Greenbang logo

Climate Change Index for week ending 20 Sept. 2009

By Greenbang on Monday, 21st September 2009

global-warmingToday we introduce a new weekly feature — the Climate Change Index — that tracks research findings and events directly attributable to global warming. Our aim is to provide a numerical, week-to-week indicator of climate change developments.

Items that qualify for listing in each week’s index include new climate data published in peer-reviewed academic journals and extreme weather incidents or other natural events that are likely directly linked to the global warming trend.

The Climate Change Index for this week, ending 20 Sept. 2009 (details below): 4

18 September: US Geological Survey researchers spot the carcasses of between 100 and 200 walruses along the northwest coast of Alaska. While the cause of death has yet to be determined, scientists are seeing walruses gathering in unusually large numbers on shore, as opposed to on sea ice. They attribute the shift to the fact that sea ice has now moved beyond the continental shelf over waters too deep for walruses to feed in.

17 September: Arctic sea ice cover reaches its seasonal minimum — the third-lowest extent ever recorded (after record lows in 2007 and 2008). This year’s minimum, occurring on 12 September, was 5.10 million square kilometres, compared to 4.52 million square kilometres in 2008 and 4.13 million square kilometres in 2007. The National Snow and Ice Data Centre adds, “While the ice extent this year is higher than the last two years, scientists do not consider this to be a recovery. Despite conditions less favorable to ice loss, the 2009 minimum extent is still 24% below the 1979-2000 average, and 20% below the thirty-year 1979-2008 average minimum. In addition, the Arctic is still dominated by younger, thinner ice, which is more vulnerable to seasonal melt. The long-term decline in summer extent is expected to continue in future years.”

16 September: The US National Climatic Data Centre, part of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, report that the world’s ocean surface temperature was the warmest for any August on record, and the warmest on record averaged for any June-August (Northern Hemisphere summer/Southern Hemisphere winter) season.

14 September: Research from the University of California – Berkeley finds that 48 of 53 bird species studied in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains have adjusted to climate change over the last century by moving to sites with the temperature and precipitation conditions they favored.

Tags:

READERS COMMENTS - Have your say...




Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.

Additional comments powered by BackType


RELATED NEWS

LATEST HEADLINES

Bloomberg: Renewables spending needs to reach $500bn by 2030 thumbnail

Bloomberg: Renewables spending needs to reach $500bn by 2030

Global spending on renewable energy projects could more than double by 2030, but
The Grumpy Environmentalist: The woes of waste thumbnail

The Grumpy Environmentalist: The woes of waste

There is plenty to be grumpy about when it comes to waste disposal
CO2 doesn’t stop at the border; Neither should energy policies thumbnail

CO2 doesn’t stop at the border; Neither should energy policies

Once upon a time, climate change felt like a distant threat on the
‘Frog foam’ could enable carbon capture, easier biofuels thumbnail

‘Frog foam’ could enable carbon capture, easier biofuels

What can frogs teach us about solar power, biofuel
Addicted to oil in a warming world? Blame the human brain thumbnail

Addicted to oil in a warming world? Blame the human brain

Never mind political differences, the rich-vs-poor divide or the
Arctic explorers set off on 500-km climate trek across sea ice thumbnail

Arctic explorers set off on 500-km climate trek across sea ice

A three-person team led by British explorer Ann Daniels