Climate Craziness of the Week: Harvard's McElroy: 'Bridges may be in the wrong place' for climate change

This flooding would never have been so bad if that bridge wasn’t in the wrong place. It probably shouldn’t cross the river. /sarc Photo from NOAA/NWS Paducah, KY WSFO http://www.crh.noaa.gov/pah/hydro/rainfall/jan05flood.php

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.

Michael B. McElroy

“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.”

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To read the full report, visit: http://environment.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/climate_extremes_report_2012-12-04.pdf

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John F. Hultquist
February 20, 2013 10:54 pm

Here is a picture of a bridge not likely to flood that Harvard could copy:
http://arras-france.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/millau_viaduct_france.jpg

MangoChutney
February 20, 2013 11:47 pm

“Study examines climate change as a national security issue”

Surely with sea level rise of 20 metres there will be less nation to make secure, so every body a winner 😉

February 21, 2013 1:02 am

This fool is a problem for national security and he is under written by the C.I.A. are you breeding these idiots in America on purpose?

Mr Green Genes
February 21, 2013 2:55 am

“Bridges may be in the wrong place”
This reminds me of a story I once heard about the Great Western Railway.
A weary traveller alighted from a late night train and asked for directions to the town centre. The porter told him that it was about 4 miles away. The traveller, astonished, asked why the GWR hadn’t built the station near to the town, to which the porter replied “We thought of doing that but eventually decided that it would be better if we put it near the railway”.

Gail Combs
February 21, 2013 7:50 am

I live on a road with two bridges over creeks that flood over the bridges routinely. Ten years ago they turned this dirt road into a paved road. They cut the hill down in front of my property by a good six feet but did they raise the part of the road that flooded most springs? NOOOOoooo. So now we have a road that crumbles into asphalt platters routinely thereby providing guaranteed jobs for the DPW.
At the time it was being paved I asked the crew foreman if the dirt from my farm was going to be used to raise the road above the flood zones of the creeks and was told no it was going to be sold instead. GRRRrrr. I and my neighbors would rather have seen the funds spent on raising the flood prone areas and leaving the road graveled instead.
Planned future employment anyone?

February 21, 2013 7:50 am

In the US we have a Bill of Rights. These rights can be suspended by Marshall Law.
Marshall Law can be invoked If threats to National Security exist.
Get ready for the Army to reset your thermostat.

February 21, 2013 7:56 am

wayne Job says:
February 21, 2013 at 1:02 am
“This fool is a problem for national security and he is under written by the C.I.A. are you breeding these idiots in America on purpose?”
Wayne, If only they were idiots. The CAGW zealots are extremely clever and extremely socialist/progressive.
They create their “useful Idiots” (52% of the US electorate). Through blatant scare-mongering propaganda such as this “study”.
Snakes in the grass, All of ’em.

BLACK PEARL
February 21, 2013 10:10 am

just ideology and politics.
crosspatch says:
February 20, 2013 at 3:20 pm
These people are banking on the fact that the majority of the population are idiots, aren’t they?
********************
Well as Winston said ” A five minute talk with the average voter is an argument against democracy”

oldfossil
February 21, 2013 11:08 am

It is impossible to rule out the likelihood that in the future I could become the world’s richest and most handsomest man. (A helluva lot of other men would have to die first but that’s just conventional wisdom.)

Gail Combs
February 21, 2013 11:38 am

crosspatch says:
February 20, 2013 at 3:20 pm
These people are banking on the fact that the majority of the population are idiots, aren’t they?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
That is why John Dewey experimentally determined the best way to derail independent thinking using ‘Progressive Education’

Dumbing Down America by Dr. Samuel Blumenfeld
Dewey created his famous experimental Laboratory School where he could test the effects of the new psychology on real live children.
Dewey’s philosophy had evolved from Hegelian idealism to socialist materialism, and the purpose of the school was to show how education could be changed to produce little socialists and collectivists instead of little capitalists and individualists. It was expected that these little socialists, when they became voting adults, would dutifully change the American economic system into a socialist one.

The latest twist is declaring our gifted students who are bored to tears with the dumbed down progressive education system as ADD and drugging children as young as 4. These drugs are alleged to have serious side effects including hallucinations, aggressiveness, hypertension, seizures, convulsions, stunted growth rate and brain damage. link 1 and link 2 and link 3 and link 4
In 2005, the Center for Disease Control released a report stating that 4.4 million children aged 4 to 17 years had been diagnosed with ADHD. Of those cases, 2.5 million (56 percent) were taking medication for the disorder….roughly 10 percent of children in the United States [are] estimated to have Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)… ADHD is classified as a mental disorder.

Born to Explore! The Other Side of ADD
Gifted children and adults are at high risk for being identified as ADD. Most people, including most medical professionals, do not realize giftedness is often associated with the following behaviors… As a result, many gifted children these days are being medicated for a brain defect they probably don’t have.
The “gifted” are supposed to be model students, teaching themselves how to spell and perfect their grammar, win spelling bees, have perfect social skills and become neurosurgeons. This is true of SOME gifted children and adults. Many others, however, act out and space out in boring school settings, and their increasing anger and frustration may lead to oppositional behavior and underachievement. They may have sloppy handwriting because of fast thought processes, miss details, and be unorganized and forgetful. Gifted adults are not always easy to spot, either. They are housewives, teachers, and carpenters, and they may not even realize they are gifted. Some even believe they are stupid.
There is some evidence that as many as half of all kids with IQs above 130 get below average grades, and in one study 13% of high school drop outs were gifted. In another study, a full 25% of children diagnosed with ADHD tested so high in creativity tests they qualified for state scholarships. I recently spoke with a consultant for the gifted who said about half of the gifted boys referred to her had been told they were probably ADD. Complicating matters is the uneven types of intelligence many people have. People labeled ADD often have a “visual/spatial” type of intelligence that confuses many teachers and parents. They might have trouble reading or spelling but have outstanding abstract reasoning abilities and become bored very quickly in traditional schools.
Proponents of the gifted assert that it is usually problems with the school environment that are to blame for behavior problems and underachievement, not any problem with the child.

Chris R.
February 21, 2013 11:57 am

Heh. Jimbo had it right. In his post of 12:54 pm he cites
a 1974 CIA-funded study that basically boils down to:
“OMG! A new ice age (cooling) is starting! There will be widespread famine, drought
and political instability
!”
And now, we have a 2013 CIA-funded study that basically
boils down to:
“OMG! Man-made climate change (warming) is causing widespread famine,
drought, and political instability
! In addition, floods! Infrastructure in the
wrong place! Rising sea levels! Desertification!”
Give them credit, though–in 40 years, they have learned to throw in extra potential
disasters, tied to the exact opposite of what was supposed be causing the same
disasters 40 years ago.

February 21, 2013 5:42 pm

Yeah, I can see it. The Golden Gate bridge should have been built in Mississippi and the Brooklyn Bridge in North Carolina. Do these guys have any idea why a bridge is built in the first place?