Friday, February 19, 2010


The Earth


    • Deserts are advancing and taking over the land. In Mali the desert has taken over about 220 miles in as few as 20 years. Deserts can be repelled, by developing tree-planting projects, having better agriculture and by managing the land better. However, governments still are reluctant to fund anti-desertification, despite horrific droughts that have occurred in recent years.
    • The Earth has been around for 4.6 billion years. Scaling this time down to 46 years we have been around for 4 hours and our Industrial Revolution began just 1 minute ago. During this short time period we have ransacked the planet for ways to get fuels and raw materials, have been the cause of extinction of an unthinkable amount of plants and animals, and have multiplied our population to that of a plague.
    • Despite all of the damage we have caused the environment most of it is reversible. We can restore habitats and return species to them; clean rivers; renovate buildings; replenish the topsoil, replant forests. However, these activities do not relieve the worst symptoms of the damage. We still have to fix the source of these problems, us and our vision that we must progress.


Human influenced facts


    • If just 25% of U.S. families used 10 fewer plastic bags a month, we would save over 2.5 BILLION bags a year.
    • On the average, the 140 million cars in America are estimated to travel almost 4 billion miles in a day, and according to the Department of Transportation, they use over 200 million gallons of gasoline doing it.
    • Every year we throw away 24 million tons of leaves and grass. Leaves alone account for 75% of our solid waste in the fall.
    • Over 100 pesticide ingredients are suspected to cause birth defects, cancer, and gene mutations.
    • Every ton of recycled office paper saves 380 gallons of oil.
    • About 1% of U.S. landfill space is full of disposable diapers, which take 500 years to decompose.
    • Energy saved from one recycled aluminum can will operate a TV set for 3 hours, and is the equivalent to half a can of gasoline.
    • Glass produced from recycled glass instead of raw materials reduces related air pollution by 20%, and water pollution by 50%.
    • Americans use 50 million tons of paper annually -- consuming more than 850 million trees.
    • Homeowners use up to 10 times more toxic chemicals per acre than farmers.
    • By turning down your central heating thermostat one degree, fuel consumption is cut by as much as 10%.
    • Insulating your attic reduces the amount of energy loss in most houses by up to 20%.
    • Enough glass was thrown away in 1990 to fill the Twin Towers (1,350 feet high) of New York's World Trade Center every two weeks.
    • One ton of carbon dioxide that is released in the air can be prevented by replacing every 75 watt light bulbs with energy efficient bulbs.
    • Many banks lent large sums of money to developing nations. In order to pay those debts plus interest many nations have turned to the mining of their natural resources as a source of financial aid.
    • Every day 40,000 children die from preventable diseases.
    • The public transportation that we have is a wreck. The U.S. continues to promote and invest in private car travel rather than public transportation.
    • The human population of the world is expected to be nearly tripled by the year 2100.
    • A three percent annual growth rate will result in the doubling of consumption and production of food and other products in 25 short years. The amount of motor vehicles that are expected to be operated will increase 15 million a year until at least 2010.
    • The world's per capita grain production has been on the downfall since 1985 despite the use of fertilizers and pesticides.
    • Already a train system has been developed (back in 1987) which is based on magnetic levitation and causes minimal pollution. These versions of a train are already in use in several countries.
    • Fibre optics, made of glass, are being used to replace copper cables throughout the world.
    • The uncontrolled fishing that is allowed has reduced the amount of commercial species. Some species, up to one-tenth of their original population.
    • Every day 50 to 100 species of plants and animals become extinct as their habitat and human influences destroy them.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Blundering into a Himalayan mistake

Are glaciers in the Himalayas retreating? India depends greatly on these water sources, and we should therefore be more cautious in assessing this risk, writes Darryl D'Monte.

25 November 2009 - Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh has a penchant for setting the cat among the (green) pigeons. His latest foray is to endorse the findings of a retired scientist that there is no proof that Himalayan glaciers are retreating. The study, titled Himalayan Glaciers: A state of art review of glacial studies, glacial retreat and climate change, has been compiled by V K Raina, a former Deputy Director General of the Geological Survey of India.

Raina told a journalist: "If we see the cumulative, average rate of retreat over the past 100 years, no glacier has deviated from that. There is no abnormal retreat." He cited the Gangotri glacier, held in the greatest veneration in this country as the source of the Ganga, as still 30 km long. "Even if we assume it retreats at the rate of 30m a year, it will take 1000 years to disappear."

Based on such findings, Ramesh has stated: "There is no conclusive evidence to link global warming and Himalayan glaciers, or to link the black carbon in the atmosphere with the glaciers. We also cannot link retreating glaciers in the Arctic because of climate change to those in Himalayas." Raina himself adds: "Himalayan glaciers, although shrinking in volume and constantly showing a retreating front, have not in any way exhibited, especially in recent years, an abnormal annual retreat of the order that some glaciers in Alaska and Greenland are reported to be showing."

Because this view received the imprimatur of the highest echelons of decision-making in the environment ministry, it was reported in the media as conclusive evidence - rather than one person's tentative venture into what is extremely tricky ground, rather akin to the treacherous glaciers themselves.

Ramesh's endorsement of this conclusion, and its subsequent wide coverage come precisely at a time when India is fumbling on formulating its policy at the forthcoming United Nations negotiations on climate change in Copenhagen, beginning on 7 December. So much so that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has actually asked Ramesh and Shyam Saran, his Special Envoy on Climate and a veteran Foreign Affairs officer, to sit together and hammer out a uniform Indian position on this highly sensitive political, environmental and economic issue, rather than be seen as talking at cross-purposes.

IFEJ Congress

Climate science is admittedly complex, and glaciology is a relatively new field in India. The congress of the International Federation of Environmental Journalists (of which this author was the chief organiser) was held on 28-30 October in Delhi, on Bridging North-South Differences in Reporting Climate Change. Dr Rajesh Kumar from the Birla Institute of Technology in Pilani, briefed the congress in Delhi, and reported how the Gangotri glacier has retreated by 2.29 km in 117 years but the highest rate was recorded between 1977 and 97 when it declined by 92 metres a year.

This period witnessed the highest rates of industrialisation throughout the world and India was no exception. The relentless burning of fossil fuels and indiscriminate use of dirty diesel for long-distance goods and passenger transport have no doubt contributed to warming.


Ramesh's endorsement of the view that glaciers are not melting, and its subsequent wide coverage come precisely at a time when India is fumbling on formulating its policy at the forthcoming United Nations negotiations on climate change in Copenhagen. (Photo: Khumbu glacier, in the Himalayas).
• Floods in Sutlej, made in China
• Alert to the implications
• Strengthen climate diplomacy

Prof Syed Iqbal Hasnain, with The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) made a presentation to journalists specifically on the "disappearance of Himalayan ice" and the Asian Brown Cloud (the polluted layer of the atmosphere over South Asia). Particulate emissions from inefficient chulhas throughout South Asia and diesel-fuelled trucks have caused black soot to settle on the Himalayas, which has a double warming effect. It prevents the ice from reflecting the sun's rays back into the atmosphere; instead, they are absorbed by the ice, leading to warming and melting.

This is no hypothesis - numerous climate researchers have conclusively proved this linkage. Although Ramesh has now sought to poke holes in the theory, there is no doubt whatsoever that there is a local problem in Asia, due to high emissions. This doesn't excuse the contribution of industrial countries by way of "historical emissions" over centuries of industrial growth, which have mainly caused global warming, but there are very real concerns over the actions of poorer countries too.

Business Standard recently interviewed another expert, Maharaj K Pandit, Director of the Centre for Inter-disciplinary Studies of Mountain and Hill Environment, who also heads the School of Environmental Studies at the University of Delhi. Pandit has been conducting multi-disciplinary research on the changing Himalayan environment. About Raina's study, he says: "It talks about a decreasing change in glacial retreat from the Western to Eastern Himalayas - higher in Kashmir and the lowest in Sikkim. It is a bit of a contradiction. On the one hand the report says that glaciers closer to sea levels are depleting faster (disregarding the latitudinal aspect), and on the other, it states that Eastern Himalayan glaciers, which are closer to sea level, are better off. This anomaly needs careful deliberation. Overall, the data is inadequate to draw any conclusions. In such critical cases, it is better to err on the side of caution rather than on misplaced optimism."

As someone who is not a glaciologist but, quite appropriately approaches the problem from other viewpoints, he asserts: "We have found something startling. Some 115-odd plant species in Sikkim's Lachung Valley have shown a significant northward shift of 500 feet to 1000 feet in the past 200 years. [In other words, the temperatures they are used to are only available higher in the mountains now, a sure indication of warming.] This is an indication of how sensitive the Himalayas are. In the Alps, the average rate of such a shift is 65-100 feet. What we are witnessing here is colossal change, proof that the Himalayas are more sensitive to climate change."

According to Pandit, "My own finding is that number of other factors such as the urban heat island effect, deforestation, expansion of agriculture and human settlements, and a quadrupling of the population density in the Himalayas since Independence would have contributed to changes in the regional climate. As I have said in my paper published in Conservation Biology, all these factors combined with global warming are a double whammy for the Himalayan ecosystems, including glaciers."

He also castigates the Ministry of Environment and Forests for oscillating between "a conspiracy of silence and a conspiracy of denial" on critical issues. It is only now that experts like Prof Hasnain are collaborating with NASA in examining these phenomena. Regrettably, we need to collaborate with Chinese scientists but that is not happening easily for political reasons.

IFEJ journalists, who were taken on a field trip to Leh after the congress in Delhi, also learnt there that it is important to record ordinary people's observations on glaciers, quite apart from the scientific research. Leh gets only 22 millimetres of rain a year, which is why it is termed a "cold desert" and people report how they used to depend on the melt from the Khardungla glacier for their water supply. But that has declined drastically over the years. One retired engineer exclaimed that he relied on his own indigenous knowledge to come to conclusions about the disappearance of these moving masses of ice rather than any official source of information.

Meanwhile, TERI chief Dr Rajendra Pachauri, who also heads the authoritative UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has dismissed Raina's study as "total unsubstantiated scientific opinion". The IPCC working group on this subject in 2007 reported that Himalayan glaciers are "receding faster than in any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate."

As reported in Science magazine dated 13 November: "With ice and snowfields covering more than 30,000 square kilometers, the Himalayas are often called the 'third pole' [and 'the water tower of Asia']. Records that began in the 19th century show that most glaciers advanced through that century as the Little Ice Age that gripped the Northern Hemisphere tapered off. Glaciers began to retreat in the early 20th century. Since 1960, almost a fifth of the Indian Himalayas' ice coverage has disappeared," according to Anil V. Kulkarni of the Space Applications Centre in Ahmedabad, who has mapped more than 1000 glaciers using satellite data.

The IPCC working group consisted of ten members and was thoroughly peer-reviewed. The IPCC is often criticised for being too conservative, no doubt conscious not to step on the toes of any UN member country, so it can hardly be accused of sensationalism. Prof Hasnain, who is actually conducting studies with sophisticated monitoring equipment in several glaciers in Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir, believes that Himalayan glaciers will retreat by 43 per cent by 2070 and 75 per cent by the end of this century.

Hundreds of millions of people in South Asia alone depend on the melt in the Himalayas for their very survival. Given this scale of dependence, there is hardly any doubt, whatever the complexities of glaciers retreating, that political leaders should exercise the greatest caution on this very crucial issue, instead of shooting their mouths off.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Save Water




There are a number of ways to save water, and they all start with you.
  • #2
    When washing dishes by hand, don't let the water run while rinsing. Fill one sink with wash water and the other with rinse water.
  • #3
    Some refrigerators, air conditioners and ice-makers are cooled with wasted flows of water. Consider upgrading with air-cooled appliances for significant water savings.
  • #4
    Adjust sprinklers so only your lawn is watered and not the house, sidewalk, or street.
  • #5
    Run your clothes washer and dishwasher only when they are full. You can save up to 1,000 gallons a month.
  • #6
    Choose shrubs and groundcovers instead of turf for hard-to-water areas such as steep slopes and isolated strips.
  • #7
    Install covers on pools and spas and check for leaks around your pumps.
  • #8
    Use the garbage disposal sparingly. Compost vegetable food waste instead and save gallons every time.
  • #9
    Plant in the fall when conditions are cooler and rainfall is more plentiful.
Tip #10
For cold drinks keep a pitcher of water in the refrigerator instead of running the tap. This way, every drop goes down you and not the drain.
  • #11
    Monitor your water bill for unusually high use. Your bill and water meter are tools that can help you discover leaks.
  • #12
    Water your lawn and garden in the morning or evening when temperatures are cooler to minimize evaporation.
  • #13
    Wash your fruits and vegetables in a pan of water instead of running water from the tap.
  • #14
    Spreading a layer of organic mulch around plants retains moisture and saves water, time and money.
  • #15
    Use a broom instead of a hose to clean your driveway and sidewalk and save water every time.
  • #16
    If your shower fills a one-gallon bucket in less than 20 seconds, replace the showerhead with a water-efficient model.
  • #17
    Collect the water you use for rinsing fruits and vegetables, then reuse it to water houseplants.
  • #18
    If water runs off your lawn easily, split your watering time into shorter periods to allow for better absorption.
  • #19
    We're more likely to notice leaks indoors, but don't forget to check outdoor faucets, sprinklers and hoses for leaks.
  • #20
    If you have an automatic refilling device, check your pool periodically for leaks.
  • #21
    Check the root zone of your lawn or garden for moisture before watering using a spade or trowel. If it's still moist two inches under the soil surface, you still have enough water.
  • #22
    When buying new appliances, consider those that offer cycle and load size adjustments. They're more water and energy efficient.
  • #23
    Shorten your shower by a minute or two and you'll save up to 150 gallons per month.
  • #24
    Upgrade older toilets with water efficient models.
  • #25
    Adjust your lawn mower to a higher setting. A taller lawn shades roots and holds soil moisture better than if it is closely clipped.
  • #26
    When cleaning out fish tanks, give the nutrient-rich water to your plants.
  • #27
    Use sprinklers for large areas of grass. Water small patches by hand to avoid waste.