more warming in the pipeline over coming centuries, as various feedbacks take effect.
A recent study on the effects of this warming on Antarctica’s ice suggests that “policymakers should be prepared for several metres of sea-level rise over the coming centuries” as the pulse of warmth spreads through the oceans to undermine the great polar ice-sheets.
This remains the case even in the most optimistic scenario where carbon dioxide emissions are reduced quickly. But emissions continue to rise steeply, to deepen the climate impact.
Controls have been overridden
To see how this might play out on a geological timescale, we need to look through the lens of the Anthropocene. A delicately balanced planetary machinery of regular, multi-millennial variations in the Earth’s spin and orbit has tightly controlled patterns of warm and cold for millions of years.
Now, suddenly, this control machinery has been overridden by a trillion tons of carbon dioxide injected into the atmosphere in little more than a century.
Modelling the effects of this pulse through the Earth System shows that this new, suddenly disrupted, climate pattern is here for at least 50,000 years and probably far longer. It’s a large part of the way our planet has changed fundamentally and irreversibly, to become comparable to some of the great climate change events in deep Earth history.
So will this particular COP meeting, with fossil fuel interests so strongly represented, make a difference? The bottom line is that attaining, and stabilizing carbon emissions at “net zero” is only a crucial first step.
To retrieve the kind of climate optimal for humanity, and for life as a whole to thrive, negative emissions are needed, to take carbon out of the atmosphere and ocean system and put it back underground. For future generations, there is much at stake.
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
RECORD HEAT SE ASIA
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
CHINA PROVINCIAL RECORDS
32.0 Xinhui, Guangdong Province
29.8 Wencheng, Zhejiang Province
Also 30 more stations records broken
THAILAND 36.6 Uttaradit record tied
LAOS 36.5 Attapeu 0.2C from Lao National heat record
Thai & Lao national records will fall https://t.co/etvEcOKGYG
After dozens of records of high temperatures, today JAPAN had an exceptional warm night.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
MIN. temperature was 24.4C at Iharama, Okinawa Prefecture which is just 0.3C from highest December TMIN ever recorded in Japan outside Minamitori Island (a very remote island in the Pacific. https://t.co/eK0UMYGIQZ
After the record heat, cold weather in AUSTRALIA.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
Max. temperatures locally at record low for December, scroll below for a list of the most remarkable ones:👎 https://t.co/1h4cLGmYP1
Warm nights in the tropics are nearly allover because the record SST.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
The Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean also tied its December record of highest minimum temperature with 83F/28.3C at Majuro on 3 December,after tying the all time high with 85F few months ago. pic.twitter.com/j7yj4RZJ2k
Brutally cold in Russia🥶
— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) December 11, 2023
The cold has been seriously impressive. Both intensity and extent.
Some places like Iema dropped out to -58.7°C, its coldest temperature in December in more than 40 years. pic.twitter.com/Lrph9rBV2e
The NYC area remains devoid of accumulating snow events this winter so far — and this looks to be the case for a while.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) December 11, 2023
With a strong Pacific jet flooding North America with anomalously mild air, NYC may once again have to wait until January for its first inch of snow. pic.twitter.com/Bp2mPhwj3S
NYC has gone 666 consecutive days without a daily snowfall of 1" or more. This blows away the prior record of 383 days (1998). Medium range model guidance is suggesting that North America will be flooded with warm air soon, suggesting the historic streak will go on for a while. pic.twitter.com/tFg6Nos5sb
— John Homenuk (@jhomenuk) December 11, 2023
Looking at the temps for the first 10 days of the month and the forecast for the next 2 weeks, it looks like December 2023 may make a run at the warmest December on record for the Contiguous U.S. https://t.co/GD68gYw0Zk
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 11, 2023
Here is more new November 2023 climatology:
November 2023 in #Turkey/ Türkiye had an average temperature of 12.5C which is 3.2C above the 1991-2020 and was the HOTTEST November on records,surpassing November 2010. https://t.co/yPJrhaM6N3
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
November 2023 in #Pakistan had an average temperature of 19.1C which is +1.24C above the 1961-1990 baseline (about +0.5C vs 1991-2020).
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
It was wetter than average with some records of daily rainfall beaten (see below table of records courtesy of PMD) 👎 pic.twitter.com/AyW4n2QDLx
November 2023 in New Caledonia was extremely dry.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 11, 2023
Average temperature was 23.25C which is 0.7C below normal.
Rainfall amounts ranged from 0mm in 15 stations to 88mm at Poindimiè with an average deficit of 88%. pic.twitter.com/0fGYQi9Z2K
More news and notes from COP28:
Good COP, Bad COP! As #COP28 draws to a close, @MichaelEMann & I make the case @LATimes for important changes to the COP process to keep the #oilandgas industry from continuing to subvert progress on #ClimateActionNow. Read our op ed, hot off the press: https://t.co/HcPAHEXdVn
— Susan Joy Hassol, Climate Communication (@ClimateComms) December 11, 2023
Great advice on COP: “Mend it, don’t end it. Petro-states should not be allowed to host the meeting….COP rules should be changed to allow for a super majority of, say, 75% of nations to approve a decision, rather than the current rules: even one holdout to veto any agreement.” https://t.co/voGqVr7hTJ
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) December 12, 2023
OPEC's leaked goal to “proactively reject any [#COP28 ] text that targets fossil fuels, rather than emissions” is, I think, the 1st *explicit* admission of Big Oil's strategy to shift climate responsibility from supply/fossil fuels to demand/emissions. 1/n https://t.co/0xJXgRgAE1
— Geoffrey Supran (@GeoffreySupran) December 11, 2023
Nobody expected #COP28 to abolish fossil fuels. But if it can't fully envision & articulate a phaseout—or even a general phasedown—then the mammoth lever for int'l peer pressure that is the #ParisAgreement goes to waste. Cogent arguments here from @ClimateComms and @MichaelEMann. https://t.co/Sy1tPrb5OF
— Bob Henson (@bhensonweather) December 12, 2023
“The Comedic Carbon Conundrum of #Cop28"
— Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali 🇧🇷 🇪🇹 🇵🇷🇯🇲🤙🏾 (@EJinAction) December 11, 2023
Alright, check it out, here we are at COP28, the global get-together where the world's supposed to wake up and smell the carbon dioxide. Think of it like a massive block party, but instead of grilling and chillin', we're talking about… pic.twitter.com/xUAlDx0K9a
COP28 is now on the verge of complete failure. The world desperately needs to phase out fossil fuels as quickly as possible, but this obsequious draft reads as if OPEC dictated it word for word. It is even worse than many had feared. It is “Of the Petrostates, By the Petrostates…
— Al Gore (@algore) December 11, 2023
Cop28 draft agreement calls for fossil fuel cuts but avoids ‘phase-out’ https://t.co/7gYYernqRH
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) December 11, 2023
Oil companies clearly show they are in total control of #COP28
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) December 11, 2023
New COP28 draft deal stops short of fossil fuel 'phase out' – Reuters https://t.co/8ZWvRzc6wy
So much anger at the new COP28 draft text. None more so than from Marshall Islands:
— Leo Hickman (@LeoHickman) December 11, 2023
“[We] did not come here to sign our death warrant. We came here to fight for 1.5C and for the only way to achieve that: a fossil fuel phase-out…We will not go silently to our watery graves."
A deafening silence from @COP28_UAE in the last few days
— Bill McGuire (@ProfBillMcGuire) December 11, 2023
Nothing on the BBC 10.00 news, or its webite front page for at least three days
Nothing in most papers, not even a @guardian front page
Just how the FF corporations like it
In this case, no news is very bad news indeed pic.twitter.com/9mKTGNih6Z
"You have people negotiating to tweak a paragraph or a single word when our islands are literally sinking.” -Head of Pacific at @GreenpeaceAP Shiva Gounden delivers a powerful message at #COP28 pic.twitter.com/CmPhPsj6QI
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) December 11, 2023
Day 12 of #COP28 has members of the Beyond Oil and Gas Alliance calling for strong outcomes on fossil fuel phaseout & just energy transition. @beyondoilgas co-chair, Danish Minister @DanJoergensen, tells us why this has to happen this year to avoid “catastrophe” pic.twitter.com/dONQsROlfY
— Catherine Abreu (@catabreu_) December 11, 2023
Interactive: Tracking negotiating texts at COP28 climate summit | @DrSimEvans @VernerViisas
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) December 11, 2023
Read: https://t.co/P4XKgEmdrq#COP28 pic.twitter.com/sRSZna1v0f
Your doctor discovers your being poisoned but shock horror your Doctor suggests that instead of stopping the poison, he is going phase out the poison as stopping it would impact profits of poison manufacture
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) December 11, 2023
What happen to you?
This is what #COP28 is doing to an entire planet https://t.co/LLiYk60Lon pic.twitter.com/ynSt74vy94
“We will not sign our death certificate. We cannot sign on to text that does not have strong commitments on phasing out fossil fuels.” https://t.co/yYIcTFjcPj
— Climate Reality (@ClimateReality) December 11, 2023
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Monday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
The science is clear: we must phase out fossil fuels.
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) December 11, 2023
That's why I've joined over 2000 CEOs, NGOs, scientists, heath experts, youth + faith leaders to ask decisionmakers to prove which side of history they are on–because #LaterIsTooLate.
Read more: https://t.co/mVzQ8Mpasc pic.twitter.com/3sj4HF6YWJ
This article proposes a different way to tell when we have officially reached 1.5C benchmark. Currently, we say it's the midpoint of the last 20 years when average is 1.5C. Betts et al. propose last 10 years and forecast of next 10 years to determine if CURRENT year meets 1.5C. pic.twitter.com/SRRIVwiOK5
— Ryan Katz-Rosene, PhD (@ryankatzrosene) December 11, 2023
#Arctic sea ice extent is currently the *3rd* lowest on record (JAXA data)
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 11, 2023
• about 270,000 km² below the 2010s mean
• about 780,000 km² below the 2000s mean
• about 1,380,000 km² below the 1990s mean
• about 1,880,000 km² below the 1980s mean
Plots: https://t.co/tBkW5GBOxd pic.twitter.com/0oNL8NKUi9
The disappearance of thicker #Arctic sea ice by decade in December… 🧊📉
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 11, 2023
More info on data: https://t.co/PTJWaGlljI pic.twitter.com/pARK2pJf3a
Why Global Warming Intensification of Heavy Rainfall Events is Much Worse than Expected
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) December 11, 2023
For each degree C of global warming:
– Rainfall Intensification increases 8.2%
– Frequency of Occurrence increases 18-32% https://t.co/NlH9beNn2w #COP28UAE #Cop28Dubai #COP28 #climate pic.twitter.com/XtYfXCOt9R
🧵NASA climate has some excellent explainers that are great at debunking human induced climate change deniers. Here is a short thread of a set of them: 1) Fire and Ice: Why Volcanic Activity Is Not Melting the Polar Ice Sheets https://t.co/ZJm4ygbRmJ …
— BONUS (@TheDisproof) June 11, 2023
Your 'moment of doom' for Dec. 11, 2023 ~ Yet another feedback loop.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 11, 2023
"Wildfire’s impact on frozen permafrost propels a climate feedback loop: Wildfires release methane, which accelerates climate change, which causes more frequent wildfires—and repeat."https://t.co/vQBxqdSvYd
Generally much higher temperatures than normal for much of the #Arctic over the next 10 days as we start to close out this warmest 12 month period in 125,000 years. pic.twitter.com/92M44QYsYL
— Randall Gates (@rgatess) December 11, 2023
Intelligent life on Earth but what use is intelligence and knowledge when it is completely ignored and we must push Earth into the complete hell of a Hot House Earth to please fat cat billionaires who have sold out not just humanity but life on Earth
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) December 11, 2023
There are no second chances https://t.co/LLiYk60Lon pic.twitter.com/BZB0t7WrFi
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
The fight to #StopLNG exports is turning into a massive campaign–with 230 organizations (local, national, and global) telling the Dept of Energy that they need to say #noCP2 and pause granting new export licenses.
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) December 11, 2023
Biden has a chance for a truly huge environmental win here! https://t.co/nwOp5Lzf5c
If you made $53,000 a day or $20 million per year since Jesus was born you would still not make the profit Shell made in 2022.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 11, 2023
It’s time for Shell to Stop Drilling and Start Paying for the climate damage they’ve caused. #ActOnClimate #climate #phaseoutfossilfuels #renewables pic.twitter.com/MB2kTdMAat
More from the Weather Department:
Heartbreaking https://t.co/3I9uhwaSYo
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) December 11, 2023
Newly released hi-res satellite images from Nearmap show devastation caused by this weekend’s deadly tornadoes in Tennessee. pic.twitter.com/EeukOwA1mj
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) December 11, 2023
The tornado that ripped through Clarksville, TN on Saturday afternoon was rated as an EF-3. The storm was responsible for 3 deaths and 62 injuries. Over 1000 homes were damages by the storm in Tennessee before it moved into southern Kentucky as an EF-2. pic.twitter.com/tCUYvTxXMK
— WeatherNation (@WeatherNation) December 11, 2023
People are picking up the pieces after a deadly tornado outbreak carved a path of devastation across parts of the South.@JimCantore is live in Clarksville, Tennessee: pic.twitter.com/cStCbggxa5
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) December 11, 2023
Intense moments Saturday as this tornado moved through north of Clarksville, TN near Fort Campbell, Kentucky!
— Live Storm Chasers (@LiveStormChaser) December 11, 2023
LSC Viewer: Kevin Price pic.twitter.com/7l0uijGlGV
New footage shows the destructive power of an EF3 tornado that struck Clarksville, TN on Saturday. pic.twitter.com/861u03QEdX
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 11, 2023
.@NOAA's #GOESEast 🛰️ tracked the severe thunderstorms that dropped destructive #tornadoes across parts of Tennessee and Kentucky on December 9. At least 6 people were killed and dozens more were injured across Middle Tennessee. #TennesseeTornado #TNwx pic.twitter.com/IL55CSICls
— NOAA Satellites (@NOAASatellites) December 11, 2023
All of central NC got some much needed rainfall yesterday and last night, with some places getting 3 inches of rain or more. Here's a map of radar-estimated storm total rainfall. A more detailed listing of rainfall observations will be available later this morning. #ncwx pic.twitter.com/LGacCWFmXf
— NWS Raleigh (@NWSRaleigh) December 11, 2023
Today, temperature difference in China has further expanded, with a difference of 83.1C between north and south! @extremetemps @ThierryGooseBC pic.twitter.com/OSqhOEDDYe
— Jim yang (@yangyubin1998) December 11, 2023
Working feverishly on the weather blog today as I believe we have reached a "break the glass" moment for #winter weather enthusiasts like myself here in the Eastern US. Brought out the big guns, #snow sweaters for me & my beer can for inspiration not only for me & Ol' Man Winter! pic.twitter.com/znDiNxNssA
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 11, 2023
It's beginning to look a lot like… a warm… Christmas. Long range looking here towards the holiday showing most above normal temperature ranges. Also seeing a pattern that might juice things up for the SE the end of the week early next week. Post coming next.… pic.twitter.com/JAl80n14nc
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) December 11, 2023
It was brisk day in Seattle on this date back in 1919. Seattle had several days well below freezing in the second week of December 1919. That was enough to freeze Seattle's Green Lake solid and allow a little dogsledding "commute" across the lake.
— NWS Seattle (@NWSSeattle) December 11, 2023
Image courtesy of MOHAI
#wawx pic.twitter.com/Byl4Z4JlYY
More on the Environment and Nature:
It is not only a phase out of fossil fuels, but there needs to be a phase out of deforestation.
— Glen Peters (@Peters_Glen) December 12, 2023
There are still high deforestation rates in some countries (partially balanced by regrowth). In those countries, the CO2 emissions from deforestation dwarf fossil CO2 emissions.
1/ pic.twitter.com/HTyhagP1Em
Rubber is now a worse deforester than coffee or cocoa and is closing in on palm oil for the top spot.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 11, 2023
And the damage could be about to escalate sharply, thanks to EVs, which wear out tires faster than conventional cars, thereby raising demand for rubber.https://t.co/0mUqbJdr9M
The largest beaver dam on Earth was discovered via satellite in 2007, and since then only one person has trekked into the Canadian wild to see it.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 11, 2023
The dam has formed a 17-acre lake in the middle of the forest — a testament to the beaver’s resilience.https://t.co/5DphJ1HRXU
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
A nice winter scene, 24° and 1.5" of #snow here at 3800 ft in Roan Mountain TN. @NWSMorristown @wjhl @WCYB_DavidBoyd pic.twitter.com/4TtTrFVvHb
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) December 11, 2023
🔥 Fire and ice ❄️ Mount Etna spews lava onto snowy peak. https://t.co/pKY8Al00aU pic.twitter.com/wKZBl2UD9X
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 11, 2023
WOW!! The sunset tonight here in southwest Missouri is gorgeous!! pic.twitter.com/aaWkTqMcRd
— Live Storm Chasers (@LiveStormChaser) December 10, 2023
Forests heal and delight us. Since 2012, several universities have had faculties for forest medicine, and the International Society of Nature and Forest Medicine has been strengthening studies on the therapeutic effects of forests on health since 2007.💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/R1CCXOYvPC
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 11, 2023