
The nuclear, biological and climate threat – 2011 reviewed
In this special issue of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, published by SAGE, experts reflect on 2011 and highlight what to look out for in 2012 in the areas of nuclear energy, nuclear weapons, biosecurity, and climate change. Topics that have made the headlines during the previous 12 months, including the increased tension surrounding Iran’s nuclear programme, the aftermath of the Fukushima incident, and the state of US policy on climate change, are analyzed in detail in this special issue.
At the Doomsday Clock Symposium on January 9-10 in Washington, DC, the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board will evaluate the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock. In 1947, the Bulletin first displayed the Doomsday Clock on its magazine cover to convey, through a simple design, the perils posed by nuclear weapons. The Clock evokes both the imagery of apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of nuclear explosion (countdown to zero). In 1949, the Clock hand first moved to signal the assessment of world events and trends. The essays within this special issue are a glimpse into the topics the Bulletin’s board will consider when evaluating the minute hand.
Gerald Epstein, director of the Center for Science, Technology, and Security Policy (CSIS) of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, says that 2011 saw progress on approaches to address biological threats posed by non-state groups at both the Seventh Biological Weapons Convention (BWC)Review Conference and the G8 Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction.
In his paper, Biosecurity 2011: Not a year to change minds, Epstein writes that the BWC is evolving to adapt to the nature of the biological threat. Going forward, biosecurity will hinge upon the international community’s ability to cooperate, whether it can think creatively and strategically, and whether it enters partnerships with scientists from all world regions.
Steven E. Miller, director of the International Security Program at Harvard University, writes in his paper, Nuclear Weapons 2011: Momentum slows, reality returns that 2011 was short on breakthroughs in the arms control arena, following something of a landmark year in 2010. Miller highlights five events that unfolded during 2011 that he suggests “seem certain to cast a powerful shadow in months and years to come.” The current tension with Iran over weapons, the spread of nuclear technology in the Middle East and Southeast Asia, and difficulties in the US relationship with Russia are among them.
The Fukushima incident was a sudden and dramatic shock in 2011, writes Mark Hibbs, a senior associate in Carnegie’s Nuclear Policy Program, but what continued to be a concern throughout the year was the incremental escalation of continuing crises in Iran, North Korea, and South Asia. In his paper, Nuclear Energy 2011: A watershed year, Hibbs reviews reassessments undertaken around the world after Fukushima, and underlines Europe’s critical role in nuclear energy’s global future.
In Climate change 2011: A status report on US policy, Steven Cohen and Alison Miller highlight a growing partisan divide in US Congress. This divide has stalled the country’s federal climate policy, frustrated efforts to pass a cap-and-trade carbon permitting system, and spawned a battle between the US Environmental Protection Agency and Congress. Climate change policy has been pushed down to the municipal level, and the divide has also hindered US ability to effectively negotiate an international climate agreement. Meanwhile, US cities have enacted far-sighted climate policy initiatives, and growing fossil fuels costs have stimulated renewable energy investment, bringing commercially viable fossil fuel alternatives closer.
“The inevitable shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources would be greatly hastened by federal action to tax carbon dioxide emissions and use the revenue generated to support alternative energy technologies,” writes Cohen, executive director of Columbia University’s Earth Institute. “That action is extremely unlikely to occur unless climate change comes to be seen in the United States as a practical, rather than ideological, issue.”
The articles are available to access free for a limited period here: http://bos.sagepub.com/content/current
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
The Bulletin is an independent nonprofit 501 (c) (3) organization that publishes analysis and conducts forums about nuclear security, climate stabilization, and safety in the biosciences. Founded by Manhattan Project scientists from the University of Chicago, it links the work of scholars and experts with policymaking entities and citizens around the world. An international network of authors assesses scientific advancements that involve both benefits and risks to humanity, with the goal of influencing public policy to protect the Earth and its inhabitants. The organization’s scientific advisory boards include 19 Nobel laureates, ambassadors, leading scholars, distinguished NGO officials, and public policy experts. The Bulletin is closely followed in Washington and other world capitals and uses its iconic Doomsday Clock to draw international attention to global risks and solutions.
SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets. Since 1965, SAGE has helped inform and educate a global community of scholars, practitioners, researchers, and students spanning a wide range of subject areas including business, humanities, social sciences, and science, technology, and medicine. An independent company, SAGE has principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC. http://www.sagepublications.com
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A spokesman for a similar organization, The Union of Concerned Scientists, Kenji Watts said in response to the question: “How do you feel about the year 2011 as evaluated by the BAS draft release?” His response: “ruff”
Global Sea Ice with positive anomaly
Northern hemisphere -0.593 million sq km2
Southern hemisphere +0.597 million sq km2
Unbelievable. Iran is a “concern”, but CO2 is an existential threat. Who’s paying for this slop?
A spokesman for a similar organization, The Union of Concerned Scientists, Kenji Watts said in response to the question: “How do you feel about the year 2011 as evaluated by the BAS draft release?” His response: “ruff”
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Would his response change if offered treats, and his choice of furniture (throne) within his domain ?
A question few are asked, and fewer can resist 🙂
Fortunately, as history shows, chances are that they will be ignored in the future, new paradigms will appear, of course discovered, as history also shows, by obscure individuals.
Why is it so that nature´s laws or the “topos uranus” is nearer to individuals than to self selected and self denominated “intelligentsia”?. Be it in the scientific, the philosophical field or even in common practical affairs the gifted individual reigns supreme; consensual science, socialized science, it is incapable of producing anything new: The most detailed and careful addition of zeroes never reaches unity, that is why.
Yawn…..
Zzz……….
“…….and growing fossil fuels costs have stimulated renewable energy investment, bringing commercially viable fossil fuel alternatives closer.”
This shows that they are completely clueless. Natural gas has gone from $8 – 9/MM BTU to $3 over the last several years. Lower cost gas is driving “renewable” energy even farther from economic viability and is scuttling investments in alternatives. The most viable alternative to gasoline/diesel for transport fuel is now natural gas.
Ironically, the shift to gas will lower carbon emissions since the carbon content relative to energy is lower than other fossil fuels. A lot of the new gas-fired power generation capacity is now combined cycle, which is more energy efficient than the older coal-fired boiler/turbine model.
Wait a cottin pickin minute.
We’ve got atomic scientists roaming the country under their own guidance? No regulation at all?
Doesn’t the government know that atomic scientists are radioactive and should be dealt with accordingly? Yes! They are hazardous waste!
In other news, the EPA has decided to shut down all nuclear power plants based on a recent report showing a direct link between the nation’s largest nuclear power source and skin cancer. Links to climate change are also suspected. They are shutting down the largest plant first because it appears to be the most dangerous.
“Everyone is encouraged to stock up on alternative energy sources like flashlights with batteries,” said the EPA press release. “As of 6:00PM tomorrow, we will be shutting down the sun.”
It has seemed to me for a long time that “environmentalists” are the modern-day equivalents of the old Luddites.
Jim
This shows you what happens when a government starts lying to its citizens to accomplish a totally unreleated problem. They will get caught eventually and voted out of power! (and that what we citizens must now make sure happens… getting them voted out… put new minds in government, it is now perfectly clear)
They are nothing more than paid activists pushing the usual eco fascism and anti fossil fuel, anti nuclear, pro AGW propaganda and catastrophism.
As for Fukushima, these so called scientists are just not credible, nor are they really truthful considering the context of the actual disaster….. Whole coastal towns and cities were destroyed by one of Japans worst earthquakes and ensuing 20 meter, or higher, tsunami, around 25 thousand people were killed by these natural forces….. During that catastrophe the Fukushima nuclear powerplant was seriously damaged… However, no one has died from radiation, no one will die from it, no one will even get sick from it…. Yet the overblown hype continues. More misery is perpetrated by bureaucracy “protecting people” and the exclusion zones, than from any effects from radiation….. and these are 1970’s designs. The modern nuclear powerplants of today are even more robust and safe.
I just get sick of the exaggerations and lies of the environmental activists and their bought and paid for science findings.
Huh? A RADICAL LEFTIST IDIOLOG GROUP, with NO credentials at all is promoted…even
obliquely here? Let’s get a LIFE these guys rank BELOW the Union of Concerned Leftists (Henry Kendahl, et.al. Quarks for the Memory and “forced” credibility, let those with EARS hear and understand…) in terms of credibility or utility.
Beware Andy Worehal’s warning, “There is NO SUCH THING as ‘bad publicity’..” In the realm of real-emotion laden, mob-psychology politic, repeating the drivel of drivelers is to their net benefit, and our net detriment.
zmdavid says: at 11:29 am
Ah, man, freaking brilliant.
Agile Aspect says: “Amazingly, water in California is not considered to be renewable resource.”
Well, if you build in what has historically been (climate-wise) pretty much a desert, don’t count on having a lot of water in the future!
The atomic scientists are jumping onto the band wagon.
It is still popular in some circles to be alarmist about extreme AGW with no knowledge about past climate cycles (natural climate change and solar mechanisms) and no knowledge about cloud feedback research (appears based on five published papers that analyze satellite radiation data from top of the atmosphere compared to ocean surface temperature changes that the sign of the cloud feedback response to CO2 forcing is unequivocally negative rather than positive – i.e. Clouds resist rather than amplify forcing changes – which means the IPCC models forcing parameter is a factor of 3 too large.
Based on the unequivocal satellite top of atmosphere vs ocean temperature change analysis, a doubling of atmospheric CO2 will result in less than 1C warming with most of the warming occurring at higher latitudes where it will expand the biosphere rather than the IPCC predicted 3C warming with associated catastrophic climate change.
Unfortunately countries do not have magic wand. Spending vast deficit funds on “green“ energy boondoggles not create jobs. Vast deficit spending will transform healthy western economies into third world economies. Greece and Spain have led they way. Protesting will not undo mass “deficit“ stupidity.
Mass “green“ deficit stupidity will become less popular when people realize that deficit spending leads to currency collapse and anarchy. Sort of conservation of energy from the standpoint of economics science. One does need to be a rocket scientist or an atomic physicist to understand the consequences of massive deficit spending.
If your friends jump off a cliff that does not make it sensible and logical to jump of a cliff.
The Real Global Warming Disaster: Is the Obsession with “Climate Change” Turning Out to Be the Most Costly Scientific Blunder in History?
http://www.amazon.com/Real-Global-Warming-Disaster-Scientific/dp/1441110526
“Booker focuses his attention on the mother of all environmental scares: global warming. This original book considers one of the most extraordinary scientific and political stories of our time: how in the 1980s a handful of scientists came to believe that mankind faced catastrophe from runaway global warming, and how today this has persuaded politicians to land us with what promises to be the biggest bill in history. Christopher Booker interweaves the science of global warming with that of its growing political consequences, showing how just when the politicians are threatening to change our Western way of life beyond recognition, the scientific evidence behind the global warming theory is being challenged like never before. The book exposes the myth that the global warming theory is supported by a ‘consensus of the world’s top climate scientists’. It shows how the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is run by a small group of ‘global warming’ zealots, who have repeatedly rigged evidence to support their theory. But the politicians, pushed by the media, have so fallen for its propaganda that, short of dramatic change, our Western world now faces an unprecedented disaster.“
The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists was a comic book from the start, a publication that no serious industry person I know ever took the trouble to read. The International Atomic Energy Agency was a better source.
Has the leopard changed its spots? Am I now too harsh?
Douglas DC says:
January 6, 2012 at 12:31 pm
. . . damaged turbine blade . . . ”
One of our local wind harvesting sites has a blade on display next to the visitor’s center. This one was damaged during shipment and rather than send it to a windmill graveyard they found a use for it. It is quite educational and interesting to see and touch. Only one such per visitor center is needed and I don’t think most places have such. Maybe they could be ground up and used in roof paint – they are white.
John-X says:
January 6, 2012 at 1:44 pm
“Meanwhile, US cities have enacted far-sighted climate policy initiatives…”
WTF is this? How does a city have a “climate policy?” What is that?
You need to pay more attention to what is going on. See this page for the small town of Ellensburg, WA:
http://www.ci.ellensburg.wa.us/index.aspx?NID=124
All I can say is: shame on the atomic scientists. They know too much physics to be innocently deceived.
Can we usurp the Doomsday Clock for the countdown to 100,000,000 page views? Looks like we won’t need it very long at all.
WUWT comment contributor ‘treegyn1’ says above: “… in the People’s Republic of Oregon, the “brilliant” policy genius’s have declared that hydroelectric is NOT renewable.”
You are right that hydroelectric power is typically classified as a “renewable”. However, I’m inclined to go along with the Oregon folks. Hydroelectric power production resulting from man-made dams does indeed have a long life, But sediment does fills the lake behind the dam after a hundred years or so, and it’s effectively over.
kbray in california: Interesting question. Here’s an approximation I’ve done. Please be aware that some of these numbers may be too high, particularly the amount of insolation per day. Cloudy days reduce energy production by about 80 per cent from the loss of direct sunlight. I may also have underestimated the amount of demand of a house with electric heat.
Winter solar availability
Energy flux: approx. 30 Watts/sq/m (note that summer insolation is about 10 times this amount).
Photon activation = 30 x 0.13 = 3.9 W/sq/m (only 13 % of photons can free an electron in the substrate).
Energy production (avg. 5hours/day) = 3.9 x 5 = 19.5 Wh/day/sq/m or 0.02 kWh/day/sq/m
Average daily insolation = 5 hours (yes, daylight is longer, but this allows for the very low sun angle for most of the day).
Daily household consumption (including heat) = 25 kWh/day approx. (This may be very low with electric heat.)
So you need 1250 square metres of solar panels to in theory provide your daily household needs. Now your broom is your best friend, as you will have no power when they’re covered in snow. And, if they’re on the roof, you may want to check on the state of your health insurance.
The title makes me think of this photo:
http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f103/KQ6WQ/Motivational/FUD.jpg
🙂
Speaking of Luddites. I wonder how Ted Kaczynski feels now, mission accomplished?
cgh says:
January 6, 2012 at 8:15 pm
cgh, Thanks for the approximation.
I’ll apply those figures to a nice little home available in New York.
xxxx Doran Ave Glendale, NY 11385 * $569,000 * 3 Bed, 2 Bath 2,000 Sq Ft Lot
* Single Family Home * Open House: Sun 1/8, 12 PM – 2 PM
Since 1250 square meters is a ballpark 12,500 square feet, it looks like I might have a slight overhang onto my neighbor’s property…. by over 5 times the entire property lot of 2,000 sq ft.
6 lots total needed just for my own requirements. The neighbors won’t mind do you think?
It would provide great shade for those who need to avoid the sun.
Another negative is the loss of plant life underneath would eliminate a good CO2 scavenger.
So this is what a “Renewable, Carbon-Free, Energy Source” looks like.!!
FAIL ! BIG FAIL !
kbray in california says:
January 6, 2012 at 11:15 am
Aren’t the only renewable energy sources things like gerbils on wheels? Gerbils reproduce so they are renewable, right?
I’m paying tax money so that these pinheads can grab their vaginas and scream about nuclear apocalypse?