Tag Archives: Bureau of Meteorology

Strong emissions targets are the real leadership test

The government looks the goods on terrorism, but climate change presents a much bigger challenge. [30 June 2015 | Peter Boyer] When federal parliament voted last week to cut by 20 per cent the amount of clean energy it aims … Continue reading

Posted in Australian Academy of Science, Australian politics, Bureau of Meteorology, carbon, carbon emissions and targets, changes to climate, climate politics, climate sensitivity, climate system, CSIRO, economic activity, economic restructuring, economic threat from climate, fossil fuels, future climate, growth, international politics, leadership, modelling, organisations and events, science | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Strong emissions targets are the real leadership test

Wishful thinking can’t prevent global warming

Maintaining that global warming has stalled since 1997 is pure delusion. [11 March 2014 | Peter Boyer] “Seventeen and a half years. Not a flicker of global warming.” That was Christopher Monckton’s take on satellite temperature data released last week … Continue reading

Posted in Arctic, atmospheric science, Bureau of Meteorology, carbon cycle, carbon emissions and targets, changes to climate, climate sensitivity, contrarians, CSIRO, environmental degradation, extreme events, fossil fuels, future climate, glaciology, ice, meteorology, modelling, NASA-GISS, natural events, NOAA, sea level, State of the Climate, temperature | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Wishful thinking can’t prevent global warming

An “angry summer” raises questions about leadership

It’s a 500 to 1 bet that Australia’s summer of extremes really is caused by human-induced warming, says climatologist Will Steffen. [12 March 2013 | Peter Boyer] After an anxious week of smoke and ash from a wildfire threatening my … Continue reading

Posted in agriculture and farming, Arctic, atmospheric science, Australian politics, carbon, carbon emissions and targets, changes to climate, Climate Commission, climate politics, climate system, environmental degradation, food, land use, leadership, meteorology, natural climate influences, organisations and events, promotion and publicity, science, Tasmanian politics, temperature | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on An “angry summer” raises questions about leadership