Leave cougars alone, Oregon legislators. Kill HB 2624 instead.

Here we go again. Another session of the Oregon legislature; another misguided attempt to undo the voter's banning (twice!) of using dogs to hunt cougars. And once again, legislation in search of a problem to justify it. House Bill 2624, introduced by Rep. Brian Clem of Salem, would let counties out of the statewide ban if voters in a county approved this. Yet nobody has ever been killed by a cougar in Oregon. Cougar complaints are declining.  Opponents called the bills unnecessary because complaints of cougar encounters are down while cougar kills are up, according to state statistics. They said…

Human-caused global warming continues as predicted

Thankfully, the influence of global warming deniers appears to be shrinking steadily. Reality has a way of weeding out those who fail to respect it. Even though this can take a while, truthful facts win out in the end. But fossil fuel industry-funded deniers, aided and abetted by anti-science media outlets like Fox News, continue to distort the disturbing truth of how humans are warming the Earth's climate much more rapidly than nature has ever done it on her/its own. For example, when I briefly channel surf onto right-wing talk radio, fairly frequently I hear that "global warming has stopped."…

Oregonian wastes paper on global warming denier Gordon Fulks

Oregon's largest newspaper, the Oregonian, is not-so-slowly sinking into irrelevancy. That's my considered opinion, at least. As noted in a recent post about a global warming story that downplayed scientific fact and played up a local meteorologist's unscientific denial of climate change, I've noted a distinct right-wing tilting in both the news and editorial sections during the past few years. After reading an absurd January 19 op-ed by Gordon Fulks, "The Changing Climate of Climate Change," that was prominently displayed by Oregonian editors, I'm even more convinced that the newspaper has joined the Republican war on science. It pains me…

Obama gets serious about climate change. Finally.

Yes. Yes. Yes.  I could hear my brain screaming those words when I came across President Obama's strong statement about global warming in his second inauguation address. We, the people, still believe that our obligations as Americans are not just to ourselves, but to all posterity. We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations. Some may still deny the overwhelming judgment of science, but none can avoid the devastating impact of raging fires, and crippling drought, and more powerful storms. The path towards sustainable energy…

Best planned community in Portland, Oregon area?

Like I said in my previous post about a planned community in Monmouth, Oregon, almost certainly someday my wife and I will want to leave behind the large house on ten rural acres that simultaneously drives us crazy and makes us happy. There's a lot of people akin to us. Baby boomers (we're in our 60's) who are in good health, have lived in a non-easy-care home for a long time, aren't interested in a traditional retirement community, and are beginning to think about where they'd like to live when "let's move" becomes not just a idle thought, but an…

Oregonian story downplays global warming science

Yesterday I emailed a reporter for the Portland Oregonian that writing a story about global warming and including a mention about how some are skeptical the planet is getting hotter is akin to ending a story about a fossil discovery with "but some scientists doubt evolution is real." That would be absurd. Evolution is a scientific truth. So is global warming. There's no doubt among the vast majority of reputable researchers in either field about these facts.  So it bothered me when the reporter, Scott Learn, tossed in this sentence near the end of a story about how a national…

Amazing photo of Mt. Everest inspires…and despairs

Here's Mt. Everest like you've never seen it before, in 3.8 billion pixels -- an amazingly detailed panoramic photograph of Everest and the surrounding region. Have a look.  This composite of 400 + images looks great on my 13 inch retina MacBook Pro. But regardless of how crisp your computer screen is, I bet you'll be as fascinated by the photograph as I was. (I've had some problems, though, getting the green hot spots to zoom correctly after being clicked.) small portion of actual photograph When I first came across the photo I spent about 20 minutes exploring the landscape. I'm now hugely more…

Global warming likely fueled the “Frankenstorm”

Yeah, global warming deniers, I know what you're going to say. "Any single weather event can't be conclusively tied to climate change." True. But we're talking odds here, likelihoods. That's how science works. Nothing is completely certain. Even the best documented law of nature could be falsified, given certain evidence. Yet when freakishly powerful storms and unusually dry/hot summers and other historically improbable weather events keep coming along, one after the other, way more frequently than has happened in decades or centuries or even thousands of years... This should make us think: global warming.  "A $20 billion, 1000-year Frankenstorm? Sandy…

Killing fewer cougars means less livestock losses. Surprising but true.

There goes another cougar management myth, the mistaken notion that the more cougars are killed, the fewer livestock are lost, and fewer encounters between cougars and humans occur.  A study conducted by Washington State University's Large Carnivore Conservation Lab brought some welcome facts to counter the often-hysterical kill them! cries from fearful ranchers and homeowners (who frequently mistake a large kitty cat for a cougar). Here's some quotes from a press release about the study. Overharvest of cougars can increase negative encounters between the predator and humans, livestock and game, according to a 13-year Washington State University research project. Based on this,…

Romney doubles down on wrecking the environment

Mitt Romney had an opportunity to reverse course on a crazy policy position: let the Earth get sicker and allow the oceans to keep rising (from global warming).  But yesterday he repeated his mocking of Obama's goal to do the opposite: heal the planet and slow the oceans' rise. Environmental activists condemned Romney's remarks on "Meet the Press." Climate scientist Michael Mann, author of "The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars," wrote in an e-mail to The Huffington Post, "It is disconcerting that a major party presidential candidate would show such wanton disregard for the health of our environment. Mr. Romney…

Romney wants our planet to get sicker and oceans to rise

There are countless reasons to vote for Barack Obama rather than Mitt Romney this November. Here's one of the great reasons: Romney wants our planet to get sicker and for the world's oceans to rise -- inundating highly populated areas, including Florida.  That's insane, but it's what he said when he mocked President Obama: President Obama promised to slow the rise of the oceans and to heal the planet. My promise is to help you and your family. How anybody could be for a diseased planet and coastal flooding is beyond me. Also, beyond Stephen Colbert, who had a great…

Another “cougar” sighting turns out to be a house cat

Cougarphobic people, of which there are quite a few here in Oregon, have an irrational fear of cougars, a.k.a. mountain lions. I wish they'd get some therapy. This would be healthy both for them and the environment, since cougars are a valuable part of the natural ecosystem. One of the symptoms of cougarphobia is seeing cougars everywhere. I enjoy the periodic news stories about someone who SAW A COUGAR!!! Which turns out to be a house cat. Recently this happened again in Lynden, Washington. A "cougar" sighted four times near the Lynden fairgrounds turned out to be a very muscular…

American Meteorological Society strengthens global warming position

You've got a choice, global warming deniers: scurry further into the shadows of unreality, or come out into the sun of truth. I recommend the latter, because there's less and less room to hide. The previously almost deserted corridors of minority scientific opinion (97% of climate experts agree humans are causing global warming) are steadily becoming even less populated. Now the American Meteorological Society has put more pressure on global warming deniers, strengthening considerably its previous position statement on the subject. Here's excerpts from the August 2012 Information Statement of the American Meteorological Society: The following is an AMS Information…

How electric cars compare to gas cars, global warming emissions-wise

Thanks to Climate Progress, I now know how our Chevy Volt stacks up against fully gasoline powered cars when it is running on electric power -- which it does most of the time, since we're getting at least forty miles per charge and we rarely drive further than that. It turns out that even with electricity being partially generated by fossil fuel sources, here in the western part of the United States a gas car would need to get 73 mpg (which none do) to equal the emissions resulting from an electric car powered on the grid. The situation will…

Global warming science shows why shipping coal to China is stupid

Plans are afoot to ship vast quantities of coal to China through ports in Oregon and Washington. Coal trains over a mile long would chug through the Columbia Gorge. Likely they'd spew polluting coal dust.

Coaltopia
Certainly all that coal, after being burned in China, would markedly further pollute the Earth's atmosphere with carbon dioxide. This is the best reason for not allowing the northwest to be China's coal shovel.

Science is solidly on the side of those who oppose the export terminals, such as the Sierra Club.

Today I listened to a podcast of Fareed Zakaria's GPS program where he interviewed Richard Muller, a physicist at the University of California who used to be a global warming skeptic, but now embraces the scientific facts.

Muller said that natural gas emits one-third of the carbon dioxide that coal does. So even though "fracking" is decried by many environmentalists, the plus side of unlocking new supplies of natural gas is the reduced greenhouse gas emissions if less coal is used.

Muller emphasized how important it is that China, India, and other developing nations cut down on their coal consumption. (I've added boldface emphasis to the transcript.)

ZAKARIA: And what do you think, you know, when you look at the issue of what to do about it, there are people who say, look, the only thing we can do is — what's called adaptation. We should rotate crops, we should build dikes, we should do those kinds of things, and then there are people who say, no, the problem is so serious, you have to actually get at the root cause and slow down the emission of CO2.

MULLER: I believe in the latter. And you — adaptation, we're very adaptable species. But adaptation is always disruptive, and it hurts. Let's see what we can do. And the biggest thing we have to do — we have to recognize that the reason the carbon dioxide is shooting up is not because of the U.S. Ours have actually been going down over the last few years as we switch from coal to natural gas.

Natural gas emits only one third the carbon dioxide that does coal. If we are going to do something about this, there are two things we have to do. One is energy conservation efficiency, that's really important. A huge amount we can do there.

Number two is we've got to switch the world, China, India, and particularly the developing world away from coal and on to natural gas. But that's a solution that a lot of my environmentalist friends don't like because they have decided they have to oppose hydraulic fracturing known as fracking. But in fact that is one of the two biggest things we can do. Energy conservation and the switch to natural gas from coal.

The rest of the interview also is well worth reading. I'll copy it in as a continuation to this post. Muller describes how he overcame his skepticism about both the accuracy of temperature measurements showing global warming, and the role of humans in causing it.

ZAKARIA: So when you look at the historical data now, is it fair to characterize the situation thus, that ever since the industrial revolution human beings have been pumping more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and that that increase in CO2 has been having the effect that we call global warming?

MULLER: That is my viewpoint on this. You can't prove it. It's always possible that something random is happening that just happens to match the carbon dioxide data. But it leads me to conclude that essentially all of this warming over the last 250, 260 years has been caused by greenhouse gases emitted by humans.

Here's the entire interview with Muller:

 

Global warming linked to extreme weather in new study

Another nail has been driven into the anti-science coffin of global warming deniers. A peer-reviewed nail. Tomorrow a study will be published by the United States National Academy of Sciences. James Hansen, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, describes the findings in "Climate change is here -- and worse than we thought." In a new analysis of the past six decades of global temperatures, which will be published Monday, my colleagues and I have revealed a stunning increase in the frequency of extremely hot summers, with deeply troubling ramifications for not only our future but also for…

Climate change skeptic admits human-caused warming is real

This is a big deal politically. A study funded by the Koch brothers, and led by a global warming skeptic, has confirmed that the planet is warming rapidly and it's because of greenhouse gases emitted by humans. CALL me a converted skeptic. Three years ago I identified problems in previous climate studies that, in my mind, threw doubt on the very existence of global warming. Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I’m now going a step…

Global warming is getting scarily real

Great way to put it, columnist Eugene Robinson: "Welcome to the rest of our lives." The extreme weather and global warming predicted by climate scientists is here. And it's only going to get worse unless the world gets off it's denying-butt and starts dealing with increasingly obvious reality. Here's a compilation of extreme weather events. More are coming. And then more after those. Believe it.   Last night I read a chilling article about global warming, "Running Wild," in a recent issue of New Scientist. Scary stuff.  Climate scientists have long warned that global warming will lead to more heatwaves, droughts…

Gas cars need to respect electric vehicle parking spaces

A few months after getting our all-electric Nissan Leaf, I was incensed to see seven of eight EV (electric vehicle) parking spaces next to chargers in Salem's Chemeketa Parkade filled with gasoline powered cars. Jim Motavalli, a writer who specializes in green car topics, wrote an interesting article on this subject: "Caught on tape! Gas cars parking in electric vehicle spots." Not surprisingly, the part I found most interesting was his mention of me. I feel the pain of EV owners who can’t charge because somebody took their space. Brian Hines took his newly acquired electric blue Nissan Leaf to…

Pacific Northwest spared drought in most of U.S.

Well, here's something to cheer up Oregonians who are waiting for a dry, warm summer to arrive. (As I write this it's 61 degrees at 2 pm, and it's been sprinkling off and on today; June has been unusually wet this year.) The map shows how much additional precipitation is needed to get a long term drought index back to what I assume is only mildly droughtiness, minus 0.5. Oregon, Washington, and Idaho is the main non-drought afflicted region in the United States. Parts or all of some other northern states also are OK, rain-wise. But most of the midwest…