Monday, May 06, 2019

  • Global glacier mass loss 1961–2016
  • Earth's glaciers lost 9 trillion tons of ice. That's the weight of 27 billion 747s.
  • The map below, developed by the European Space Agency, illustrates where this ice loss has occurred. Alaska leads the race with over 3019 gigatons lost in total, or 816 million 747s.


The world's total ice loss between 1961 and 2016.IMAGE: EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY / ADAPTED FROM ZEMP ET AL. (2019) NATURE / DATA COURTESY OF WORLD GLACIER MONITORING SERVICE
  • Released 08/04/2019 5:00 pm
  • Copyright ESA, adapted from Zemp et al. (2019) Nature, and data courtesy of World Glacier Monitoring Service
  • Description paper published in Nature describes how an international team led by the University of Zurich in Switzerland used classical glaciological field observations combined with a wealth of information from various satellite missions to painstakingly calculate how much ice has been lost from and gained by 19 different glacierized regions around the world. They reveal that 9625 gigatonnes of ice was lost from 1961 to 2016, raising sea level by 27 mm.
  • BY MARK KAUFMAN
    APR 08, 2019

  • Nine trillion metric tons. 
    That's how much ice Earth's glaciers lost in the 55 years between 1961 and 2016. An international team of scientists used satellite and direct field observations to conclude that Earth's glaciers have melted such a profound sum of ice in the last half-century. They published their report Monday in the journal Nature.  

  • If one were to assume an average weight of 735,000 pounds for a 747 airliner (not the colossal Alaskan bear), that comes out to around 27 billion 747s worth of ice lost over this period. 

  • This grand figure also means the planet is now losing, on average, 335 billion metric tons of ice per year. (For reference, there are 2 trillion pounds of ice in just 1 billion tons.)
    "In other words, every single year we are losing about three times the volume of all ice stored in the European Alps, and this accounts for around 30 percent of the current rate of sea-level rise," Michael Zemp, director of the World Glacier Monitoring Service at the University of Zurich and lead author of the research, said in a statement. 
  •  The world's total ice loss between 1961 and 2016.
  • The pronounced melting in Alaska is little surprise. The Arctic is the fastest warming region on Earth, warming two to three times faster than the rest of the globe. 
    Overall, the over 9 trillion metric tons of melted ice equates to a little over an inch of sea level rise, or 27 millimeters, over the 55-year period. 

  • But, critically, it's not just melting glaciers that are driving sea level rise, which has raised sea levels by around 9 inches along portions of the East Coast in the last century. The ocean is absorbing vast quantities of heat, and is expanding. Specifically, the absorbent oceans soak up over 90 percent of the heat trapped by human-generated greenhouse gas emissions. 

  • What's more, the pace of melt is expected to pick up as the planet continues on its accelerated warming trend — stoked by the highest levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide in millions of years.

  • Projections of sea level rise by century's end are between two and three feet, though NASA scientists admit this is almost certainly a "conservative estimate." In more extreme scenarios, the number could be as much a six feet by 2100. 
  •  
    There is only one region of the world, southwest Asia, that has gained some ice mass since the 1960s. But its neighbor, southeast Asia, lost a similar amount of ice, canceling these fleeting gains. 

  • Overall, the picture is clear. Greenland is in hot water. Ice loss in the Antarctic is picking up steam. The vast Himalayan glaciers have a dire future, at best. And you don't need to be a scientist employing sophisticated satellite technology to see what's transpiring on Earth. 
     Animation showing how the distribution over Earth's surface of annual average temperature anomalies has been shifting due to global warming since 1850. #GlobalWarming #ClimateChange

  • Alaska's famous Mendenhall Glacier is vanishing in front of the public's eyes. In 1850, there were an estimated 150 sizable glaciers in what is now Glacier National Park. Today, there are 26 glaciers large enough to be counted.   

  • The reason for such wide-scale planetary change is not due to the whims of weather, natural variation, volcanoes, or other factors climate scientists have considered for decades.
    "We know it's caused by global warming and human emissions of these greenhouse gases," NASA oceanographer Josh Willis, who has been watching Greenland melt into the sea, told Mashable. "The basic physics of the warming planet have been known for over a century."

Sunday, May 05, 2019

THIS IS NOT THE CANADIAN GARBAGE THAT HAS BEEN IN THE PHILIPPINES HARBOUR FOR FIVE YEARS, THAT IS IN A SHIP STILL




Canadian garbage wrongly dumped in the Philippines is coming home
Canada has made an offer to the Philippines to repatriate six dozen shipping containers full of rotting garbage that were erroneously shipped there six years ago

Canada makes formal offer to bring home trash that Philippines threatened ‘war’ over
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte berated Canada on Tuesday in a long-running dispute over the 100 shipping containers of garbage exported to the ...

Canada violated international law by dumping garbage in the Philippines: lawyers
Canada broke international rules when it dumped more than 100 shipping containers of garbage disguised as plastics for recycling into the Philippines six years ...



Inside the global fight over a 2500-ton heap of garbage
Rodrigo Duterte, president of the Philippines, made global headlines last week when he threatened to “declare war” on Canada over some 2500 tons of trash.
Popular Science




You can’t preach environment while ignoring your own trash
Trudeau must accept what his environment minister preaches to the rest of us common folk on a daily basis: pollution isn't free anymore, Scott Thompson says.



Alberta’s Filipino community says president’s trash-related threat is rubbish
EDMONTON—Members of the Filipino community in Alberta are wrinkling their noses over the international spat caused by dozens of containers of Canadian ...
Toronto Star



A Timeline Of The Canada-Philippines Trash War Before Duterte's Threats
The countries have been going back and forth for nearly six years about Canadian trash abandoned in.




Feast your eyes on this spectacular Hubble photo of a spiral galaxy

The Hubble telescope has captured a dazzling new photograph of a spiral galaxy, NGC 2903. 

 


Fake mews? Confusion over cat at Thai king's coronation ceremony



A SCHRODINGER'S CAT CONUNDRUM; IS THE CAT REAL OR FAKE 


WORLD NEWS
MAY 5, 2019 




BANGKOK (Reuters) - Animal lovers in Thailand were thrown into confusion on Sunday over whether a Siamese cat presented to the newly crowned Thai king and his queen was a living feline - or not.

Royal officials place a chicken and a cat next to the bed of Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn during the ceremony of Assumption of the Royal Residence inside the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand, May 4, 2019. Picture taken May 4, 2019. The Committee on Public Relations of the Coronation of King Rama X via REUTERS

Thailand is holding three days of coronation events for King Maha Vajiralongkorn, 66, who was officially crowned on Saturday in elaborate ceremonies.

It is tradition at royal coronations to present a cat - as well as several symbolic household items - to a new monarch as part of the private Assumption of the Royal Residence blessing ceremony, which was held on Saturday at the Chakrabat Biman residence.

Cats are considered lucky by many Thais and the tradition of giving one as a housewarming gift signifies a stable home.

On Sunday morning, several Thai media outlets carried a photo of two uniformed palace officials next to what appeared to be a docile Siamese cat and a fluffy white rooster. The image, distributed by the Bureau of the Royal Household, was not captioned.

But by afternoon, the Thai-language news site Manager was reporting that the palace had used a “cat doll” instead of a live cat.


A palace official, contacted by Reuters, said: “The royal ceremony required the use of a rooster and a cat. It should not be the focus whether the animals were real or not, but instead the ritual itself is important.”

Reuters was unable to independently confirm whether live animals were used in the ceremony or the photograph


A Facebook page Maewthai.com - “ThaiCat.com” - posted a copy of the palace photo with a message from a well-known cat breeder saying he originally had been asked to select two gentle male Siamese cats for the ceremony but his cats were ultimately not used.

“I feel grateful for His Majesty’s kindness for feeling compassionate about the cats, fearing that the animal would suffer from waiting too long during ceremonies, so the cats were not used,” said the breeder, whose post did not identify him by name.

The breeder did not directly address whether the cat in the palace photo was a doll.

That ambiguity confused some Thais who posted comments online.

“So is it real or fake cat?” a Facebook user called Niphawan Rakpontee asked.

Another user named Krittaya Parichayanan said “It’s a real cat isn’t it?”

“This is likely a stuffed cat,” user Prapaporn Tongprasan said.


Thailand has strict lese majeste laws carrying prison sentences of up to 15 years for insulting the king, queen or the heir-apparent.

Historical images of the 1926 coronation of King Rama VII, the current monarch’s great uncle, show a group photo with female members of the royal family holding both a Siamese cat - a breed that originated in Thailand - as well as a rooster.

The tradition of using cats in royal household ceremonies dates back centuries, said historian and writer Sujane Kanparit.


“The meaning of having a cat is that it brings warmth to the household. It is an old court tradition that has appeared in the royal chronicles,” he told Reuters.

Asked if the cat in the palace photo was alive or a doll, Sujane said: “I have no idea.”
Writing by Kay Johnson; Editing by Frances Kerry