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sky otter
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sky otter


Number of posts : 4389
Registration date : 2009-02-01

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PostSubject: It's already started   It's already started Icon_minitimeSun Oct 18, 2009 6:55 pm

Rising seas threaten Shanghai, other big cities
Millions of people in coastal areas are vulnerable to flooding, catastrophes


It's already started 506cf010
Water lock station employees observe the water lock in Suzhou Creek in Shanghai, China, on Sept. 9 EDITOR'S NOTE —

updated 3:31 p.m. ET, Sun., Oct . 18, 2009

This is one of an occasional series of stories leading up to December's climate conference in Copenhagen, reporting on the impact, future and responses to climate change

SHANGHAI - This city of 20 million rose from the sea and grew into a modern showcase, with skyscrapers piercing the clouds, atop tidal flats fed by the mighty Yangtze River.

Now Shanghai's future depends on finding ways to prevent the same waters from reclaiming it.

Global warming and melting glaciers and polar ice sheets are raising sea levels worldwide, leaving tens of millions of people in coastal areas and on low-lying islands vulnerable to flooding and other weather-related catastrophes.
Shanghai, altitude roughly 3 meters (10 feet) above sea level, is among dozens of great world cities — including London, Miami, New York, New Orleans, Mumbai, Cairo, Amsterdam and Tokyo — threatened by sea levels that now are rising twice as fast as projected just a few years ago, expanding from warmth and meltwater. Estimates of the scale and timing vary, but Stefan Rahmstorf, a respected expert at Germany's Potsdam Institute, expects a 1-meter (3-foot) rise in this century and up to 5 meters (15 feet) over the next 300 years.

Chinese cities are among the largest and most threatened. Their huge populations — the Yangtze River Delta region alone has about 80 million people — and their rapid growth into giant industrial, financial and shipping centers could mean massive losses from rising sea levels, experts say.

Sea is advancing
The sea is steadily advancing on Shanghai, tainting its freshwater supplies as it turns coastal land and groundwater salty, slowing drainage of the area's heavily polluted flood basin and eating away at the precious delta soils that form the city's foundations.

Planners are slow in addressing the threat, in the apparent belief they have time. Instead, Shanghai has thrown its energies into constructing billions of dollars worth of new infrastructure: new ports, bridges, airports, industrial zones, right on the coast.

"By no means will Shanghai be under the sea 50 years from now. It won't be like the 'Day After Tomorrow' scenario," says Zheng Hongbo, a geologist who heads the School of Earth Science and Engineering at Nanjing University.

"Scientifically, though, this is a problem whether we like it or not," says Zheng, pointing to areas along Shanghai's coast thought to be shrinking due to erosion caused by rising water levels.

Chinese legend credits Emperor Yu the Great with taming floods in Neolithic times by dredging new river channels to absorb excess water. In modern times, the city has been sinking for decades, thanks to pumping of groundwater and the construction of thousands of high-rise buildings.

Reinforcing flood gates and levees
Today, Shanghai's engineers are reinforcing flood gates and levees to contain rivers rising due to heavy silting and subsidence.

"We used to play on the river banks and swim in the water when I was growing up. But the river is higher now," says Ma Shikang, an engineer overseeing Shanghai's main flood gate, pointing to homes below water level near the city's famed riverfront Bund.

Twice daily, the 100-meter (330-foot-wide) barrier, where the city's Suzhou Creek empties into the Huangpu River, is raised and lowered in tandem with the tides and weather, regulating the city's vast labyrinth of canals and creeks.

The 5.86-meter (19-foot) high flood gate is built to withstand a one-in-1,000 years tidal surge; the highest modern Shanghai has faced so far was 5.72 meters (nearly 19 feet), during a 1997 typhoon.

Levees along the Bund and other major waterways are 6.9 meters (nearly 23 feet) high, providing better protection than in Miami, New York and many other cities. But they still would be swamped if hit by a surge like Hurricane Katrina's 8.5-meter (28-foot) onslaught.

Shanghai is considering building still bigger barriers — like those in London, Venice and the Netherlands — to fend off potentially disastrous storm surges, most likely at the point 30 kilometers (18 miles) downstream where the deep, muddy Huangpu empties into the Yangtze.

‘It is extremely complicated’
Sang Baoliang, deputy director of the Shanghai Flood Control Headquarters, has been to see the Thames Barrier, which protects London, and the Deltaworks series of storm barriers and dams in the Netherlands, where two-thirds of the population lives on land below sea level, much of it reclaimed from the sea.

Like many Chinese officials, some of whom deem the topic too sensitive to discuss, Sang is cautious about what China might do.

"We are studying this, but it is extremely complicated," said Sang, as shots from surveillance cameras at dozens of flood gates flashed on a full-wall screen.

"If the research determines that indeed the sea level will rise further, then we will need to build the walls higher. But this is still under research," he said.

Such projects usually require several decades of planning and construction, and with sea levels rising, they likely will have to be adjusted, given the unknowns of climate change.

"Nobody — no municipal or provincial government, and no central government agency — is preparing adaptation plans for Shanghai or the Yangtze Delta," says Edward Leman, whose Ottawa-based consultancy Chreod Ltd. has published research on the issue. "They must begin now, as investments and decisions made today will have a major impact in the coming years."

Many live in low-lying coastal areas
Nearly a quarter of mankind lives in low-lying coastal areas, and urbanization is drawing still more people into them.

"The tendency of coastal and port locations to become playgrounds for architects and developers has become a global phenomenon in recent decades," says Gordon McGranahan, director of the human settlements group at the International Institute for Environment and Development, an independent think tank in London.

McGranahan helped author a 2007 report by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development that put the number of people living in areas vulnerable to such flooding at 40 million people, with trillions of dollars of homes and other assets at risk. By the 2070s, the number could rise to nearly 150 million, it says.

Extreme weather will aggravate the already precarious situation for many: in September, Tropical Storm Kestana left 80 percent of the Philippine capital, Manila, under water. Newspaper photos showed much of Haikou, on China's southern coast, flooded, as Vietnam evacuated more than 350,000 people from the storm's path.

In years to come, some Pacific islands, like tiny Tuvalu, are expecting complete inundation. Vietnam's environment ministry estimates that more than a third of the Mekong Delta, where nearly half the country's rice is grown, will be submerged if sea levels rise by 1 meter (39 inches).

Impoverished Bangladesh is spending billions of dollars on dikes and storm shelters, while seeking international aid to help it adapt to flooding that could force up to 35 million of its people to relocate by 2050.

Densely populated tidal flats
Though much of its land is arid, China likewise has millions of people living in densely populated tidal flats and coastal valleys who already must be evacuated during typhoons. Many of the country's biggest cities are threatened, the OECD report says.

"What has been specific to China has been the enormous coastward migration, unfortunately just at a time when it would have been better not to settle low-elevation coastal areas," McGranahan said.
Traces of former sea walls show that much of today's Shanghai, which sits between a flood basin and the sea, was under water or marshland until the 7th or 8th century AD. Over thousands of years, ancient settlements expanded and withdrew as water levels ebbed and rose.

In the future, communities unable to move may instead end up adapting buildings and infrastructure to accommodate higher water levels, says Hui-Li Lee, a landscape architect who is working on several projects in the region.

"There are many things we cannot account for, but if we know an area is going to flood, then we have to plan for that," Lee said. "When we look at a map, we have to think that 30 years later or 50 years later everything will be below sea level."

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33368880/ns/world_news-asiapacific//
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sky otter
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sky otter


Number of posts : 4389
Registration date : 2009-02-01

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PostSubject: Re: It's already started   It's already started Icon_minitimeSun Oct 18, 2009 7:06 pm


PM warns of climate 'catastrophe'



It's already started _4657010

Mr Brown will urge leaders to break their "impasse"

The UK faces a "catastrophe" of floods, droughts and killer heatwaves if world leaders fail to agree a deal on climate change, the prime minister will warn.

Gordon Brown is to address the Major Economies Forum in London, which brings together 17 of the world's biggest greenhouse gas-emitting countries.

Mr Brown will say there will be "no plan B" if agreement is not reached at December's UN summit in Copenhagen.

Negotiators have 50 days to save the world from global warming, he will add.

'Rising wave'

The Copenhagen summit in December is intended produce a new global climate change deal to replace the ageing Kyoto treaty.

But BBC deputy political editor James Landale said that not everything was going to plan.

At the meeting in London, the prime minister will warn that preparatory talks within the United Nations have reached an impasse.

Negotiators, he will say, are not reaching agreement quickly enough.

"In Britain we face the prospect of more frequent droughts and a rising wave of floods," Mr Brown is expected to tell delegates.

"The extraordinary summer heatwave of 2003 in Europe resulted in over 35,000 extra deaths.

"On current trends, such an event could become quite routine in Britain in just a few decades' time. And within the lifetime of our children and grandchildren the intense temperatures of 2003 could become the average temperature experienced throughout much of Europe."

Grim warning

If a deal is not agreed, the world will face more conflict fuelled by climate-induced migration, Mr Brown will add.

He will tell the meeting that by 2080 an extra 1.8 billion people - a quarter of the world's current population - could lack sufficient water.

Mr Brown will say: "If we do not reach a deal at this time, let us be in no doubt: once the damage from unchecked emissions growth is done, no retrospective global agreement, in some future period, can undo that choice.

"So we should never allow ourselves to lose sight of the catastrophe we face if present warming trends continue."

Agreement at Copenhagen "is possible", he will conclude.

Commitments unlikely
"But we must frankly face the plain fact that our negotiators are not getting to agreement quickly enough. So I believe that leaders must engage directly to break the impasse."

In recent days there have been a number of warnings that progress is stalling, with Rajendra Pachauri, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, telling Newsweek magazine that "the prospects that states will actually agree to anything in Copenhagen are starting to look worse and worse".

MEF is not part of the formal UN process and so firm commitments are unlikely to come from the meeting.

It is seen instead as a forum where countries can explore options and positions in a less pressured environment

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8313672.stm
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micjer
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micjer


Number of posts : 5325
Age : 63
Location : canada
Registration date : 2009-01-23

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PostSubject: Re: It's already started   It's already started Icon_minitimeSun Oct 18, 2009 7:19 pm

Ya people are really believing the global warming issue is a great concern.....


Oct 17 2009

Quote :
Up to a foot of snow expected in Northeast - A new storm forming off the Carolinas will dump heavy snow across the highest mountains in Pennsylvania, upstate New York and central New England this weekend.



Parts of the Poconos and the Catskills can expect up to a foot of snow, with widespread amounts of 6-9 inches. Areas of the Alleghenies into the Green Mountains can expect 3-6 inches of a heavy wet snow, where trees and power lines already stressed by the previous snowfall could to come crashing down.

http://www.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&traveler=0&article=1



Quote :
Coldest Ever 1st Half of October in Minnesota & Wisconsin - Chicago, Minneapolis,
St. Paul, St. Cloud, Eau Claire - the entire Upper Midwest has endured a chilly start to October.



“Temperatures during the first half of the month in the Twin Cities, St. Cloud, Minn. and Eau Claire, Wis., will go down in history as the coldest on record,” says this article on Accuweather.com. “The normal average high temperature over the first two weeks of October in Minneapolis, Minn., is 63 degrees, but this year the average temperature lurked at a mere 47 degrees.”
http://www.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&traveler=0&article=5


http://www.iceagenow.com/Record_Lows_2009.htm


It's already started Penguins_01
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mntruthseeker
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mntruthseeker


Number of posts : 698
Location : Blaine
Humor : I got some
Registration date : 2009-01-26

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PostSubject: Re: It's already started   It's already started Icon_minitimeSun Oct 18, 2009 7:23 pm

LOL love the picture.....................

Earth is not the planet having the global warming..............they never get anything right, do they ?

Just trying to throw some darkness around again as usual
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Lightning222
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Number of posts : 2198
Location : here
Humor : most definitely
Registration date : 2009-07-26

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PostSubject: Re: It's already started   It's already started Icon_minitimeSun Oct 18, 2009 10:00 pm

Quote:
Up to a foot of snow expected in Northeast - A new storm forming off the Carolinas will dump heavy snow across the highest mountains in Pennsylvania, upstate New York and central New England this weekend.



Parts of the Poconos and the Catskills can expect up to a foot of snow, with widespread amounts of 6-9 inches. Areas of the Alleghenies into the Green Mountains can expect 3-6 inches of a heavy wet snow, where trees and power lines already stressed by the previous snowfall could to come crashing down.

http://www.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&traveler=0&article=1


I can feel it on it's way in my bones. We've had a rainy summer, an early cold spell with no Indian Summer and I can smell that snow. Just call me a human barometer.
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