Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Leading into "climate summits" the US political class is always eager to sell out US taxpayers. It published "science" before 2009 Copenhagen summit implying US CO2 emissions cause African civil wars, and US taxpayers must pay. Nine months later, more PNAS science found CO2 didn't cause African wars after all-BBC, Nov. 2009, Sept. 2010

. 









Image above leads BBC article. Meaning: Greedy Americans made this African person cry and US politicians will make them pay.





(Below, links for above paragraph:)

Copenhagen Climate Summit, Dec. 7-18, 2009.
45,000 belched CO2 into the air traveling to Copenhagen to pick up what they had reason to believe would be their share of massive amounts of US taxpayer cash handed out by the US political class as "compensation for decades of warming." 

11/24/2009, "Climate 'is a major cause' of conflict in Africa," BBC, Richard Black

"Climate has been a major driver of armed conflict in Africa, research shows-and future warming is likely to increase the number of deaths from war.

US researchers found that across the continent, conflict was about 50% more likely in unusually warm years. 

Writing in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), they suggest strife arises when the food supply is scarce in warm conditions. 

Climatic factors have been cited as a reason for several recent conflicts. 

One is the fighting in Darfur in Sudan that according to UN figures has killed 200,000 people and forced two million more from their homes."...

[Ed. note: Encouraging even more frenzy surrounding the grotesque sight of 45,000 people flying to Copenhagen for their anticipated US taxpayer funded windfall, the US releases a PNAS study effectively telling the world that greedy Americans were mass murderers of Africans, and that US taxpayers would be expected to pay: "Our findings provide strong impetus to ramp up investments in African adaptation to climate change."...""I think it strengthens the argument for ensuring we compensate the developing world for climate change, especially Africa." And: "The United States backed what amounts to the single biggest transfer of wealth from rich to poor nations for any one cause--in a sense offering compensation for decades of warming the Earth."



(continuing): "Previous research has shown an association between lack of rain and conflict, but this is thought to be the first clear evidence of a temperature link.

The researchers used databases of temperatures across sub-Saharan Africa for the period between 1981 and 2002, and looked for correlations between above average warmth and civil conflict in the same country that left at least 1,000 people dead. 

Warm years increased the likelihood of conflict by about 50% - and food seems to be the reason why. 

"Studies show that crop yields in the region are really sensitive to small shifts in temperature, even of half a degree (Celsius) or so," research leader Marshall Burke, from the University of California at Berkeley, told BBC News. 

"If the sub-Saharan climate continues to warm and little is done to help its countries better adapt to high temperatures, the human costs are likely to be staggering." 

Conflicting outcomes

If temperatures rise across the continent as computer models project, future conflicts are likely to become more common, researchers suggest.


Their study shows an increase of about 50% over the next 20 years. 

When projections of social trends such as population increase and economic development were included in their model of a future Africa, temperature rise still emerged as a likely major cause of increasing armed conflict. 

"We were very surprised to find that when you put things like economic growth and better governance into the mix, the temperature effect remains strong," said Dr Burke. 

At next month's UN climate summit in Copenhagen, governments are due to debate how much money to put into helping African countries prepare for and adapt to impacts of climate change.

"Our findings provide strong impetus to ramp up investments in African adaptation to climate change by such steps as developing crop varieties less sensitive to extreme heat and promoting insurance plans to help protect farmers from adverse effects of the hotter climate," said Dr Burke.

Nana Poku, Professor of African Studies at the UK's Bradford University, suggested that it also pointed up the need to improve mechanisms for avoiding and resolving conflict in the continent.

"I think it strengthens the argument for ensuring we compensate the developing world for climate change, [ie, "reparations"] especially Africa, and to begin looking at how we link environmental issues to governance," he said. 

"If the argument is that the trend towards rising temperatures will increase conflict, then yes we need to do something around climate change, but more fundamentally we need to resolve the conflicts in the first place.""

===========

Added: 9 months later another US PNAS study finds CO2 isn't responsible for civil wars in Africa after all:

9/6/2010, "Climate shifts 'not to blame' for Africa civil wars,"


The 2009 paper suggested that climate had been a major driver of armed conflict in Africa, and that future warming was likely to increase the number of deaths from war.

US researchers found that across the continent, conflict was about 50% more likely in unusually warm years.

'Lack of research'

Dr Buhaug said it was too early to make such assertions.

"It is not a misunderstanding as such, more a case of the research still being in its infancy - we still don't know enough yet," he told BBC News.

"My article points to the fact that there has been too much emphasis on single definitions of conflict and single definitions of climate.

"Even if you found that conflict, defined in a particular way, appeared to be associated with climate, if you applied a number of complementary measures - which you should do in order to determine the robustness of the apparent connection - then you would find, in almost all cases, the two were actually unrelated."

Dr Buhaug explained that there were a variety of ways to define what constituted a civil war.

One method requires the conflict to claim 1,000 lives overall. Another method says unrest can only be categorised as a civil war if it results in 1,000 deaths each year.

Other definitions have much lower thresholds, ranging between one casualty and 25 casualties per year.

"I tried quite a few different and complementary definitions of conflict," said Dr Buhaug.

He found that that there was a strong correlation between civil wars and traditional factors, such as economic disparity, ethnic tensions, and historic political and economic instability.

"These factors seemed to matter, not so when it came to climate variability," he observed.

He says that it will take a while yet, even taking into account his own paper, for academic research to converge on an agreed position.

'Action still needed'

When it came to politicians and policymakers, many of the adopted positions were "speculative", he added.

"It is partly a result of a lack of solid evidence in the first place," the researcher explained. 

"If you do not have any solid scientific evidence to base your assumptions, then you are going to have to speculate."

He also said that the end of the Cold War also seemed to have had a impact on civil unrest in African nations.

"You did see a shift in the focus of quite a few conflicts during the 1990s, when the ending of the supply of arms saw some groups lay down their arms, while others sought alternative forms of funding, such as diamonds."

However, he concluded, the uncertainty about the link between conflict and climate did not mean that global climate mitigation and adaptation measures did not matter.

"Targeted climate adaptation initiatives, such as those outlined in various UN (strategies), can have significant positive implications for social well-being and human security.

"But these initiatives should not be considered a replacement for traditional peace-building strategies.

"The challenges imposed by future global warming are too daunting to let the debate...be sidetracked by atypical, non-robust scientific findings and actors with vested interests.""
...............................
...................

Added: Corruption and lack of good governance are main obstacles to climate adaptation in Bangladesh:

10/5/2013, "On October 3, (2013) a Transparency International Bangladesh report said the main obstacles to adapting to the negative impacts of climate change are corruption and a lack of good governance." "Climate Change Trust flouting own law with annual reporting failure," Dhaka Tribune, (Bangladesh), Abu Bakar Siddique

=============







...........


No comments: