From Harvard University , where you can’t tell them much, comes this laughable press release. I loved this line “Bridges may be in the wrong place“. Then the author, Michael McElroy, goes on to connect the long debunked “climate change caused the Arab Spring uprising”, when it was actually local politics and food prices resulting from those politics caused it. The stupid, it burns like a supernova in this article which is chock full of coulds, maybes, and might be’s. And, get this line:
“We don’t have definitive answers, but our report raises these questions, because what we are saying is that these conditions are likely to be more normal than they were in the past,”
Wait, what? Gosh, now there’s a headline: Future to be more normal, film at 11. – Anthony
Weather warning
Study examines climate change as a national security issue
A Harvard researcher is pointing toward a new reason to worry about the effects of climate change — national security.
A new report co-authored by Michael McElroy, the Gilbert Butler Professor of Environmental Studies, and D. James Baker, a former administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, connects global climate change, extreme weather, and national security. During the next decade, the report concludes, climate change could have wide-reaching effects on everything from food, water, and energy supplies to critical infrastructure and economic security.
The study was conducted with funds provided by the Central Intelligence Agency. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the view of the CIA or the U.S. government.
“Over the last century, the trend has been toward urbanization — to concentrate people in smaller areas,” McElroy said. “We’ve built an infrastructure — whether it’s where we build our homes or where we put our roads and bridges — that fits with that trend. If the weather pattern suddenly changes in a serious way, it could create very large problems. Bridges may be in the wrong place, or sea walls may not be high enough.”
Possible effects on critical infrastructure, however, only scratch the surface of the security concerns.
On an international scale, the report points to recent events, such as flooding in Pakistan and sustained drought in eastern Africa, that may be tied to changing weather patterns. How the United States responds to such disasters — whether by delivering humanitarian aid or through technical support — could affect security.
“By recognizing the immediacy of these risks, the U.S. can enhance its own security and help other countries do a better job of preparing for and coping with near-term climate extremes,” Baker said.
The report suggests that climate changes could even have long-reaching political effects.
It’s possible, McElroy said, that climate changes may have contributed to the uprisings of the Arab Spring by causing a rise in food prices, or that the extended drought in northern Mexico has contributed to political instability and a rise in drug trafficking in the region.

“We don’t have definitive answers, but our report raises these questions, because what we are saying is that these conditions are likely to be more normal than they were in the past,” McElroy said. “There are also questions related to sea-level rise. The conventional wisdom is that sea level is rising by a small amount, but observations show it’s rising about twice as fast as the models suggested. Could it actually go up by a large amount in a short period? I don’t think you can rule that out.”
Other potential effects, McElroy said, are tied to changes in an atmospheric circulation pattern called the Hadley circulation, in which warm tropical air rises, resulting in tropical rains. As the air moves to higher latitudes, it descends, causing the now-dry air to heat up. Regions where the hot, dry air returns to the surface are typically dominated by desert.
The problem, he said, is that evidence shows those arid regions are expanding.
“The observational data suggest that the Hadley circulation has expanded by several degrees in latitude,” McElroy said. “That’s a big deal, because if you shift where deserts are by just a few degrees, you’re talking about moving the southwestern desert into the grain-producing region of the country, or moving the Sahara into southern Europe.”
The report is the result of the authors’ involvement with Medea, a group of scientists who support the U.S. government by examining declassified national security data useful for scientific inquiry. In recent decades, the group has worked with officials in the United States and Russia to declassify data on climatic conditions in the Arctic and thousands of spy satellite images. Those images have been used to study ancient settlement patterns in the Middle East and changes in Arctic ice.
“I would be reluctant to say that our report is the last word on short-term climate change,” McElroy said. “Climate change is a moving target. We’ve done an honest, useful assessment of the state of play today, but we will need more information and more hard work to get it right. One of the recommendations in our report is the need for a serious investment in measurement and observation. It’s really important to keep doing that, otherwise we’re going to be flying blind.”
To read the full report, visit: http://environment.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/climate_extremes_report_2012-12-04.pdf
” … but we will need more information and more hard work to get it right.”
Please send MORE money. But wait, that’s not all >
“One of the recommendations in our report is the need for a serious investment in measurement and observation. It’s really important to keep doing that, otherwise we’re going to be flying blind.”
Please send LOTS more money. And keep the money coming, or else we’re flying blind.
Really, could they be more obvious if they tried harder?
Why are most readers of this blog so ready to ridicule out-of-the-box thinking? Michael McElroy is, if anything, a bit behind the times. When London Bridge was in London it was vulnerable to storm surges coming up the Thames estuary and we all know (don’t we?) that global warming will make storm surges more common (after all it is responsible for almost everything). However,
in 1967 London Bridge was dismantled and re-erected in 1971 in a place where it is completely safe from storm surges – Arizona!
London Bridge (Lake Havasu City)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Bridge_(Lake_Havasu_City)
Our civil engineers ought to follow this precedent and start moving all important bridges to locations where we know they will be safe from the effects of global warming!
Lil Fella from OZ says:
February 20, 2013 at 1:36 pm
“Does money create madness in science? ”
In a manner of speaking yes it does.
People like this get addicted to their fix of money. They will do almost anything to maintain their lifestyle (Harvard Profs make huge $$s for teach two or three classes). Anything includes incredible rationalizations – even bending reality to maintain their current situation.
“We’ve done an honest, useful assessment of the state of play today, but we will need more information and more hard work to get it right.”
Translation: “Send more money.”
Sorry, Dubya G. beat me to it
Great picture. Looks like the bridge over the Skookumchuck river in Washington State. Gee, I miss the slugs and gray skies.
Or maybe the Lewis River.
Jimbo’s comment says it all. CIA funding, “national security” issue, that’s what it’s all pretending to be about…
“We’ve done an honest, useful assessment of the state of play today”
Honest = I’m actually stupid enough to believe all this crap.
Useful = I hope my political masters approve and I get more grant money.
Please send much more money and keep it sustained, we have families to feed you suckersssss.
The CIA paid for this???
Post-normal is the new normal and those that control the language control the normal. This double-speak In truly Orwellian, the future is language and torturing the language defines the future.
Im surprised that the report failed to mention that the British built Iraq in the wrong place too and Iran oh and Israel and Somalia and……….not climate change, just ideology and politics.
These people are banking on the fact that the majority of the population are idiots, aren’t they?
{ measurement and observation }
I measured their paper and it took up about 13 screen inches on my laptop. I measured the time it took to read it and it was about 25 seconds.I observed not one shred of intelligence in the whole darn thing.
Here is what worries me…if CAGW is now a “national seurity” issue, those FOIs are going to be much harder to come by (not that they aren’t ridiculous now)
The link attached to the bridge picture takes you to a completely different bridge ….
The bridge in the picture looks ok to me. If it was closed, for how long? A few hours?
Most higher clearance vehicles could cross it. Judging by the apparent absence of turbulence, it doesn’t appear to be acting as a dam. The approach carriageways are well above the water level. Raising this bridge would make no difference, as a higher flood would take out the approaches.
Some of these alarmists need to understand Limit State Design. You don’t design for the most extreme possible event, otherwise you simply can’t build the road, bridge, dwelling, town, whatever. You pick a point that is reasonable on the basis of average return interval, eg statistical probability, 1 in 50 or 100 years – not 1 in 500 years. On reflection, maybe some of them do understand. Push the LSD up far enough and nobody gets to build anything anywhere.
Michael McElroy says:
“We don’t have definitive answers…”
Stop right there… and you’re absolutely correct!
Looks like the CIA has a new mission. Agents can go out with wristwatch-sized weather stations and report back from exotic locations. Analysts can input millions of bits of information about anything bad (e.g. some foreign leader’s ingrown toenail) and determine how it was caused by climate change using complex algorithms. Mostly they will need to keep tabs on the countries soon to be tropical paradises like Iceland, Nepal, Mongolia, etc and make sure the local politics is amenable to the enormous influxes of future climate refugees.
Keep your eyes on Costa Rica: we can help with bridges. With the most Bailey bridges per capita, we know how to stretch the life-span of these convenient and ‘temporary’ fixes. Currently, thirty years may be the limit.
Try and move a bridge and then get back to us.
What does Chicken Little have to say about this?
“One of the recommendations in our report is the need for a serious investment in measurement and observation. It’s really important to keep doing that, otherwise we’re going to be flying blind.”
============
Kinda like when the wolf pack has one surrounded ?
“Climate change is a moving target…” must be the best line. He didn’t get the memo that the target has been moved to “climate disruption”. The target moves so fast the apparatchiks can’t keep up!
Lil Fella from OZ says:
February 20, 2013 at 1:36 pm
“Does money create madness in science? Where do these people get off (or on)!”
Yes. The more the money, the more the madness.
Its not the birdges that are in the wrong place, its the water… Agree totally with the previous comments on over development. this is also compounded with town planners ‘cutting corners’; i.e. not putting in the recommended size of storm drain to deal with the 1 in 100 year floods and then acting all surprized when it backs up…
Also in Australia we have restrictions on when a dam can be put in – usually its completely banned in favour of a small undersized tank that just collects the roof rain water. Funny thing in Australia is it either hardly ever rains or rains alot of days.. Town planners do not plan, they just knee jerk to the latest fad and stop people managing their own lands and learning from others.
The crazy climate cult has really been amping up their propaganda push the last few days – its sort of like a climate change battle of the bulge – Adolph Gore must have ordered a climate blitzkrieg.