Tuvalu and many other South Pacific Islands are not …...2010/06/02  · fuel use and otherwise...

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Tuvalu and many other South Pacific Islands are not sinking, claims they are due to global warming driven sea level rise are opportunistic Posted on June 2, 2010 by Anthony Watts Nils Axel Morner and Don Easterbrook told them so . So did Willis , who had some very similar ideas. Despite popular opinion and calls to action, the Maldives are not being overrun by sea level rise Posted on March 19, 2009 by Anthony Watts When somebody mentions “Maldives”, the image above of a tropical paradise often springs to mind. Andy Revkin wrote a story recently about the Maldives on his NYT Dot Earth blog that provoked quite an email exchange that I was privy to today. Here are some highlights. First the article: Maldives Seeks Carbon Neutrality by 2020 By Andrew C. Revkin March 16, 2009, 8:39 am

Transcript of Tuvalu and many other South Pacific Islands are not …...2010/06/02  · fuel use and otherwise...

Page 1: Tuvalu and many other South Pacific Islands are not …...2010/06/02  · fuel use and otherwise trim the country’s climate footprint from Chris Goodall and Mark Lynas, British environmentalists

Tuvalu and many other South Pacific Islands are not sinking, claims they are due to global warming driven sea level rise are opportunistic Posted on June 2, 2010 by Anthony Watts

Nils Axel Morner and Don Easterbrook told them so. So did Willis, who had some very

similar ideas.

Despite popular opinion and calls to action, the Maldives are not being overrun by sea level rise Posted on March 19, 2009 by Anthony Watts

When somebody mentions “Maldives”, the image above of a tropical paradise often

springs to mind. Andy Revkin wrote a story recently about the Maldives on his NYT Dot

Earth blog that provoked quite an email exchange that I was privy to today. Here are

some highlights. First the article:

Maldives Seeks Carbon Neutrality by 2020

By Andrew C. Revkin March 16, 2009, 8:39 am

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No spot in the Maldives is more than six feet above sea level. (Click here for a narrated

slide show describing this reporter’s first visit to the Maldives, in 1980.)

The Maldives, a strand of coral atolls south of India, is just about the most tenuous

country on Earth. No patch of land in the island chain, where the population has risen

from 200,000 to 400,000 in the last 25 years, is more than six feet or so above sea level.

Even modest projections for a rise in sea level from global warming would increase

flooding from storm surges. A higher rise could render hundreds of islands

uninhabitable.

That’s why the country has paid particularly close attention, since the early days of

discussion of the issue, to scientists who warn of a growing human influence on climate

and sea levels. On Sunday, the new president of the island nation, Mohamed Nasheed,

prodded the world to get serious about cutting emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse

gases by pledging, in a short piece in England’s Observer newspaper, to make the

Maldives the first carbon-neutral country within a decade:

Many politicians’ response to the looming catastrophe, however, beggars belief. Playing

a reckless game of chicken with Mother Nature, they prefer to deny, squabble and

procrastinate rather than heed the words of those who know best…. Spearheaded by a

switch from oil to 100% renewable energy production within a decade, the Maldives will

no longer be a net contributor to greenhouse gas emissions.

The announcement was made in the Maldives, but synchronized with the London

premiere of ” The Age of Stupid,” a new film on global warming and oil that is a mix of

documentary, dramatization and animation. (I haven’t seen it yet, but the description

reminds me of the work of Randy Olson, particularly his mock documentary ” Sizzle.”)

Officials in the Maldives made the decision after soliciting a report on how to cut fossil

fuel use and otherwise trim the country’s climate footprint from Chris Goodall and Mark

Lynas, British environmentalists and authors of books on energy and climate.

The proposal recommended a mix of wind turbines, rooftop photovoltaic panels and a

backup power plant that burns coconut husks (coconut is a substantial export), among

other steps. The estimated cost: about $1.1 billion over 10 years. But the new energy

options could pay off in the long run by greatly reducing the country’s reliance on

imported oil, the report concluded.

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The early concern about global warming by officials in the Maldives was visible as far

back as 1988, as shown in this vignette from my first (and long out of print) book on

climate, “Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast”:

Perhaps the most straightforward projections of what a greenhouse future will bring in

coming decades are those related to rising seas. A foot-and-a-half rise doesn’t sound like

much – unless you live in a place that just barely pokes above the ocean. I learned this

when I went to Toronto in 1988 to report on the First International Conference on the

Changing Atmosphere. Most of the discussions centered on devising strategies to curb

emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases from automobiles, power

plants, and the burning of tropical forests. Among those in attendance was Hussein

Manikfan, who holds the title Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary

Permanent Representative to the United Nations from the republic of Maldives.

At first it seemed odd to find a representative from the Maldives at the meeting. The

country, a sprinkling of 1,190 coral islets in the Indian Ocean southwest of Sri Lanka,

has no tropical forests, hardly any automobiles, and little industry beyond the canning

of bonito. I spoke for a while with Manikfan. Why was he in Toronto? “To find out how

much longer my country will exist,” was his simple reply.

Manikfan is worried because few of the islands have any point that is more than six feet

above sea level. Even now, many of the atolls are awash during strong storms. The fear

is that Manikfan’s nation – with a tradition of independence dating back thousands of

years and its own language and alphabet – might have to be abandoned altogether, as if

it were a slowly sinking ship.

Now for the geographically challenged, the map:

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Dr. Don Easterbrook responded today to Andy Revkin with this email, cc:d to me

Andy,

I just read your article on sea level alarm in the Maldives. You may not be aware of a study there by Nils-Axel Morner, a Swedish sea level expert (former president of the INQUA Commission of Sea Level Changes and Coastal Evolution). Attached is photographic evidence by Morner that sea level in the Maldives is not rising relative to the coasts but has indeed fallen! Global sea level has been rising at a rate of about a foot per century but the Maldives are either rising or subject to a local sea level anomaly related to ocean currents and evaporation rates. Thus, the ‘poster child’ of Gore’s sea level alarm is invalid.

Don

The photographs he attached are interesting to say the least, click for larger images:

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And soon others were jumping in. Tom Harris quoted a study from Nils-Axel Mörner

and provided a plot from Nils-Axel Mörner’s study of sea level using C14 isotope dating.

Harris wrote:

While Andrew does not personally say that sea level rise will swamp the Maldives soon, he implies he

agrees with the scenario by including nothing at all to counter the validity of the Maldivian announcement.

I suggest Andrew read about Morner’s work and get an expansion of the below misleading piece

published right away. You can download (for the next 7 days) one of Dr. Morner’s most recent papers on

the topic at http://tinyurl.com/dhz6gk . Note the below graph from that report, especially.

Note also the Feb 2009 report of the SWEDISH SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES NETWORK at Lund U (a large,

respected and very old school in Sweden) at http://www.sasnet.lu.se/maldives09.html, in which they

conclude, “In June 2004, Prof. Mörner published his research results in an article titled ”The Maldives

Project: a future free from sea-level flooding” in the Contemporary South Asia magazine. However, the

Maldivian government did not react positively to these findings since they went against the official policy,

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even though the facts presented seem to be beyond dispute and are confirmed in private by individual

Maldivian researchers.” I have submitted a letter to the editor to the NYT on this and I’ll let people know if

it is published.

Andy Revkin responded with:

Has anyone on this list assessed this Indian Ocean / Pacific sea level study —

http://bit.ly/IndianOceanSeaLevel — which seems to challenge Morner’s analysis?

To which Nils-Axel Mörner replied:

The paper by Church et al. represent desk-work at the computers. Tide gauges have to be treated with

care. There are pitfalls both with respect to stability (compaction, etc) and cyclic patterns (disqualifying

regressionline approaches).

Our Mildives story is based on multiple criteria: off-shore, on-shore, lagoonal, back-shore, swamp

environment.

Ditailed morphology (in different environmental settings) is combined with stratigraphy and biological

index + numerous C14-dates.

Also, our team of researchers is very strong.

Later Dr. Vincent Gray weighed in:

Have you heard of the Australian study on 12 Pacific islands, some of them mentioned by Church? They

used much more reliable equipment than the others. They claimed an upward trend but this was done by

the dishonest use of a linear regression which made use of the temporary depression on all the records

caused by the 1988 hurricane. If you look at the actual records in their report (attached) and ignore this

temporary event you will find that there was no change for the last sixteen years. The website of the

Australian Bureau of meteorology has individual and summarizing reports on this project at

http://www.bom.gov.au/pacificsealevel/

Finally Don Easterbrook comes full circle:

The Geology speaks for itself!

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As Morner points out, Church,, White, and Hunter applied a number of regional

‘corrections’ to the basic tide gauge record and calculated averages of a large region to

arrive at their conclusion that sea level was rising in the Maldives. This is akin to putting

one foot in a bed of hot coals and the other in a bucket of ice, averaging the temperature,

and concluding that you should be quite comfortable! Putting aside the arguments

around tide gauge levels, the geologic evidence appears to be indisputable and indicates

conclusively that the sea levels at the sites shown in Morners paper cannot be

submerging. You’re a smart guy–look at the geologic evidence in the two attached

photos and judge for yourself.

Figure 1 shows a post-1970 wave-cut notch eroded into the pre-1970 shore platform.

You cannot do that with a submerging coastline. (The platform should be under water if

the island is submerging, not being eroded at a lower level). This is a classic example of

an emergent shoreline, the kind you can see in any geologic textbook.

Figure 2 shows the present high tide line, the 1970 shoreline, and a pre-1970 shoreline.

If the island has been submerging since 1970, as contended by Church,, White, and

Hunter, the present high tide line should be above the 1970 shoreline, not below it!

Any regional analysis of average sea level changes cannot trump the geologic evidence

at the two sites shown. The geologic evidence is site specific, just like each foot in the

coals and ice bucket. The average is meaningless.

So it boils down to this: Who would you rather believe? People doing studies on-site and

gathering photographic evidence that shows clear geologic actions of lowered sea levels

on the islands, or somebody sitting in an office analyzing and doing regressions on tide

gauge data when they’ve never even done and checking on the quality control of the

gauges themselves? Here’s one from Tasmania from this CSIRO report:

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The tide gauge and GPS installation at Burnie (NW Tasmania). The tide gauge has been running since 1992 and has

been used for absolute calibration studies on the TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason-1 satellite altimeters

I’m sure that old algae covered dock is stable enough to use for “calibration”. Surely no

possibility of shifting, or sinking there.

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Here’s a somewhat better tide gauge placement of a gauge in the Adriatic sea.

The description reads:

The tide gauge Luka Koper is located in northern part of Adriatic in Koper bay at the

industrial pier grounded to the bottom with piles.

Here’s one in Alaska:

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Historic tidal gauge near Anchorage, indicating the extreme tidal range possible along fiords in Southeast and South-

central Alaska. (NOAA/NOS Tides and Currents)

Here’s another, at Cape Ferguson in Australia, from BOM:

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A tide gauge at Cape Ferguson, near Townsville - part of the national baseline tide gauge network (see inset map).

IMHO The idea that a dock (or piling) is a long term stable measurement platform is

simply ludicrous. Piles sink, structures decay, boats whack them, pounding wave action

loosens their grip. One feature missing from all these old style tide gauges is any way to

reference the long term level of the gauge itself. In the era of GPS we can start doing

this, but in the years past, how much is from simple sinking of the pilings over time?

When you are looking for millimeters per year, such things become significant.

Gee, and I thought weather station measurement issues were bad. Scientists really do

need to get out more. Perhaps the next IPCC conference can be in the Maldives instead

of Bali. I volunteer to run beach tours to show water level notches. – Anthony