Visar inlägg med etikett climate exchange. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett climate exchange. Visa alla inlägg

onsdag 1 oktober 2008

Things...

I don´t understand:
1. Why can´t people ever learn to go down a few steps when they are going out from the bus? They stand there one hundred thousand years waiting for the busdriver to open the doors!!! It doesn´t even help others in the bus when I sit close to the door, instructing the stupid ones to step down. Others do the same annoying thing anyway. I could definetly not be a bus driver. In the end I would scream like a pitbull, red in my face.

2. George Bush is the president. But there is this name for a president that has been reelected: sitting duck. This makes the whole system very static and in the end he can´t do almost anything. Why not change this system so the poor reelected president can rule as he should be allowed to?

3. I want the oilcompanies, carcompanies etc to let all the patents free and out in the public. I know they hide patents that solves a lot of climate exchangeproblems. They´ve bought them in order to hide them, just to keep on make profit on for instance oil. When the world lives in the 12th hour that should be a crime an equal to be put in rocket and sent away on a neverending journey (that is until the air is nomore).

4. And why does people think that when I am out with my children, having a stroller, I walk slowly? They think they can pass my way first. I am fast! Beware!

onsdag 4 juli 2007


Newsupdates:
Sports: It´s tennis at wimbledon now, and maybe something big is going to happen: the tennislegend Bjorn Borg is perhaps losing the incredible record of five wins in a row.

It´s 4th of july! A day of celebration.

The release of the new Harry Pottermovie.

Weather: flooded areas in Sweden risks to get more rain this week.

The terroristhunt in England has a new face: Seven of eight captured are doctors.
(http://www.dn.se/DNet/jsp/polopoly.jsp?d=148&a=667487)

Shie and Jonas writes about: roadtrip, wedding, Simon´s Acproblems, a 4,5 pound steak.
Mir and Sam writes about: a flat town, marriage, Christian a new familymember.
Johanna writes about quitting her job.
Jay and Andrea writes about: a 30 yard dumpster
Kenton and Jen writes about: some people getting knocked over and hanging on basketball rims.

måndag 2 juli 2007

First, please notice the link to the right that goes to Candace´s homepage. It´s worth the time to surf there.

Ok, when we where heading to ALV we suddenly heard a noice from what I guess was from one of the tires and the brakes. We could hear the sound for about ten kilometers and I thought of a lot of possible scenarios that could happen. I prayed silently and nothing more happened.

The second risk of catastrophy: We, that is Victoria, Hanna, David, Johanna, Tobias and Berit, spent half a day in Borås.
We ate at Mc´Donalds, spent some money on clothes and icecream and while Hanna, David and I waited for the others, near by the parkinglot, our children decided to hunt the pigeons. It was a kind of street where only busses are alowed to go. I saw one coming, said to Hanna and David to wait. When the bus passed by us, Hanna ran out to hunt the pigeons again, only to see another bus coming from the other direction. She ran over the street just a few meters from the bus. It was seconds from a huge catastrophy.

Now to a question. What would you do/say now?
Tomorrow I will give you: A day of celebration, swedish cake, blue and yellow balloons.

söndag 1 juli 2007



As you may have seen, it rained quite a lot the first day we were at ALV. I realized that I am not only short on goodlooking clothes, but also on real raincoats. The one I had functioned the other way around. It was like bees to honey. But I am sure you agree with me that it´s just because of the “unexpected” or “special happening” that you remember it better. A time worth remember. It´s like 70 hours in a car, singing “100 bottles of…” or discuss important issues with close friends. Do I recommend you to visit this place? Yes!

Tomorrow I will tell you two things I experienced that could have ended in catastrophy.
Speaking of climateexchange; Here are some quotes and links that give light to the global warming and how close to disaster we actually are:
"According to Dr. James Hansen, a top climate scientist at NASA, it´s much more important to hurry than we thought. “-If we wait ten more years this way, we will pass the point where it´s impossible to make everything right again. It would be as warm as it was thousands of years ago…” …”if we shall have any chance to change anything it must happen whithin one, two or three years.”
Freely interpreted from expressen.
Av Lisa Jannerling expressen

The top climate scientist at NASA says the Bush administration has tried to stop him from speaking out since he gave a lecture last month calling for prompt reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

The scientist, James E. Hansen, longtime director of the agency's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in an interview that officials at NASA headquarters had ordered the public affairs staff to review his coming lectures, papers, postings on the Goddard Web site and requests for interviews from journalists.
(http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/science/earth/29climate.html?ex=1296190800&en=28e236da0977ee7f&ei=5088)

The authors use the model for climate simulations of the 21st century using both "business-as-usual" growth of greenhouse gas emissions and an "alternative scenario" in which emissions decrease slowly in the next few decades and then rapidly to achieve stabilization of atmospheric CO2 amount by the end of the century. Climate changes are so large with "business-as-usual", with additional global warming of 2-3°C (3.6-5.4°F) that Hansen concludes "'business-as-usual' would be a guarantee of global and regional disasters."
"Climate effects may still be substantial in the 'alternative scenario', but there is a better chance to adapt to the changes and find other ways to further reduce the climate change," said Sato.
While the researchers say it is still possible to achieve the "alternative scenario", they note that significant actions will be required to do so. Emissions must begin to slow soon. "With another decade of 'business-as-usual' it becomes impractical to achieve the 'alternative scenario' because of the energy infrastructure that would be in place," says Hansen.
(http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/news/20070530/)
"Civilization developed, and constructed extensive infrastructure, during a period of unusual climate stability, the Holocene, now almost 12,000 years in duration. That period is about to end".
Dr. Hansen has been saying for three years that we have, at best, ten years to stop the rise in CO2 emissions and start their decline, or the earth will become 'a different planet' than what we have taken for granted for thousands of years. But we have seen very little changed in government policy and it appears that Dr. Hansen feels it is necessary to take it up a notch.
(http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/374107.html)

Twentieth century sea level trends, however, are substantially higher that those of the last few thousand years.
Since 1993, an even higher sea level trend of about 2.8 mm/yr has been measured from the TOPEX/POSEIDON satellite altimeter.
Recent observations of Greenland and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet raise concerns for the future. Satellites detect a thinning of parts of the Greenland Ice Sheet at lower elevations, and glaciers are disgorging ice into the ocean more rapidly, adding 0.23 to 0.57 mm/yr to the sea within the last decade.
A global temperature rise of 2-5°C might destabilize Greenland irreversibly.
(http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/gornitz_09/)