Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier has passed the point of no return.

 Planet Earth has not always had great ice sheets at the poles, of the sort that currently exist atop Greenland and Antarctica. In other periods, much of that water has instead been in liquid form, in the oceans—and the oceans have been much higher.

How much? According to the National Academy of Sciences, the globe's great ice sheets contain enough frozen water to raise sea levels worldwide by more than 60 meters. That's about 200 feet. And it makes all the sea level rise that we've seen so far due to global warming appear piddly and insignificant.

That's why scientists have long feared a day like this would come. Two new scientific papers, in the journals Science and Geophysical Research Letters, report that major glaciers that are part of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet appear to have become irrevocably destabilized. The whole process may still play out on the scale of centuries, but due to the particular dynamics of this ice sheet, the collapse of these major glaciers now "appears unstoppable," according to NASA (whose researchers are behind one of the two studies).

Visualization of Antarctic temperature changes. NASA Earth Observatory
The first study, by researchers at NASA and the University of California-Irvine, uses satellite radar to examine an array of large glaciers along the Amundsen Sea in West Antarctica, which collectively contain the equivalent of four feet of sea level rise. The result is the documentation of a "continuous and rapid retreat"—for instance, the Smith and Kohler glaciers have retreated 35 kilometers since 1992—and the researchers say that there is "no [major] obstacle that would prevent the glaciers from further retreat." In the NASA press release, the researchers are still more vocal, with one of them noting that these glaciers "have passed the point of no return."

The other group of researchers, based at the University of Washington, reach similar conclusions with their paper in Science. But they do so by using an computer model to study one of these glaciers in particular: The Thwaites Glacier, pictured above, which contains about two feet of sea level rise and is retreating rapidly. "The simulations indicate that early-stage collapse has begun," notes their paper. What's more, the Thwaites Glacier is a "linchpin" for the rest of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet; its rapid collapse would "probably spill over to adjacent catchments, undermining much of West Antarctica." And considering that the entire West Antarctic Ice Sheet contains enough water to raise sea levels by 10 to 13 feet, that's a really big deal.

It is, again, important to emphasize that just because these glaciers may have passed the "point of no return" does not mean that dramatic sea level rise happens tomorrow. There is a limit to how fast glaciers and ice sheets can move, and the Science paper emphasizes that the entire process may take several hundred years and possibly as much as a millennium.

In the grand scheme of things, though, the consequence would be a very different planet. And West Antarctica is just the beginning. According to glaciologist and Greenland expert Jason Box, when you compare where we are now to where atmospheric carbon dioxide levels and ocean levels stood in past warm periods of Earth's history, you can infer that human beings have already set in motion 69 feet of sea level rise.

Extreme Weather and Climate Change:

Extreme Weather and Climate Change: The Northeast

WHAT WE KNOW

On average, the US is 2 degrees F warmer than it was 40 years ago. Twice as many record highs have been set in the past decade as record lows, in the US. By 2050, record highs could outpace record lows by 20 to 1 in the U.S. By the end of the century, the ratio could jump to 100 to 1 if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated. This warmer world is increasing the odds of extreme precipitation, in part because a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture and release more of it during rainstorms and snowstorms. Heavy precipitation, both rain and snow, is happening more often than it used to. Heat-related extreme events are on the rise around the globe. Man made climate change significantly increased the odds of some specific events, including the killer European heat wave of 2003 and the Russian heat wave of 2010. Even small increases in average temperatures raise the risk of heat waves, droughts and wildfires.


Devastating deluges, record floods and deadly heat waves have raised the question of whether there’s a connection between these events and global warming.

The bottom line answer is yes: Heat waves are longer and hotter than they used to be and some regions are suffering from catastrophic drought.  Heavy rains are more frequent and can be more intense and rainfall records have been smashed. These events fit a pattern that climate scientists have long expected to appear as the result of increased greenhouse gases in our atmosphere. That doesn’t mean global warming is the only culprit: extreme weather was happening before global warming began. But there’s general scientific agreement that global warming has contributed to a trend toward more intense extremes of heat and precipitation around the world, is partly to blame for specific extreme weather events over the last decade and will continue to influence both in the future.

THE NORTHEAST

Major Rainstorms and Floods of 2011

A quick summary of 2011 weather highlights would read approximately like this:  Devastating snowstorm, devastating snowstorm, blizzard, heat wave, heat wave, torrential rains, hurricane (more torrential rains), floods, hurricane remnants (even more torrential rains), worse floods, even more devastating snowstorm—and that only takes you through October. The details follow.
RECORD SMASHING RAIN
2011
All-Time Rainiest Month:
August 2011
Central Park, NY (18.95”)
La Guardia, NY (17.32”)
JFK, NY (17.24”)
Newark, NJ (18.79”)
Philadelphia, PA (19.31”)
Rainiest August of All Time
Binghamton, NY, (8.90”)
Trenton, NJ, (16.10”)
Allentown, PA (13.47”)
Rainiest September of All Time
Dayton, OH (10.84”)
Baltimore, MD, (13.32”)
Binghamton, NY,  (16.58”)
Rainiest August-September of
All-Time
Philadelphia, PA (29.58”)
Wilmington, NJ (20.63”)
Baltimore (26.46”)
Rainiest Year Ever *
(and it’s not over yet!)
Cleveland, OH (53.84”)
Scranton, PA (54.02”)
Binghamton, NY (52.70”)
Harrisburg, PA (61.82”)
*January through September 2011
  • In late August, Hurricane Irene became the first hurricane to make landfall in New Jersey in more than 100 years, dumping 6 to 8 inches of rain in parts of New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont. This was on top of the 6 to 8 inches that had already fallen in August.
     
  • In early September, Irene was followed by more heavy rain due in part to the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee which caused several Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern states to experience historic flooding (Pennsylvania, New York and Virginia) and in Pennsylvania alone forced 75,000 people to evacuate and destroyed 2,000 homes.
     
  • The September rains swelled the Susquehanna and Delaware Rivers to record-breaking levels in Binghamton and Owego, NY, and Waverly and Wilkes-Barre, PA, to name just a few.
     
  • In Hershey PA, Swatara Creek crested at 26.8 feet, beating the previous record by more than 10 feet.
     
  • Flood damage, which is estimated at around $1 billion, was especially severe because the rains fell on a region that had already been saturated with drenching rainfall in the preceding weeks and months including from Hurricane Irene in late August.
     
  • On September 8th, a whopping 7.03 inches of rain fell in Ft. Belvoir, VA., in just three hours. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), that amount of rain in that amount of time was “off the charts above a 1000-year rainfall (based on precipitation frequency from Quantico).” Largely due to Tropical Storm Lee, Pennsylvania recorded its rainiest September on record, according to the National Climatic Data Center. January through September was the rainiest such period on record in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Vermont.
Major Snowstorms of 2011
The blizzard that paralyzed New York City shortly after Christmas 2010 was followed by record-breaking snowstorms in the Northeast and Midwest during January and February.
Six cities saw their snowiest January on record: Hartford, CT (57.0 inches), Bridgeport, CT (42.0 inches); Newark, NJ (37.4 inches); Central Park, NY (36.0 inches); Islip, NY (34.3 inches); and LaGuardia Airport, NY (32.6 inches). Hartford’s 57 inches of snow in January made it the city’s all-time snowiest month on record.
 Thanks to reduced sea ice in the Arctic Ocean in summer and fall, the Arctic has been unusually warm. Recent research suggests this may have changed air circulation patterns in winter, pushing colder than normal air down toward North America and Europe (22, 23, 24). 
An unusually early major winter storm that struck the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast in late October, 2011 caused widespread tree damage and power outages and contributed to 22 deaths. The storm, nicknamed “Snowtober”, knocked out power to more than three million customers from West Virginia to Maine and resulted in the largest power outage in Connecticut’s history. Dropping up to 32 inches of snow, it was the most severe early-season snowstorm in New England since befo
\re the Civil War. According to one insurance company estimate, Snowtober resulted in upwards of $3 billion in damage.

2011 Heat Records
April 2011 was the warmest April on record for Portland, ME, New York, NY and Atlantic City, NJ.
June 2011 was the warmest June on record for Philadelphia, PA.
Philadelphia, PA, Trenton, NJ and Atlantic City NJ, all set records for the most days ever above 90°F.
Summer 2011 was the hottest summer on record for Boston, MA and Windsor, CT.

Extreme Weather and Climate Change: The Midwest

Spring 2011 brought some of the worst flooding in history, from the Upper Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico. Snowmelt and more than three times the normal spring rainfall in the Ohio Valley made rivers, including the Ohio, Missouri and the Mississippi overflow their banks along with many smaller tributaries. The Mississippi River crested at either record or near-record levels from Illinois all the way to Louisiana.

More than 1,300 daily precipitation records were broken during April across the Midwest and South. For the month, 72 locations reported their rainiest day in any April on record and five of these stations set a new all-time record for the rainiest 24-hour period for any month, the National Climatic Data Center reported.
On May 2, the Army Corps of Engineers breached part of the Birds Point-New Madrid Levee near where the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers come together, flooding 130,000 acres of Missouri farmland, but protecting the small Illinois town of Cairo.
 
On May 9, officials opened the Bonnet Carre Spillway in Louisiana, which diverted floodwaters into Lake Pontchartrain. Later, officials also opened part of the Morganza Spillway to reduce pressure on levees that protect New Orleans from flooding. In Minot, North Dakota, the overflowing Souris River forced about 11,000 residents to evacuate and flooded 4,000 homes. Waters from the Mississippi River flooded Yazoo City, Mississippi, where the crest reached 38.7 feet, close to the record set during a devastating flood in 1927, and nearly ten feet above flood stage. In Memphis, the Mississippi crested at 47.9 feet, the highest there since 1937. The 2011 flood also set an all-time record in Vicksburg, Mississippi where the Mississippi crested at 57.1 feet on May 18. In Natchez, Mississippi, the river rose about four feet higher than the previous record set in 1937.

The Missouri River also caused record floods due to above average spring precipitation and a record to near-record snowpack that contributed large amounts of river runoff. In Wyoming and Montana for the month of May, a total of 14 locations set precipitation records and seven locations set a new all-time record for the rainiest 24-hour period for any month on record.  According to the National Climate Data Center, the flooding resulted in at least $800 million of damage to Mississippi agriculture, $500 million in damage to Arkansas agriculture and $320 million in overall damages to Memphis, Tennessee. Overall, roughly 3.5 million acres of farmland were flooded in the Lower Mississippi Valley including 900,000 acres in Mississippi (that’s 10 percent of the state’s total) and 1 million in Arkansas. Across the nation, 6.8 million acres of farm and non-farm land were inundated during the spring of 2011 — one of the worst flood disasters in American history.

2011 Snow Storms
While most of the headline-grabbing snowstorms of 2011 affected Northeastern cities like New York, the Midwest was slammed as well, especially by a blizzard that struck in early February, paralyzing a region that is used to plenty of snow. According to NOAA, the "Groundhog Day Blizzard," which crippled travel in the Midwest and stranded motorists on Lakes Shore Drive in Chicago, dropped one to two feet in some areas, with 22 states getting at least five inches of snow. The Groundhog Day Blizzard was one of Chicago’s top five snowstorms on record. It caused more than  $1.8 billion in total losses and 36 weather-related deaths.

 2011 Heat
In mid July, much of the nation sweltered under a “heat dome” that brought roasting heat and sweltering humidity to much of the eastern two thirds of the country. At its worst, more than 140 million Americans were under a heat advisory or excessive heat warning, with the heat index—a measure of discomfort that combines both heat and humidity and describes how hot it actually feels—reaching brutal levels typical of the area surrounding the Red Sea in Saudi Arabia.

THE SOUTHWEST


Number of days the maximum temperature exceeded 100 °F. credit: NOAA/NCDC.
Extreme Heat and Drought of 2011

 Texans love to brag about how big their state is along with everything in it. Not so much this year, though, as record-breaking heat, drought and wildfires relentlessly pummeled Texans. The heat struck nearby Oklahoma, Louisiana and New Mexico too, pushing all of the states’ resources, along with their residents, to the brink of disaster—and in many cases, right over the edge. Scientists know that climate change is making heat extremes like those experienced in the Southwest this year more intense and more frequent.

What happened in 2011:

Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Louisiana had their hottest summers on record this year. 
Texas had the warmest summer of any state in the U.S. going back to when modern records began in 1895 and set more than 4,000 hot temperature records in August alone. Oklahoma came in second and both states beat records set during the Dust Bowl era in the 1930s. Nationally, the ratio of record highs to record lows this summer was 4.35 to 1. But in Texas, the ratio was 80 to 1.
 
In Texas, the average statewide temperature for the summer (night and day) was a whopping 86. 8°F.
 Every state in the Lower-48 except North Dakota and Vermont had at least one day with a temperature topping 100°F. Many cities broke all-time heat records.  Austin, Texas set new records for the most 100° days, the hottest month, the hottest summer and the hottest day in history (112°F, tied with Sep, 5, 2000)
Climate change is creating drier conditions in the American Southwest,(15) and has been linked to increases inforest acres burned in some regions of the West.(8,16)
 
These drier conditions are aggravated by natural climate cycles, such as La Nina, a significant factor in this year’s drought, which tend to favor drought in the Southwest. Global warming could boost the intensity and impact of these La Nina-related droughts.(18,19,20)
 
For every additional degree of global warming, the number of acres burned in Southwest wildfires is projected to increase dramatically — at the same time as rain and snowfall decrease.(17)
At the end of September, 97 percent of Texas was in one of the top two most severe categories of drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. That’s a new state record.
 
Drought and extreme heat combined to create Texas’ worst wildfire season on record, with nearly four million acres burned so far. Texas broke a record for the driest 12-month period on record. The drought has cost Texas an estimated $5.2 billion in agricultural losses and at least $1 billion in other damage, making it the most costly drought in the state’s history.

The drought is driving up the price of beef as ranchers are forced to sell their herds early. Lower cotton yields could force up cotton prices and peanut, corn and wheat crops have also been hit hard. The Bastrop fire, which ignited east of Austin on September 4, burned over 34,000 acres, killed two people and destroyed more than 1,600 homes, breaking the state record for the most homes lost in a single wildfire. It was also the most expensive wildfire in Texas history.
 
New Mexico also suffered from unusually severe wildfires. At one point, the Las Conchas wildfire, which burned nearly 130,000 acres, threatened the Energy Department’s Los Alamos National Laboratory, the birthplace of the atomic bomb.


April set a carbon dioxide milestone by averaging 400 parts per million for the entire month. That’s uncharted territory over the course of human history, and a new data visualization makes clear just how high and fast it has risen.


The march to 400 ppm might seem slow by human standards, rising just one or two parts per million each year, but it’s a veritable sprint by geological standards. We know this from ice cores, which contain air bubbles that give snapshots of carbon dioxide levels over the past 800,000 years. Modern atmospheric measurements are taken at observatories around the globe including one at Mauna Loa, Hawaii, which has been taking continuous measurements since the late 1950s.

An animation from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences makes clear that though there have been variations over time, the current rise is unparalleled. The animation zooms in on the graph of temperatures, often times referred to as the Hockey Stick for its distinctive shape, and shows the granular changes over time. It’s clear that there are long swings taking CO2 levels anywhere from 175 ppm up to 300 ppm.

Over the course of the past 2,000 years, CO2 has stayed roughly around 280 ppm until the Industrial Revolution kickstarted a carbon emissions bonanza, driving levels higher and higher. It soared past 350 ppm — the level scientist James Hansen has said is the safe upper limit of CO2 — in October 1989.

CO2 levels vary throughout the year as trees and plants burst forth in the spring and draw down levels over the following months. That means this year’s CO2 levels will peak in May and then drop below 400 ppm over the summer before trekking back up in the fall. Scientists that work on the CO2 monitoring program at Mauna Loa estimate it will be just a few years before CO2 levels stay above 400 ppm year round.

Rising CO2 levels have been linked to the globe’s average temperature rise as well as a host of other changes to the climate system including sea level rise, shifts in precipitation, ocean acidification, and an increase in extreme heat. Those changes are expected to continue and intensify if emissions from human activities continue.

[Global Warming Fact of the Day] http://www.vox.com/cards/global-warming/what-is-gl...

Frederick Stoss
Frederick Stoss 2:35pm May 5
What is global warming?
www.vox.com
The world is getting hotter, and humans are responsible. That's the short version.

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] http://www.climatecentral.org/news/the-meteoric-ri...


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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] 56 Senators Try to Force Keystone XL Pipeline Past President Obama...

Michael Tomecek
Michael Tomecek 12:27pm May 5

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] 56 Senators Try to Force Keystone XL Pipeline Past President Obama...

Michael Tomecek
Michael Tomecek 12:27pm May 5

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] The company confirmed the pipeline activity in...

Dylan Hock
Dylan Hock 12:25pm May 5
The company confirmed the pipeline activity in its 2014 quarter one earnings call.

Asked by Argus Media reporter Iris Kuo how much of the current 530,000 barrels per day of oil flowing from the Cushing, Oklahoma to Port Arthur, Texas pipeline is tar sands ("heavy crude," in industry lingo), TransCanada CEO Russ Girling confirmed what many had already suspected.

"I don't have that exact mix, but it does have the ability to take the domestic lights as well as any heavies that find a way down to the Cushing market, so it is a combination of the heavies and the lights," said Girling. "I just don't know what the percentage is."
For First Time, TransCanada Says Tar Sands Flowing to Gulf in Keystone XL South
www.desmogblog.com
TransCanada admitted for the first time that tar sands oil is now flowing through Keystone XL's sout...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] The company confirmed the pipeline activity in...

Steve Horn
Steve Horn 12:25pm May 5
The company confirmed the pipeline activity in its 2014 quarter one earnings call.

Asked by Argus Media reporter Iris Kuo how much of the current 530,000 barrels per day of oil flowing from the Cushing, Oklahoma to Port Arthur, Texas pipeline is tar sands ("heavy crude," in industry lingo), TransCanada CEO Russ Girling confirmed what many had already suspected.

"I don't have that exact mix, but it does have the ability to take the domestic lights as well as any heavies that find a way down to the Cushing market, so it is a combination of the heavies and the lights," said Girling. "I just don't know what the percentage is."
For First Time, TransCanada Says Tar Sands Flowing to Gulf in Keystone XL South
www.desmogblog.com
TransCanada admitted for the first time that tar sands oil is now flowing through Keystone XL's sout...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] CP: "Meet the new Bush, same as the old Bush."...

Michael Tomecek
Michael Tomecek 11:30am May 5
CP: "Meet the new Bush, same as the old Bush." When he says energy, he is talking carbon based. Is there anyone on that side of the aisle that promotes a different model?
In Texas, A New Bush Launches Political Career With Leap Into Oil And Gas Interests
thinkprogress.org
On his campaign website, George P. Bush says his goal for the state is for it to "once again become ...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] good story on how a strong carbon status quo was...

Michael Tomecek
Michael Tomecek 11:15am May 5
good story on how a strong carbon status quo was upset by grit and determination.
Dryden - The Small Town that Changed the Fracking Game
"The industry kept saying: 'We have the power, you have none. We are coming. Get out of the way or l...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] New White House report warns that climate change...

Brian Kahn
Brian Kahn 11:02am May 5
New White House report warns that climate change is a clear and present danger and no American will be left unscathed.
Landmark White House Report Warns Americans That Climate Change Poses an Imminent Threat
inhabitat.com
A landmark report to be formally launched at the White House tomorrow will warn Americans that clima...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] New White House report warns that climate change...

Josh Marks
Josh Marks 11:02am May 5
New White House report warns that climate change is a clear and present danger and no American will be left unscathed.
Landmark White House Report Warns Americans That Climate Change Poses an Imminent Threat
inhabitat.com
A landmark report to be formally launched at the White House tomorrow will warn Americans that clima...

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[Global Warming Fact of the Day] A switch from ethanol to gasoline in São Paulo...

Timothy J. Reed
Timothy J. Reed 10:14am May 5
A switch from ethanol to gasoline in São Paulo caused a 20% drop in local ozone levels. http://bit.ly/1rVxF9j
Switch From Ethanol to Gasoline Causes Ozone Levels to Drop 20%
dailyfusion.net
When fuel prices drove residents of São Paulo, Brazil, to mostly switch from ethanol to gasoline, lo...

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[Weird Weather] Elephant seal pups flood rescue center: Northcoast Marine Mammal Center takes in 15...

Julie Generic
Julie Generic 9:18am May 5
Elephant seal pups flood rescue center: Northcoast Marine Mammal Center takes in 15 since April 1
www.advocate-news.com
The Northcoast Marine Mammal Center in Crescent City is being inundated with stranded or abandoned n...

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