2014 had the record for the warmest year ever but its hold on that title will be short-lived since it looks like 2015 is going to eclipse it quite easily. In the UK, the British gambling firm Ladbrokes has for the first time ever stopped offering bets on a white Christmas, instead offering bets on record temperatures instead.
This graph pretty much tells the story.
“Each month along each trace represents the year-to-date average temperature,” according to the NCEI analysis. “In other words, the January value is the January average temperature, the February value is the average of both January and February, and so on.”
It is true that this is an El Nino year that brings unusually warm weather but what has been extraordinary is how easily this year has beaten every other hottest years, and also how so many of the warmest years on record have been in just the last decade.
The Paris summit to deal with this problem has ended with a deal being reached. An agreement of this complexity is hard for outsiders to get a handle on. I am not in a position to evaluate the merits of the deal and so am dependent on the views of others. While the reviews have been mixed, the general impression I get is that there seems to be a cautious sense of optimism that, unlike the 2009 Copenhagen summit, this one has produced a plan that may lay the foundation for real progress in the future.
This article looks at the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of the deal that was reached.
There have been disagreements about the value of what was achieved.
As many analysts have pointed out, the plans—known as nationally determined contributions, or N.D.C.s—are, collectively, not nearly enough to avert catastrophic climate change. Nor are they necessarily going to be realized. The U.S.’s N.D.C., for instance, relies on power-plant regulations recently finalized by the Obama Administration. Should a Republican be elected president next year, it’s quite possible the rules will be revoked. These and other weaknesses prompted James Hansen, the climate scientist sometimes called the father of global warming, to label the accord a sham.
“It’s just worthless words,” he told the Guardian. “There is no action, just promises.” Writing in the Times, Bill McKibben, the author and climate activist, described the accord as “designed for about 1995,” rather than for 2015, or, if you prefer, for 2020, which is when the pact is supposed to take effect.
Most other commentators were far more upbeat, however. Jeff Sachs, director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, called the agreement is “a diplomatic triumph” and “an act of true global co-operation.” Narendra Modi, India’s Prime Minister, said, via Twitter, “Climate justice has won & we are all working towards a greener future.” Giza Gaspar Martins, chairman of the bloc known as the Least Developed Countries, described it as “the best outcome we could have hoped for.”
Though it may seem impossible, both groups, those who say Paris is just words and those who call it a triumph, are probably right. In order to reach an agreement in Paris—and a great deal of credit for the final text belongs to the French and their determination to make the meeting a success—delegates in Le Bourget decided, in effect, to sacrifice coherence for comity. This means that the pact is not a realizable blueprint for the future but, rather, a collection of aspirations, some of them contradictory.
The main complaint was that without penalties for non-achievement of target goals for carbon reduction, the agreements would be unenforceable. Another criticism was that even if those goals were met, the target of limiting warming to just a 2oC rise may not be achieved and that even that target is not ambitious enough and we really needed to set the limit at 1.5oC, especially for those from island nations and others with a lot of low-lying areas.
One positive step is the transparency that has been put in place. Each country has to periodically release to the public what it plans to do and what it has achieved in terms of carbon reduction and it is hoped that this will shame them into actually doing something.
Another positive sign is that pretty much the whole world has agreed that climate change is a serious problem that must be addressed. The Republican party in the US is almost alone in being denialists. Up to now, they have hidden some of their objections behind claims that China was not doing anything and so why should the US. But this time China is also on board with pledges to cut carbon emissions so they will lose that excuse. Not that this will stop their denialism.
StevoR says
Yes. Great post here Mano Singham.
Personally, we’ve just had a record breaking December heatwave here in my home town.
Four days in a row over forty degrees Celsius.
Port Augusta, a town not too far to my north was the hottest town on the planet just last week with temperatures hitting 47.2 Celsius
http://www.pressreader.com/australia/sunday-mail/20151220/281479275371792/TextView
Or 117 degrees Fahrenheit whilst on that day my home city reached 43.2 or 109.76 F.
Oh and there’s this to look forward to over the next few days :
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-12-23/sa-in-for-worst-christmas-day-fire-conditions-in-30-years/7050764
After I start work early tomorrow because I’m working outside in 39 degree Celsius (102 F) heat.
After struggling to keep my garden of native plants alive after a poor nights sleep by spending hours soaking the ground in water as rainfall is well below average.
So, damn right, I take Denialist bullshit personally.
Oh & don’t tell me that Adelaide and Australia generally is always hot in summer. That we always fear bushfires and swelter, scorch and wilt in extreme heat.
Gee, I know. I have, after all, lived here for most of my life. So yeah. I know we get hot and I also can durn well recognise a trend and unusual conditions for my location when I feel them on my skin and experience them more often and worse than I ever have before thankyou.
When we have our longest heatwave on record one year and the hottest the next and now the earliest now all in very quick succession; how stupid do you have to be to think that’s just purely coincidence especially given all of, well, the science?
StevoR says
See : https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/angry-summer
Just last summer.
This one, so far, sucks even more to live through.
StevoR says
PS. See :
http://www.metric-conversions.org/temperature/celsius-to-fahrenheit.htm
If that helps.
Metric works much better -for me anyway. Then again I ‘spose you could argue a good case for using degrees Kelvin over both. Though it would probably make the weather reports fractionally longer ..
hannahs dad says
Greetings StevoR,
from a person who was born in Whyalla, has lived in Pt. Augusta and Adelaide and is currently living on a property on the River Murray where we had 4 days last week in the upper parts of the range of 40-45 degrees celsius and where temperatures have trended up over the last 2 decades [my mathematical brother in law did a trend line for a BOM station 2 kms to the east of us] and rainfall has decreased by about 10% over the same period [he also did rainfall].
We are expecting 40 degrees here today, and christmas, that’s about 104 F for those unused to celsius.
“So, damn right, I take Denialist bullshit personally.”
Yeah. me too -- and so do my dogs.
Holms says
I am just blown away by the number of South Stralians reading this blog.
tbrandt says
For the next decade or two we’ll probably be hearing about how there has been no warming since 2015.
Lofty says
Why? it’s a hot bed of reason, after all. (Waves at Holms from the top of a small mountain.)
Extreme fire weather with high winds forecast for xmas day, mow there’s a present to die for.
John Morales says
Lofty,
Section 105F of the Fire and Emergency Services Act, 2005.
StevoR says
@4. hannahs dad : Thanks for that -- there are certainly plenty of places in my state that are hotter than Adelaide -- I’m lucky ebnough tobe living in the Adelaide hills so yeah.
Meanwhile just coz things aren’t grim enough already :
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-12-24/known-firebugs-on-sa-police-radar-over-christmas-hot-spell/7051606
All I want for Xmas is for it to be autumn again already. Don’t know that I’ll get that wish. Well ‘spose it depends how drunk I get this year!
Lofty says
All Hail Tpyos and yes, I’ve “nowed” the long grass a month earlier than usual.
Holms says
Lofty, as in Mount? I’ve actually been working with some of the fire recovery efforts up in the hills lately, more up One Tree Hill / Kersbrook way though.
WMDKitty -- Survivor says
@ Loftyand anyone else in the area
Stay safe!
Lofty says
WMDKitty, thanks, the cat carriers, the escape route, the whopping great concrete water tank and fire sprinkler system are all ready, but it’s been not too bad yet around Mt Lofty and districts. But further south a massive fire along the Great Ocean Road in Victoria burnt down 116 houses on xmas day, fortunately with no loss of life. It’s going to be a busy summer for the fire brigades.