Open Thread Sunday 12-27-15

Good morning 99percenters!
Morning climate/weather dump and music by the late, great Vassar Clements.

Texas Storms, Tornadoes Leave at Least 11 Dead Around Dallas Area

A new line of storms was barreling through Texas on Sunday as officials worked to assess damage from a series of tornadoes and severe weather which left at least 11 people dead overnight.

Authorities said the full extent of the damage from Saturday's spate of storms was not yet known — but warned the region should get ready for another hit. Forecasters warned of more "severe" weather and heavy rain.


The same storm system that spawned the deadly twisters in the Dallas area was expected to leave up to 16 inches of snow in west Texas through Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

The same storm system that spawned the deadly twisters in the Dallas area was expected to leave up to 16 inches of snow in west Texas through Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

Texas tornadoes: Eleven killed in Dallas area

Eleven people are reported to have been killed in tornadoes in Texas, raising the death toll to 29 in a week of storms across several US states.

At least eight people died in Garland, near Dallas, five of them when their cars were blown off a motorway. Three bodies were found in other towns.

Officials also say west Texas and New Mexico could suffer major blizzards, bringing up to 16in (41cm) of snow.

The storms across the South have been unusually powerful for winter.

Reports from Texas said churches were destroyed, cars mangled and trees toppled across a 64km (20 mile) zone from south of Dallas up to suburbs in the north-east.

Glacial Melt Causing Subtle Slowing of Earth’s Rotation

The melting of glaciers caused by the world's rising temperatures appears to be causing a slight slowing of the Earth's rotation in another illustration of the far-reaching impact of global climate change, a study in the journal of Science Advances said.

The driving force behind the modest but discernible changes in the Earth's rotation measured by satellites and astronomical methods is a global sea level rise fueled by an influx of meltwater into the oceans from glaciers, the researchers said.

"Because glaciers are at high latitudes, when they melt they redistribute water from these high latitudes towards lower latitudes, and like a figure skater who moves his or her arms away from their body, this acts to slow the rotation rate of the Earth," Harvard University geophysicist Jerry Mitrovica said.

The movement of ice and meltwater is also causing a slight migration of the Earth's axis, or north pole, in a phenomenon known as "polar wander," the researchers said.

Russia Warming Over Two Times Faster Than Rest of Planet
Country's environment ministry issues climate change warning in annual report

Russia is warming at 2.5 times the global average and faces a dramatic rise in related threats—from floods to fires—the country's Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection revealed Friday in its annual report.

"Growth of average temperatures in Russia in 1976-2014 was 0.42 degrees Celsius in 10 years, which is 2.5 times more than growth of global temperatures on Earth for the same period—0.17 degrees Celsius in 10 years," the ministry wrote, according to media reports.

"Climate change leads to growth of dangerous meteorological phenomena," the ministry continued, citing dramatic floods and severe forest fires last year. According to the agency's calculations, Russia faced 569 events in 2014—marking the greatest number since the ministry began keeping track.

The report charts temperature fluctuations affecting the climate, leading to ice melting, sea levels rising, floods, droughts and other phenomena.

There's A Way to Save Our Future. So Why Aren't More People Talking About It?
Transitioning to organic regenerative agriculture practices 'offers the best, and perhaps our only, hope for averting a global warming disaster.'

A critical tool in the fight against global warming is right below our feet.

So where is this "shovel-ready solution" amid all the talk of climate fixes in the wake of the COP21 summit in Paris?

An Associated Press article published Thursday, for example, professes to outline "methods to achieve negative emissions," wherein humans remove more greenhouse gases from the atmosphere than they put in it. The AP quotes scientists who say "it's clear" that the goals laid out in Paris "cannot be reached without negative emissions in the future, because the atmosphere is filling up with greenhouse gases so fast that it may already be too late to keep the temperature rise below 1.5 degrees C."

Among the solutions mentioned in the piece: "fertilizing the oceans with iron to make them absorb more carbon," "planting more forests," and "carbon capture technologies."

Rich white people are ruining the planet: How the donor class prevents action on climate change
Research indicates wealthy white Republicans are less likely to support policy proposals to reduce carbon emissions

Although the Paris Climate Deal certainly represents a step forward for the international community, there are still many potential pitfalls to addressing climate change. New data suggest that the overwhelmingly white donor class may be one such obstacle.

Recently, political scientist Brian Schaffner and I wrote a piece in Mother Jones showing that the GOP donor class is both far more likely to deny the reality of climate change and far less likely to support policy proposals to reduce emissions. However, beyond being more conservative than the population in general, the data so far available suggest that the donor class is far whiter than the general population. CCES data suggest that that may well have a major impact on policy.

Using 2012 and 2014 CCES, we can examine divides between white and non-white donors. These divides are large and consistent: white donors are more likely to deny climate change and oppose action to remedy it. CCES asks a series of questions on climate change, and two of them (“Global Climate change has been established as a serious problem, and immediate action is necessary” and “There is enough evidence that climate change is taking place and some action should be taken”) meet scientific muster. However, while 55% of white donors agree, a whopping 71% of non-white donors do. In addition, non-white donors are more supportive of the EPA strengthening enforcement, even it costs jobs (58% to 49%).

Will the Decline of Coal Solve the Climate Crisis?

Sharon Kelly says as coal companies face financial pressure, investors should be wary about shifting toward other fossil fuels if we are to avoid catastrophic climate change.

A href="http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&I...">Transcript here>

Climate Change 2015: The Latest Science

Climate science is way out in front of climate policy. Commitments at the United Nations Climate Conference in Paris pale in comparison to those from the Kyoto Protocol with its beginnings in the Rio Earth Summit in 1992. The cheap and unambiguous solution of removing CO2 directly from the sky has been discredited by the perceived debate. Previously assumed stable ice sheets are disintegrating. It is warmer than any time in the last 120,000 years. The Gulf Stream appears to be shutting down. Nearly 100 submarine glacial valleys beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet tunnel warm subtropical Atlantic water 90 miles beneath the ice. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says we need to remove more carbon dioxide from our atmosphere than we emit every year (negative emissions). Most importantly, new knowledge about global cooling smog shows that killing coal will create more warming than doing nothing in the most critical decades-long time frames.

The great delay in climate action has dramatically increased climate change impacts and the amount of carbon dioxide that we must now deal with to prevent even greater impacts. Delay has been caused by the debate casting doubt on climate science in ways that have proven to be effective in similar debates about smoking, acid rain and ozone-depleting chemicals. Because of doubt, fundamentally important new climate science has failed to escape the confines of academia and proceed into the public realm where it can move policy - literally - into the 21st century.

Number One: Direct Air Capture

Not new, very real, but often maligned in advocacy and policy discussions, direct air capture (DAC) of carbon dioxide is an important aspect of the failure of traditional climate science education techniques. DAC costs as little as $20 per ton, and once fully industrialized, can remove 50 ppm CO2 from the atmosphere and allow us to approach a safe level of greenhouses gases for less than the $2.1 trillion Americans spent on health care in 2006. (1, 2)

Holiday Melancholy in Bayou Corne, Louisiana, Home of Giant Sinkhole Caused by an Industrial Accident

Hand-painted standing alligators holding signs that read "Noel" on Tim Brown's lawn in Bayou Corne, LA, offer holiday cheer in an area where most of his neighbors moved away

Bayou Corne, 77 miles west of New Orleans, has joined the growing list of communities destroyed by industrial accidents.

Once known as a sportsman's paradise, Bayou Corne is now famous for a giant sinkhole that opened up on August 3, 2012, after a salt dome cavern, owned by Occidental Chemical Corp. and operated by Texas Brine Co. LLC, collapsed.

How Oil Lobbyists Won the Fight to Drill in the Alaskan Wilderness

From his seat in the small plane flying over the largest remaining swath of American wilderness, Bruce Babbitt thought he could envision the legacy of one of his proudest achievements as Interior Secretary in the Clinton administration.

Babbitt was returning in the summer of 2013 from four sunlit nights in Alaska's western Arctic, where at one point his camp was nearly overrun by a herd of caribou that split around the tents at the last minute. Now, below him, Babbitt saw an oil field — one carefully built and operated to avoid permanent roads and other scars on the vast expanse of tundra and lakes.

Under the deal he'd negotiated just before leaving Interior in 2000, that would be the only kind of drilling he thought would be allowed in the 23 million acres of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, which, despite its name, is a pristine region home to one of the world's largest caribou herds and giant flocks of migratory birds. The compromise was fair and, he hoped, enduring — clear-eyed about the need for more domestic oil but resolute in defense of the wilderness.

The deal lasted barely 15 years.

Africa Could Lead World on Green Energy

Africa could be the first region in the world to power its economic development on renewable energy rather than fossil fuels such as coal, according to the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA).

“I’m very excited about this,” said Fatih Birol as he launched the World Energy Outlook 2015 last month. “When we look at the history of energy – in Europe, the U.S., China – economic development was realized by a substantial amount of coal. But in Africa, we may well see, for the first time, a region [realizing] its economic growth using renewable energy.”

Birol said the big push from governments to get electricity to the two out of three people in Africa who don’t have access will help support this, as will falling costs of renewable energy. The price of solar panels fell by 75 percent from 2009 to 2014 and the costs of producing energy from the sun continues to fall.

Energy demand is growing in Africa, the Middle East and south-east Asia, said Birol, but India is “the engine of the global energy demand” now that China’s energy demand is plateauing.

This is Why Scientists Have Hope For the Climate

There’s no getting around the fact that climate change is a bummer. The planet is warming, ice is melting, oceans are acidifying and, well, you get the point.

While the bad news is important — it lets us know what we’re getting into with this whole climate change thing — it’s also worth remembering there’s reason for hope.

This year the world finally came together in Paris where a landmark climate pact was agreed to to try to put a cap on greenhouse gas emissions, and there are some fascinating innovations that could speed the world’s efforts to curb climate change. We asked climate experts for their top reason for climate hope in 2015 and what to look forward to in 2016. Below are their answers, edited slightly for clarity or length.

Vassar Clements - Orange Blossom Special

Vassar Clements & Dickey Betts - I've Been to Georgia

Josh Graves, Jerry Douglas and Vassar Clements - Flatt Lonesome

Vassar Clements, Tony Rice - Kissimmee Kid

Vassar Clements - Lonesome Fiddle Blues

Del McCoury Band with Vassar Clements - True Life Blues

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hecate's picture

January 1, Texans can openly carry their killing machines. So they will be able to quickly and efficiently shoot the storms. As everyone knows, only a good guy with a gun can stop bad weather.

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howsa' bout open carry one of these bad boys? That'll give a whole new meaning to the old saying from the 60s: "How's your weather"?

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hecate's picture

can be used to shoot down the contrails.

I had an interesting conversation once with Slartibartfast, one of the designers of Earth. He said the purpose of Texas was to absorb the excess sand allotted for the construction of the planet. Seems once they'd run up the rest of the world, there was a lot of sand left over. So the decision was made to dump it all in Texas. Unfortunately, the landscape itself was not sufficient to assimilate the entirety of the sand surplus. Thus it was decreed that all Texas residents would thereafter be apportioned a certain amount of sand that would be deposited in their craniums. However, sand is an abrasive: it rubs stuff away. Over time, then, the sand wears down the wrinkles in the brains of the Texans. This explains people like George W. Bush, Louis Gohmert, Ron Paul, Greg Abbott, Rick Perry.

They are very proud of their sand, there in Texas.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ef0s38kCAEo]

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Merrry second day after Christmas and Happy five days before New Year's! Heh!

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smiley7's picture

70 degrees forecast for today; going fishing with the eighties' crowd. Here, we are all unemployed ski bums now. Have a good day.

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hope you catch "The Big One". How did the Santa gig go? The weather's starting to change for the worse here in the midwest, it'll head your way eventually.

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smiley7's picture

The fish god smiled on me; caught a beauty, a rainbow of around 18 inches and a few pan fish. It was odd being out in such balmy weather, raining like hell again today. Only got to do Santa a few days as we've been mostly closed for the season, hurting us all financially. Big hit for the owners as well as xmas week accounts for more than 30 percent of annual revenue for ski resorts.

Some cold weather forecast for the upcoming weekend.

Listening to El's good music today as I deal with insurance and appointments. Have a good day!

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enhydra lutris's picture

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

thanks for the vid, very highlarious!

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link

Iraqi forces have retaken a former government compound in Ramadi from where Islamic State (IS) group militants have been resisting an army offensive, the military has said.

The complex was "under complete control" and there was no sign of IS fighters, a spokesman said.

He said this heralded the defeat of IS in the city, although he admitted there could be pockets of resistance.

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shaharazade's picture

Northern England is awash with 'floods of biblical proportions'. To top it off more rain and gales are predicted next week. I noticed that the articles this month about the northern UK floods mentioned climate change/global warming but blamed the big bad el nino. The articles today are finally saying this is global warming/climate change acerbated by the el nino.

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/dec/26/flooding-havoc-britai...
Floods of biblical proportions leave cities, towns and villages under water

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/dec/27/flood-hit-northern-en...
Flood-hit northern England told to expect further rainfall

Here's a video

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/video/2015/dec/26/uk-floods-torre...

and pictures....

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2015/dec/27/flooding-nort...

I was going to post the Beatles tune Rain but came upon this version. I went with this cause a good laugh is a needed antidote to rain of 'biblical proportions'.

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Azazello's picture

Did you get my Xmas present ?

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

I had to step out for a few hours today. No, not yet, but now I'm excited!

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Azazello's picture

I mailed it before Xmas, the post office estimated arrival on Xmas eve.

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

gulfgal98's picture

I am finally back on line after spending several days visiting with my mother over the Christmas holiday. I have a lot of catching up to do now. But first, my husband and his brother had to clean out all of his late aunt's stuff from her room before the New Year. Since everyone is on their way up to Virginia for the internment, he did it on the 23rd and 24th. She had a lot more stuff than any of us realized and every bit of it with a few exceptions came to our house. My job is to go through all of her clothing and prepare it for donation. She had some very nice things and I found a few that I can wear. Now I am boxing the clothing and going through everything up else. This is a big job, much more so than I ever expected.

gjohnsit's diary on the wars in the Middle East is outstanding and I posted it on my Facebook account. There is an excellent diary up at dkos right now contrasting Bernie and Hillary's positions. It is extremely well written and documented. I highly recommend it.

I have to get back to sorting, washing, and packing up my husband's aunt's stuff for donation.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

glad you're back, been missing you!

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mimi's picture

all those little or major climate change disasters might end up to be our last chance to come to our senses politically speaking. Facing "the deluge" might just unite the peoples who otherwise fight each other or exploit each other.

In this sense "Happy New Year" to all. We will throw each other "rescue rings" before we let our next fellow drown, right?

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Happy New Year right back at ya'. [tosses ring]

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mimi's picture

Cheese Can Now Power a Town — in France, of Course.

The small Alpine town of Albertville, which is best known for having hosted the 1992 Winter Olympics, has recently become home to a new type of power plant — one that turns cheese into electricity.

In a large snow-white globe on the edge of town, bacteria bred in whey, the liquid that remains after milk has been curdled and strained to make cheese, are hard at work generating biogas: a clean, renewable energy source that can also be used to produce electricity.

"We can power a city of 1,500," said local dairy farmer Yvon Brochet, who is also the president of the Beaufort Producers Union. Beaufort, a hard, raw cow's milk cheese, is a regional specialty known as one of the more noble Alpine cheeses.
...
100,000 liters of whey a day. Every kilo of beaufort cheese generates nine kilos of whey.

"Up until now, we used to sell the whey to a major group that processes it near Verdun [in northeastern France], but transporting it cost more than the actual value of the product," explained Brochet. Eager to limit their losses, the producers got in touch with French renewable energy company Valbio, which built the plant.

Nearly 100,000 liters of whey from nine different dairy cooperatives are processed each day in the plant. First, the factory rids the whey of its fat, which is made into butter. It also removes the protein, which becomes a powder used in energy drinks and supplement shakes. The remaining liquid — which is sweet and green — is then continuously introduced into a vat containing the microorganisms.

The only waste to come out of the factory is a skip-load of compost each month, which is used to fertilize fields, and water that is released into a nearby river. None of the waste is hazardous, and none of the milk gets wasted.

The factory, which today employs 10 people, cost 13 million euros ($14.2 million) to build, and investors hope to break even by 2022.

I like that. Smile

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