. Earth Science News .
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Water For An Integrative Climate Paradigm

File image.
by Staff Writers
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Mar 15, 2011
International climate negotiations are deadlocked between the affluent global North and "developing" South, between political Left and Right, and between believers and deniers. Now, authors writing in the latest issue of the International Journal of Water argue that a more integrative analysis of climate should help resolve these conflicts.

Land use changes and water management are highly relevant to climate change. To quote hydrologists Juraj Kohutiar and Michal Kravcik of the Slovak People and Water NGO: "Water evaporation is the most important agent of energy transformation on Earth."

Unfortunately, some parts of the media simply play the crisis as a highly antagonistic two-headed controversy between Position 1 - human impacts on climate are negligible, and Position 2 - human impacts are significant and a result of carbon dioxide emissions. This has done little for public understanding and has been exploited by others with political and economic agendas.

The Editor of the IJW special issue, "Water and the Complexities of Climate", Ariel Salleh, environmental sociologist from the University of Sydney, says that public eco-literacy is critical to good climate policy formulation.

"Overly simplified climate models are one thing, but governments are proffering economic solutions (like taxes or trading) for ecological problems! This can achieve little on the ground - since economics and ecology deal with two different orders of reality."

Given the political uproar of international climate summits including Copenhagen and Cancun, attention has been deflected from a third variety of scientific opinion - Position 3 - the integrative climate paradigm.

This recognizes a range of first-order climate forcings and human-induced causes as significant as carbon dioxide emissions, such as deforestation, agro-industry, and urbanization.

United Nations climate negotiations promote programs such as the Clean Development Mechanism, where forests in the global South are treated as passive carbon sinks for pollution from industrialized countries in the global North.

However, what is commonly overlooked is the fact that intact vegetation actively manages the small water cycle, and cools the earth by converting sensible heat to the latent heat of evaporation.

This thesis is amplified by authors in the IJW special issue. Wilhelm Ripl from the Technical University of Berlin connects mismanagement of water with the running down of ecosystems and thus global warming.

Russian physicists Makarieva and Gorshkov argue for closer attention to the climate-regulating effects of forest-ocean interactions. A Czech scientific team led by Jan Pokorny assesses the efficacy of 'Solar energy dissipation and temperature control by water and plants'.

In Pokorny's words: "Ecosystems use solar energy for self-organization and cool themselves by exporting entropy to the atmosphere as heat. These energy transformations are achieved through evapo-transpiration, with plants as 'heat valves' ... While global warming is commonly attributed to atmospheric CO2, the research shows water vapor has a concentration two orders of magnitude higher than other greenhouse gases."

Wider implications of the integrative climate model are explored by Schmidt in urban planning. Norris, Andrews and Williams demonstrate the principles in agriculture. Hesslerova and Pokorny show how warming and rainfall loss follow "development" projects that clear fell forests and engineer drainage.

Australian political scientist James Goodman and activist Ellen Roberts expose the social costs on poor communities imposed by what they see as "badly conceived UN climate policies" such as the REDD scheme - Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation.

A final paper by Lodemann and colleagues is written from the viewpoint of environmental ethics. As Salleh notes: "The challenge is to achieve a climate politics that is at once responsive to local conditions, ecologically effective, socially democratic, and globally just."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Inderscience Publishers
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


CLIMATE SCIENCE
Climate-Related Disasters May Provide Opportunities For Some Rural Poor
Columbus OH (SPX) Mar 15, 2011
A new study in Honduras suggests that climate-related weather disasters may sometimes actually provide opportunities for the rural poor to improve their lives. Researchers found that that the poorest inhabitants of a small village in northeastern Honduras increased their land wealth and their share of earnings relative to more wealthy residents after Hurricane Mitch devastated their villag ... read more







CLIMATE SCIENCE
Japan disaster in numbers

Japan disaster: Insured losses at $12-25 bn

Japanese baker picks up pieces after tsunami

Japan disaster survivors search for the missing

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Mounting Japan crisis sparks warnings to leave Tokyo

Hong Kong extends 'black' travel alert for Japan

S.Korea warns against panic-buying of iodide pills

US warns citizens near Japan nuclear plant to leave

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Ethiopian dams on Nile stir river rivalry

Shallow-Water Shrimp Tolerates Deep-Sea Conditions

'Pancake' stingrays found in Amazon

Sinohydro inks $2 bn deal to build Iran dam: report

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Wheels Up for Extensive Survey of Arctic Ice

Arctic-Wide Measurements Verify Rapid Ozone Depletion In Recent Days

Pace of polar ice melt 'accelerating rapidly': study

Soot Packs A Punch On Tibetan Plateau's Climate

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Forgotten forage grass rediscovered

Japan to start screening food for radioactivity

Tainted pork is latest food scandal to hit China

Untapped Crop Data From Africa Predicts Corn Peril If Temperatures Rise

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Indonesian man escapes Aceh and Japan tsunamis

Prince William stunned at Christchurch quake damage

Japan disaster dead, missing at 14,650: police

Unique Japan tsunami footage boon to scientists

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Cameroon suspends Twitter for 'security reasons'

Over 500 flee restive Casamance flee to Gambia: UN

First protests in Guinea since Conde takes power

China lends Angola $15 bn but creates few jobs

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Study: More immigrant families are intact

Study: Neanderthals had control of fire

Age Affects All Primates

Brain Has 3 Layers Of Working Memory


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement