The environment in the news monday, 26 May 2008


G8 greenhouse gases down in 2006, only Russia up



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G8 greenhouse gases down in 2006, only Russia up


By Alister Doyle and Gerard Wynn

Reuters


Friday May 23, 2008

OSLO/LONDON (Reuters) - Greenhouse gas emissions by all the Group of Eight industrial nations except Russia fell in 2006 in the broadest dip since the world started trying to slow climate change in 1990, a Reuters survey showed on Friday.

Rising oil prices, some measures to curb global warming and a milder winter in the United States in 2006 that depressed energy demand for heating all contributed to an overall 0.6 percent dip in G8 emissions in 2006 from 2005.

"It is an encouraging sign that emissions decreased in 2006 in some major developed economies," said Michael Raupach, leader of the Earth Observation Centre in Canberra, Australia.

"However, we have scarcely begun," he said, adding that the world would need far tougher action to stabilize emissions at levels to avert "dangerous" climate changes of ever more heatwaves, food shortages, floods, droughts and rising seas.

Emissions by the United States, Japan, Germany, Canada, France, Britain, and Italy were all down in 2006 -- by between 2.5 percent for France and just 0.02 percent for Germany.

Russia's emissions, which fell sharply after the collapse of the Soviet Union's smokestack industries, went against the trend with a gain of 3.1 percent in line with strong economic growth.

Emissions by so many nations in the G8 have not previously fallen together any year since 1990, the U.N. benchmark for efforts to combat climate change including the Kyoto Protocol.

Overall, emissions by the G8 fell to 14.04 billion tonnes in 2006 from 14.12 billion in 2005, according to a Reuters calculations based on submissions to the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat.

G8 environment ministers meet in Kobe, Japan, from May 24-26 to prepare a July summit meant to map out future actions to curb warming.

MILD WINTER

Some experts said the 0.6 percent decline was not a sign that G8 nations were really getting to grips with the problem.

"One would expect higher oil prices to reduce demand for oil ... and a relatively mild winter would reduce power consumption and hence emissions from power stations," said Knut Alfsen, research director of the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo.

"Unfortunately, it is difficult to discover policy actions in any of these countries that would explain the reduced emissions," he said. "I'm fairly pessimistic with regard to whether the countries are 'starting to get to grips' with the climate change challenge."

He said it would be interesting to see if heightened awareness among many people about climate change in 2007, linked to factors such as a movie by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and reports by the U.N. Climate Panel, would curb emissions.

Gore's documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth", looks at scientific evidence on the causes and likely impact of a warming world.

"It's hard to generalize across all the economies," said Jennifer Morgan, a director of the E3G think-tank in London.

"In the United States it doesn't have a lot to do with climate factors, it has more to do with other factors such as the winter weather," she said. The United States is outside the Kyoto Protocol, embraced by all other G8 nations.

Still, the fall in emissions came despite 2006 economic growth of an average of 3.0 percent for advanced economies, estimated by the International Monetary Fund. That may mark progress at least in decoupling emissions from growth.

Overall, G8 emissions were down 2.6 percent since 1990.

But almost of that overall decline was due to a sharp fall in Russian emissions after the break-up of the Soviet Union. Emissions overall in the other seven nations are up, led by Canada, the United States and Italy.

(Editing by Richard Balmforth)

© Thomson Reuters 2008.

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSL2343063320080523?feedType=RSS&feedName=environmentNews


U.S. government sees active Atlantic hurricane season


By Christopher Doering

Reuters


Thursday May 22, 2008 2

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 2008 Atlantic hurricane season will be active with 12 to 16 named storms, six to nine of which are expected to become hurricanes, the U.S. government's top climate agency predicted on Thursday.

Of the six to nine hurricanes forecast for the season starting June 1, two to five will be major ones of Category 3 or higher with winds above 110 miles per hour, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in its annual preseason forecast.

After several years where the government forecast an active hurricane season would impact the United States, only to see little or no activity, NOAA said its outlook this year indicates a 60 to 70 percent chance of its forecast occurring.

"There is uncertainty in these outlooks," said Gerry Bell, lead seasonal hurricane forecaster at NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.

The hurricane season officially starts on June 1 and typically peaks between late August and mid-October.

An average Atlantic hurricane season brings 11 tropical storms, of which six reach hurricane wind speed of 74 mph (119 kph), including two major hurricanes, NOAA said.

NOAA said the La Nina phenomenon in the eastern Pacific is fading, but its impact would be felt for some time.

La Nina is an unusual cooling of Pacific Ocean surface temperatures that can trigger widespread changes in weather around the world.

It generally results in conditions that favor hurricanes in the Atlantic while its opposite effect, El Nino, generates wind shear that makes it difficult for hurricanes to stay together.

The United States has made it through largely unscathed during the last two years despite predictions for active seasons. During the 2007 hurricane season only one minor storm reached the United States a year after the country escaped any impact.

U.S. weather forecasters, including private and university researchers, also have predicted that 2008 will be an active hurricane season.

(Reporting by Christopher Doering, editing by Jackie Frank)

© Thomson Reuters 2008.

http://www.reuters.com/articlePrint?articleId=USWBT00904020080522



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