Reminder: your stubborn sceptical mind will be dissected this week

UPDATE 1600, Monday 20 July: Lecture cancelled – see below
Manukau Institute of Technology

Manukau Institute of Technology, Otara. Look for the theatre. Click to enlarge.

Come along and hear all about it

This is a reminder to readers in and near Auckland about the free public lecture next Wednesday to address the problem of sceptical minds stubbornly clinging to questions about global warming. Since there can be, by our definition, no genuine scientific questions unanswered by our mainstream climate scientists, there must be something in the mind interfering with the acceptance of climate change.

Can sceptics help themselves or do we have to help them? Can they ever put their denial behind them? Victoria University has a highly-skilled psychologist who will dissect their anti-social behaviour.

The official brochure asks: “If it’s so obvious, why doesn’t everyone believe in climate change?” But the brochure misses the simple truth—that it’s not obvious because it’s not happening. The denial is actually in those presenting this examination of denial. What is obvious to the open mind is that it’s easier to cast doubt on the sceptic than to produce non-existent evidence of dangerous anthropogenic warming.

I mentioned this extraordinary public lecture in Are you a scientist? a few weeks ago. I’ll be there; I hope to see some of you.

When and where

When: 5.30–8pm, Wednesday 22 July
Where: Manukau Institute of Technology Theatre, Newbury St, Otara, Auckland

Remember

If you would like to attend, rsvp by tomorrow, Monday 20 July, to rsvp@vuw.ac.nz with ‘Manukau lecture’ in the subject line or phone 04-463 5791.


Two Victoria University of Wellington academics will this month give a public lecture on aspects of climate change at the Manukau Institute of Technology. Climate change: beliefs, biases and measures will see Dr Marc Wilson from the School of Psychology and Professor Lionel Carter FRSNZ of the Antarctic Research Centre discuss how people think about the issue of climate change and aspects of the science underpinning the world’s changing climate.

UPDATE 1625, Monday 20 July: Lecture cancelled

I’ve been advised by Victoria University that the lecture has been cancelled. I rang them for details. They were wanting 40 RSVPs to go ahead but apparently they received only 20. It’s disappointing that we won’t hear the details of this theory explaining climate denial nor get the chance to question them, though they might look at it again next year.

Visits: 282

154 Thoughts on “Reminder: your stubborn sceptical mind will be dissected this week

  1. Richard C (NZ) on 28/07/2015 at 11:33 am said:

    Mike.

    >”Therefore any posited forcing of CO2 in between is invalid.” YES. You have it here. The posited “forcing” is there but it is ineffectual.

    When I say the forcing is “there” I mean in 2 ways, both of which are theoretical even though the second may lead one to think it is actually effective because it is observed:

    1) The theoretical CO2 forcing can be estimated for any period using the IPCC’s simplified expression,

    dF = 5.35 ln (C/Co). Where Co is initial year CO2 level in ppm and C is final year CO2 level in ppm.

    This expression is at odds with other CO2 forcing expressions used for example in furnace design which are validated expressions. Here is the IPCC’s expression graphed against the Leckner expression for 278 K (typical of lower mid troposphere temperature):

    https://tallbloke.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/eggert-co2.png

    The Leckner curve reaches maximum forcing around 200ppm and that’s it – no more. The IPCC curve continues with increased forcing.

    Nevertheless, this is one method of determining the IPCC’s theoretical CO2 forcing in the atmosphere from historical CO2 levels and developing future scenarios, however erroneous those might be.

    2) The theoretical CO2 forcing can also be measured by going out to any location and pointing appropriate instruments at the sky to spectroscopically identify the CO2 signal from its emission spectrum. That’s this graph (The wavelength is in wavenumber (which I hate) but that can be converted to simple microns for convenience):

    http://clivebest.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/smoothed-CO2-emissionheight1.png

    These observations must be done regularly over time to track the additional CO2 molecules in the air i.e. as CO2 levels increase the theoretical forcing increases. The CO2 molecules intercept outgoing radiation, they thermalize (get heated), then almost instantly re-emit radiation (give off heat) . They do not “trap” heat as is the common notion. CO2 is an effective energy transfer medium. In the thermosphere coronal mass ejection (CME) energy from the sun (dollops when this happens) is sent right back out to space by CO2 and NO2. We would cook if that didn’t happen. CO2 is used as a coolant in refrigerators (Code R744). It does exactly the same job in the troposphere but climate science says it doesn’t.

    Note that there is no observed downward trend in outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) at TOA as would be expected from the theory that OLR intercepted by CO2 and converted to energy in the form of heat is blocked from egress to space as radiative energy. Observed OLR is increasing not decreasing.

    The observed increasing atmospheric CO2 emissions can then be converted to a theoretical forcing at TOA. Berkeley Labs did exactly this study over 2000 – 2010 at Oklahoma and Alaska:

    ‘First Direct Observation of Carbon Dioxide’s Increasing Greenhouse Effect at the Earth’s Surface’
    http://newscenter.lbl.gov/2015/02/25/co2-greenhouse-effect-increase/

    “Both series showed the same trend: atmospheric CO2 emitted an increasing amount of infrared energy, to the tune of 0.2 Watts per square meter per decade. This increase is about ten percent of the trend from all sources of infrared energy such as clouds and water vapor.”

    The observed theoretical “forcing” (which is actually a TOA term – not “Earth’s Surface”) is a little less than what would be arrived at by using df = 5.35 ln (C/Co) over the same period.

    # # #

    Both are theoretical. But by however means the theoretical CO2 “forcing” is arrived at it is inescapable (undeniable) that the theoretical forcing is having no effect whatsoever on the earth’s energy budget which is the primary critical criteria for climate change.

  2. Man of Thessaly on 28/07/2015 at 9:37 pm said:

    [RT] Neither the Dutch nor the Italians, in engineering major works to prevent inundation, are responding to the IPCC’s insubstantial guesswork

    Where do you get your information, Richard? Try the Dutch Delta Commission report http://www.deltacommissie.com/doc/deltareport_full.pdf
    “When considering sea level rise scenarios, one of the inputs was the temperature increase calculated by the IPCC on the basis of the IPCC highest emission scenario, called A1FI”
    “[…] this scenario is realistic, as witnessed by the fact that actual emissions since 2000 are in line with, or even exceed the IPCC A1FI scenario”

    So it looks like they did refer to the IPCC, wouldn’t you say?

    Regarding the relative importance of subsidence and sea level rise, from the same report:

    “[Using the IPCC scenario] … we may expect a sea level rise of 0.55 to 1.2 m. Mean land subsidence along the Dutch coast, due to glacial isostasy and subsoil compaction, will be well over 10 cm in 2100. On balance this implies a relative ‘sea level rise’ for the Netherlands of 0.65 to 1.3 m in 2100.”

    Are you just making stuff up, Richard? Why? There are plenty of interesting things to discuss about the policy response to sea-level rise, without denying verifiable facts.

    Finding information on the Venice flood protection works is harder – they have less documentation in English. But “IPCC” appears on their website a lot, you’ll find.

  3. Man of Thessaly on 28/07/2015 at 10:06 pm said:

    [Andy] Christchurch is not planning for sea defences, unlike Holland.

    Do you think they should? Seawalls and barrages are expensive – I’m not surprised they survive a cost-benefit analysis in the Netherlands and Venice, but suburban Chch? I suspect not. Should people outside the affected region be asked to pay for such a project? These are not rhetorical questions – I really think people should see such an analysis when the council makes planning decisions.

    If insurance companies funded rebuilds, but now won’t insure the house, then I can well imagine your frustration. As I wrote yesterday, New Zealand really needs a coherent policy on this: ways of continuing insurance cover of assets facing predictably increasing risks; ways of ensuring that (the majority of) people will abide by decisions to ‘red zone’ if and when it proves necessary. It’s got to be possible, don’t you think?

  4. Man of Thessaly on 28/07/2015 at 10:46 pm said:

    [Richard C] My statement “unperturbed” is in comparison to panic stricken Christchurch City Council. The Dutch actually seek out the risk of inundation (they are risk seekers) in order to live on land claimed from the sea. They plan, build, carry on unperturbed. But CCC are risk averse (in the extreme).

    I haven’t seen any ‘panic stricken’ behaviour. The council statements in The Press were pretty calm, I thought:
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/69901937/6000-christchurch-properties-at-risk-from-coastal-erosion
    eg “people should not be alarmed if their homes were within either an inundation or erosion zone. The report projected decades ahead and there was time for authorities to respond to the risk”

    In both the Netherlands and Christchurch the authorities are planning for the future using the best available information. I know you don’t agree with the IPCC conclusions, Richard, but they are authoritative, and governments would be taking an extreme risk not to heed them. Nobody can blame them if the world doesn’t warm and the sea doesn’t rise – they are acting responsibly with the information they’ve got. But if they ignore it, and the sea _does_ rise, then the liability would be terrible. A no-brainer, from their point of view.

    As for the Dutch “seeking risk”… nah, nonsense. The very first recommendation of the Delta Commission report is “the present flood protection levels of all diked areas must be raised by a factor of 10”. The defences they plan are the result of cost-benefit analysis. I recommend the report, the English translation is good reading.

  5. Richard C (NZ) on 29/07/2015 at 3:24 am said:

    T Man

    >”I know you don’t agree with the IPCC conclusions, Richard, but they are authoritative, and governments would be taking an extreme risk not to heed them. Nobody can blame them if the world doesn’t warm and the sea doesn’t rise – they are acting responsibly with the information they’ve got. But if they ignore it, and the sea _does_ rise, then the liability would be terrible. A no-brainer, from their point of view.”

    Authoritative? What a load of rubbish. You accept authority even when it is in error and can be proved to be? There’s all manner of nasty things that could be planned for because they “could” eventuate but this distorts policy. Everyone already knows sea levels are rising due to natural cause and the rates are known. The risk is known. The IPCC predictions of a man-made acceleration are demonstrably wrong already, there is no risk ignoring them. It should be happening by now if it is ever to happen but we’ve had 25 years and nada. The historical rate of rise is the default for planning and totally responsible. North Carolina has moved to this, they sacked the IPCC. Shoalhaven in Australia called in the NIPCC for a realistic assessment. There is no justification for basing policy on whimsy. Councils will either follow suit or be forced to concede council by council but it will take time and probably legal action.

    >”As for the Dutch “seeking risk”… nah, nonsense. The very first recommendation of the Delta Commission report is “the present flood protection levels of all diked areas must be raised by a factor of 10″. The defences they plan are the result of cost-benefit analysis. I recommend the report, the English translation is good reading.”

    The Dutch made a conscious decision years ago to claim land from the sea below sea level. This is risk seeking. They continue to take the risk. This is risk taking. If they are already committed to continuing their dike regime, and they appear to be, then obviously they will go to whatever cost provides the greatest benefit which for them being below sea level is rather different to being above it. I would want the highest dike for cost irrespective of whatever scenario was being catered for.. But Christchurch is not in that situation. The SLR risk for an above default scenario is negligible and the default (not actually a risk because the rate is known) can be managed without unnecessary cost and value wipeout.

  6. Andy on 29/07/2015 at 8:54 am said:

    Christchurch is not planning for sea defences, unlike Holland.
    Do you think they should? Seawalls and barrages are expensive

    Yes I agree they are expensive. I don’t necessarily agree that the council or govt should fund a sea wall at Southshore. However, the government decided to red-zone all the estuary facing properties and demolish them. Private property owners provided their own sea wall defences where needed (not large I might add – just enough to prevent erosion).

    There is now a buffer zone of empty land which is now vulnerable to storms and no one seems to take responsibility. But then this is a story of Christchurch all over and I don’t want to sound like another moaner especially as we are planning to move away permanently.

    I am more concerned, however, by the general ethos and philosophy shown in the MfE report I linked to earlier.

    http://www.mfe.govt.nz/sites/default/files/coastal-hazards-climate-change-guidance-manual.pdf

    Figure 1.2 describes the “new paradigms” which express how we are supposed to deal with coastal hazards, in particular that we need to “Living with coastal erosion as a natural cyclic process that helps shape the
    natural characteristics of the coastal margin” rather than treat it as something that is “abnormal” that needs to be managed

    Well, of course coastal erosion is a natural cyclic process , but so is cancer and ebola.

    I’m just wondering how far we take this philosophy. Christchurch is, after all, a drained swamp. Should we let the swamps reclaim us as part of a “natural cycle”? The UK planners in charge of the drainage of the Somerset Levels seemed to think so. This led to major devastation and loss of large amounts of wildlife, but it is “natural”

    Should the wildfires in Australia be allowed to burn unchecked? Many think so, it is part of a natural cycle that regenerates seedlings. Should we fine people for creating firebreaks around their properties to protect their families? Some think so.

    What of the Wellington CBD and Wellington airport. (Much built on reclaimed land) Should we let these get reclaimed by nature, as part of a “natural cycle”. ?

    Therein lies my dilemma.

  7. Richard Treadgold on 29/07/2015 at 10:08 am said:

    Man of Thessaly,

    So it looks like they did refer to the IPCC, wouldn’t you say? … Are you just making stuff up … denying verifiable facts

    Thank you for your references, and your impressive grasp of these policy issues. However, I stand by what I said, because there’s no reason to believe the IPCC’s most conservative scenario, much less its most alarming. The thread of reason that connects our emissions with the level of the sea is tenuous and demonstrably unproven.

    The Delta Committee was responding to the threat of dangerous climate change because when it was set up in 2007 the political pressure to believe in it was enormous. But that doesn’t mean they have acted on it. If you read the report you find the Dutch don’t meekly accept everything the IPCC says but make up their own minds.

    The Delta Committee found great difficulty handling the IPCC forecasts because of the astounding margins of error they presented. The IPCC cannot specify what the global average temperature will be in 2100, yet the amount of sea level rise (they say) depends upon it. They claim that the temperature depends on the social and industrial scenario that eventuates, but even when they specify a temperature, the sheer range of possible sea levels arising from their guesswork defeats sensible planning. In addition, the committee held different opinions from the IPCC on several aspects of the scenarios. In the end it appeared to decide that by 2100 the sea level might have risen between +0.55 and +1.10 m. But they ignore it. They say (p.25):

    The scenarios are more reliable out to 2100 thanks to our knowledge of the present rate of sea level rise and the fact that it is unlikely that this rate will accelerate greatly over a period of several decades. The reliability of predicted sea level rise beyond 2100 is far less.

    In a piece of eminently reasonable thinking, they decided that climate change would cause no great changes before 2050 and thus they left future engineering for the future.

    So, as I have already observed, the Netherlands “are [not] responding to the IPCC’s insubstantial guesswork” but are engaged in work based firmly on experience. If you have evidence that this is wrong, by all means present it.

    Finally, I should mention that when you quote the Delta report:

    […] this scenario is realistic, as witnessed by the fact that actual emissions since 2000 are in line with, or even exceed the IPCC A1FI scenario

    You should know that, notwithstanding these high—even record—emissions, the global average surface temperature since about 2000 has exhibited what many call a hiatus. In other words, the very first link in the tenuous chain of logic that establishes our guilt in the rising of the sea has recently been shown to be weak.

    Our emissions don’t control the Earth’s temperature.

  8. Andy on 29/07/2015 at 10:46 am said:

    The IPCC cannot specify what the global average temperature will be in 2100, yet the amount of sea level rise (they say) depends upon it

    If you read the MfE report linked to earlier, they are suggesting policy recommendations for the year 2100. They even have a graph projecting sea level out to the year 3000
    (Figure 2.6, page 17)

  9. Richard Treadgold on 29/07/2015 at 11:50 am said:

    Andy> “They even have a graph”

    Quite. It was produced by 8 models from an IPCC scenario but does not allow for more melting ice brought on by the higher temperatures. Guesses piled upon speculation heaped on wild assumptions. It’s scientific nonsense and an engineer would scoff at being asked to build something based on this picture of the “future.” Of course we must never forget (from the Delta Commission report): the IPCC says explicitly that these scenarios are not extrapolations of present trends but plausible pictures of the future and it makes no explicit statements on the scenarios’ probability.

  10. Richard C (NZ) on 29/07/2015 at 2:17 pm said:

    >”Should we fine people for creating firebreaks around their properties to protect their families?”

    Remembering the fellow in the path of the Black Saturday fire who had previously been fined $60,000 for clearing a firebreak around his house who said after surviving the fire unscathed that he had been vindicated.

    >”Christchurch is, after all, a drained swamp”

    Drainage is about the best example of living with consequences there is. Christchurch and Somerset Levels are prime examples (Holland is the extreme case). Our modern infrastructure creates a drainage problem simply by altering the runoff coefficients. Flood plains are built on so naturally there will be a flooding problem eventually. But we get some event that would otherwise be sensibly managed locally and it becomes an opportunity for “authorities”, including international (as per T Man), to exercise overbearing distortion of the situation because of some global scare campaign based on fantasy and a Green agenda.

  11. Richard C (NZ) on 29/07/2015 at 3:04 pm said:

    Map of the coastal areas of Tauranga, Mount Maunaganui and Papamoa showing tsunami evacuation zones.

    http://bopcivildefence.govt.nz/media/11308/tsunami_map_-_tauranga_mt_maunganui_papamoa_1_.pdf

    Property in the red sells for millions. A tsunami could happen but people are falling over themselves to live in the red zone. Gareth Morgan has a “beach house” over the road from the beach right next to where the soundshell was but just to the south,

  12. Richard C (NZ) on 29/07/2015 at 3:35 pm said:

    Gareth Morgan’s expansive front window gives him direct line of sight to the Moturike Island tide guage:

    https://www.niwa.co.nz/our-science/coasts/tools-and-resources/sea-levels/moturiki-island

    Haven’t time to pull up the data right now but might try later. I don’t think the series is continuous but might be worth a look. It is not in the NZL section of PSMS:L that I can see but I see this in Google:

    Obtaining Tide Gauge Data
    http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/
    Obtaining Tide Gauge Data. To obtain individual records, click on the appropriate …… -36.843. 174.769. 127. NZL, 09/06/2003, 690, 002. MOTURIKI ISLAND.

    Must be there somewhere.

  13. Richard C (NZ) on 30/07/2015 at 2:39 pm said:

    >”Gareth Morgan’s expansive front window gives him direct line of sight to the Moturike Island tide guage”

    MOTURIKI ISLAND Station Information and Tide Gauge Data [2002 – 2005 only]
    http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/stations/978.php

    Link to larger image of monthly data plot [2002 – 2005]
    http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/rlr.monthly.plots/978_high.png

    NIWA has data from this tide guage for 2015 so I don’t know why PSMSL only has this plotted or on record. Maybe now the data has to be purchased from NIWA.

    FOLLOWING PSMSL DOCUMENTATION ADDED 23-Nov-2010 :
    Data for Moturiki Island 2002 onwards has been made RLR. Primary benchmark is
    BC 81 4.462m above TGZ. RLR year is 2002 with RLR factor 5.438m.

    The full data series, 1960.8750 – 2006.4584, is here:

    Download metric sea level data. Use only with extreme caution.
    http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/met.monthly.data/978.metdata

    1960.8750; 1713; 0;000
    1960.9584; 1719; 0;000
    1961.0416; 1756; 8;000
    1961.1250; 1713; 0;000
    1961.2084; 1737; 0;000
    1961.2916; 1734; 2;000
    1961.3750; 1817; 0;000
    1961.4584; 1753; 9;000
    1961.5416; 1753; 5;000
    1961.6250; 1737; 0;000
    1961.7084; 1765; 3;000
    1961.7916; 1643; 2;000

    [Break]

    2002.0416; 1608; 0;000
    2002.1250; 1638; 0;000
    2002.2084; 1623; 0;000
    2002.2916; 1582; 0;000
    2002.3750; 1617; 0;000
    2002.4584; 1598; 0;000
    2002.5416; 1578; 0;000
    2002.6250; 1548; 0;000
    2002.7084; 1497; 0;000
    2002.7916; 1551; 0;000
    2002.8750; 1561; 0;000
    2002.9584; 1525; 0;000
    2003.0416; 1579; 0;000
    2003.1250; 1581; 0;000
    2003.2084; 1589; 0;000
    2003.2916; 1648; 0;000
    2003.3750; 1629; 0;000
    2003.4584; 1610; 0;000
    2003.5416; 1582; 0;000
    2003.6250; 1611; 0;000
    2003.7084; 1623; 0;000
    2003.7916; 1541; 0;000
    2003.8750; 1534; 0;000
    2003.9584; 1545; 0;000
    2004.0416; 1575; 0;000
    2004.1250; 1609; 0;000
    2004.2084; 1584; 0;000
    2004.2916; 1558; 0;000
    2004.3750; 1651; 0;000
    2004.4584; 1573; 0;000
    2004.5416; 1604; 0;000
    2004.6250; 1625; 0;000
    2004.7084; 1498; 0;000
    2004.7916; 1496; 0;000
    2004.8750; 1502; 0;000
    2004.9584; 1567; 0;000
    2005.0416; 1492; 0;000
    2005.1250; 1620; 0;000
    2005.2084; 1632; 0;000
    2005.2916; 1599; 0;000
    2005.3750; 1655; 0;000
    2005.4584; 1577; 0;000
    2005.5416; 1574; 0;000
    2005.6250; 1544; 0;000
    2005.7084; 1571; 0;000
    2005.7916; 1542; 0;000
    2005.8750; 1564; 0;000
    2005.9584; 1584; 0;000
    2006.0416; 1536; 0;000
    2006.1250; 1585; 0;000
    2006.2084; 1649; 0;000
    2006.2916; 1627; 0;000
    2006.3750; 1633; 0;000
    2006.4584; 1609; 0;000

    According to this (dodgy) data, there has been a fall of sea level since the early 1960s right outside Gareth Morgan’s beach house window.

    Katherine Hayhoe says we just need to look out our windows to see climate change.

  14. Richard C (NZ) on 30/07/2015 at 3:01 pm said:

    Average of the last 10 datapoints in the 1960s section of Moturiki Island is: 1740.8
    Average of the last 10 datapoints in the 2000s section of Moturiki Island is: 1590.0

    1740.8 – 1590.0 = 150.8mm sea level fall over 4.5 decades.

    -33.5mm/decade or -3.35mm/year

    I don’t think Gareth Morgan needs to be alarmed that his sea view will disappear and multi-million property value slump in the immediate future though.

    It’s the tsunami that will wipe him out.

  15. Andy on 30/07/2015 at 3:08 pm said:

    Meanwhile, in this “hottest year ever”, the gritters are out in Scotland
    http://www.scotsman.com/news/environment/scotland-s-weather-snow-forecast-as-gritters-seen-1-3843824

  16. Richard C (NZ) on 30/07/2015 at 3:44 pm said:

    >”Meanwhile, in this “hottest year ever”, the gritters are out in Scotland”

    And,

    “Anomalous” July snowfall in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho
    http://iceagenow.info/2015/07/anomalous-july-snowfall-in-montana-wyoming-and-idaho/

    Freak cold wave hits Papua – Thousands go hungry

    “The cold wave first struck at the beginning of July, hitting the district of Lanny Jaya particularly hard. The sub-districts of Kuyawage, West Wanu and Goa Baliem were struck by hailstorms accompanied by freezing temperatures which plunged to minus two degrees Celsius.

    “The average temperature in Lanny Jaya ranges between 17.8 degrees to 32 degrees and such an extreme cold wave hasn’t been witnessed since 1989. So far, nine people have died, half of whom were children. Thousands of people are threatened with food shortages, says the article, written by Ahmad Jusein of the IFRC.. The hailstorms caused severe damage to farmland and killed a large number of livestock.

    “Our community has suffered as the hailstorms destroyed yam crops and people have nothing to harvest. It also killed 168 pigs which are our main livestock,” said Lenius Muria Lanny, head of Kuyawage sub-district.

    http://iceagenow.info/2015/07/freak-cold-wave-hits-papua-thousands-go-hungry/

    The Gore effect continues…down under

    Al does it again – visits Melbourne during coldest July in 19 years

    Hamish Grant writes:

    As a staff member at the august academic institute of higher learning that employs some of the greatest alarmists in the business (but I am still proud to say that I work there), Melbourne University has just hosted a visit from Al Gore & the PR spiel says that he would provide “update to his influential 2006 film An Inconvenient Truth”.

    I have also just finished watching the 6pm TV Channel 7 news weather report which told me that we are on track for the coldest (both daily max & overnight min) July for 19 years.

    Just sayin……

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/07/29/the-gore-effect-continues-down-under/

    # # #

    Fortunately, depending on your perspective, crippling heat is everywhere else.

  17. Richard Treadgold on 30/07/2015 at 5:33 pm said:

    Good work, RC, as ever.

    “150.8mm sea level fall over 4.5 decades: -33.5mm/decade or -3.35mm/year”

    Brilliant. I think Willem de Lange has mentioned Mt Maunganui is accreting from riverine sediment transport and rising. Illustrates the complexity of geographical processes.

  18. Richard C (NZ) on 30/07/2015 at 6:01 pm said:

    >”Mt Maunganui is accreting from riverine sediment transport and rising. Illustrates the complexity of geographical processes”

    The Moturiki Is. tide guage is mounted on a rock on the ocean side though (not harbour side). It is independent of any sedimentary processes.

  19. Man of Thessaly on 31/07/2015 at 11:04 pm said:

    [Andy] There is now a buffer zone of empty land which is now vulnerable to storms

    I find this a fascinating statement. Do you think all of our empty natural coast is “vulnerable to storms”? Personally, I only see vulnerability where people have built in the zone that is affected by natural cycles of erosion and accretion; and, under the regime of climate change and rising sea level, where buildings are going to be so affected in the future. Seawalls are dubious protection even under static conditions, and worse as the sea encroaches.

    Your musings about how development interacts with nature are interesting; I wouldn’t say there’s a blanket answer to whether nature is good and development bad, or vice versa; but in each case the people involved need to balance the risk and reward. Whether to place yourself in the path of the rising sea is, famously, one of the simplest of such cases.

  20. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 7:49 am said:

    Why is it a fascinating statement? The sea walls were placed by private property owners to protect their land. Now the land has been acquired by the government under compulsory purchase, there is no requirement to maintain those defenses, which makes the coast more vulnerable to erosion.

    What exactly is “fascinating” about this statement?

  21. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 8:26 am said:

    Of course, we are completely fine to build a house close the Alpine Fault, (which we are) which has a greater than 30% chance of rupturing in our lifetime, causing widespread fatalities and mayhem, which the government take no interest in.

    However, the government and councils seem very keen to make our coastal properties worthless and uninsurable due to the potential and unproven science of rapidly rising sea levels, which apparently the MfE can model out to the year 3000

  22. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 3:19 pm said:

    I just came back from a local community meeting where about 80 people were discussing the new Christchurch plan and how it would affect them, for example by not being allowed to rebuild on land that they own.

    There was also talk of sea walls and a tidal barrage.

    Fascinating

  23. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 4:31 pm said:

    Speaking of tidal barriers, the cost is a mere $430 million to solve the non problem (currently) of tidal surges,

    http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/70707779/tidal-barrier-could-reduce-flooding-risk-in-christchurch

    Another nice little consultancy earner for someone, dreaming up hair brained schemes.

  24. Richard C (NZ) on 01/08/2015 at 5:09 pm said:

    >”not being allowed to rebuild on land that they own”

    Are you allowed houseboats on dry land?

  25. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 5:16 pm said:

    The council note that current sea level rise is around 1.7mm a year, but it is expected to rise sharply in 2065

    I am not making this up.

  26. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 6:08 pm said:

    I will try to scan some of the council leaflet and post it here for interest

  27. Richard C (NZ) on 01/08/2015 at 6:34 pm said:

    Here ya go Andy:

    1999 Brown Brothers Power Cat, NZ$ 429,000

    CODE: 9462
    LENGTH: 17.4 metres
    TYPE: Power

    The ultimate live-aboard/house boat, very well maintained by her retiring owner. Launched approximately 1999, steel/timber glassed construction, powered by twin Isuzu 140hp diesels, shaft drive, cruise at 12lph at 6.5 knots. Carries 1000L fuel and 1000L water. A very nice interior layout with 6’3″ headroom, 4 double berths in private cabins, large galley with fridge and 2 freezers, cosy lounge area with diesel heater. Large top deck and entertainment area. Equipped with 6.5kva genset, BBQ, dinghy and 50hp outboard, HIAB deck crane. Equipped with a good range of electronics. Has been in SSM survey. Major refit 2013. Inspection will not disappoint. Currently lying in Picton. Will look at trade/swap on small house on Great Barrier Island.

    http://www.gulfgroup.co.nz/displayboat.php?list_code=9462

  28. Andy on 01/08/2015 at 6:42 pm said:

    Looks great. Actually, here is a true story. Before I was born, my parents lived on the River Thames in London on a boat.

    The boat was called “The Gay Adventurer”

    How times have changed.

  29. Andy on 02/08/2015 at 11:39 am said:

    I scanned the key page on sea levels from the “Coastal Hazards” booklet from Christchurch City Council
    https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/48940782/ChChCoastalHazardsPage9.jpg

  30. Richard C (NZ) on 02/08/2015 at 12:36 pm said:

    CCC have moved the baseline on 10 years to 2000 from the IPCC’s 1990. Even so, sea levels SHOULD have risen 50mm since 2000 on that projection i.e. 3.33mm/yr in linear terms. But they say Christchurch and Banks Peninsula are only rising at 1.9 +/- 0.06mm/yr.

    Their man-made boost of 1.75mm/yr is not occurring – they are wrong already in 2015. If they are wrong in 2015 they are wrong for 2065. Why they think they might be able to guess rise to 2115 is anyone’s guess.

    3.33mm/yr is 200mm over the 60 years 1990 – 2050 in IPCC terms. Dr Jan Wright implied “20 to 40cms” from 2015 – 2050 i.e. about 300mm over 35 years or 8.57mm/yr. Wrong of course, it should be 300mm over 60 years 1990 – 2050 or 5mm/yr.

    1.90mm/yr Reality
    3.33mm/yr CCC (IPCC’s low end)
    5.00mm/yr IPCC’s mid-range
    8.57mm/yr Dr Jan Wright, MfE Commissioner for the Environment ($300,000 pa)

    Why not just accept reality?

  31. Richard C (NZ) on 02/08/2015 at 1:16 pm said:

    Should be – “Their man-made boost of [1.43mm/yr] is not occurring”

  32. Richard Treadgold on 02/08/2015 at 2:20 pm said:

    Andy,

    sea levels from the “Coastal Hazards” booklet

    Thanks for this. The CCC contradicts the Delta Commission of the Netherlands, responsible for keeping the sea where it belongs. Where can we download the booklet?

  33. Andy on 02/08/2015 at 3:09 pm said:

    RT
    This link is fairly close to the relevant parts of the print booklet, which I can scan all of if needed

    http://www.ccc.govt.nz/environment/land/coast/coastal-hazards/coastal-erosion-and-inundation/

    Not that the graph of projected SLR is the upper bound of scenarios presented in the Tonkin and Taylor report
    http://www.ccc.govt.nz/assets/Documents/Environment/Land/Tonkin-Taylor-Coastal-Hazard-Assessment-Report-2015.pdf

    Page 7

  34. Andy on 02/08/2015 at 5:55 pm said:

    I note that the Tonkin and Taylor report I link to above is actually V2 which is mentioned in the report

    A peer review of the assessment methodology and reporting was
    undertaken by Hume Consultancy Ltd. All the suggested amendments documented in the peer
    review were included in this report (Version 2).

    There is some new jargon in there that will take some digesting

    Following consultation with Council, the P66% CEHZ
    value at 2065 and the P5% CEHZ value at 2115 are adopted as prudent likely and potential CEHZ
    values (termed CEHZ2065 and CEHZ2115 respectively).

    I thought we had reached “peak jargon” but I was mistaken

Comment navigation

 

Leave a Reply to Andy Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Post Navigation