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Politics : The Exxon Free Environmental Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (19546)4/30/2014 11:44:45 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49090
 
Climate change: Pacific Ocean acidity dissolving shells of key species

By Paul Rogers

progers@mercurynews.com
Posted: 04/30/2014 06:00:00 AM PDT 3 Comments | Updated: 19 min. ago


In a troubling new discovery, scientists studying ocean waters off California, Oregon and Washington have found the first evidence that increasing acidity in the ocean is dissolving the shells of a key species of tiny sea creature at the base of the food chain.

The animals, a type of free-floating marine snail known as pteropods, are an important food source for salmon, herring, mackerel and other fish in the Pacific Ocean. Those fish are eaten not only by millions of people every year, but also by a wide variety of other sea creatures, from whales to dolphins to sea lions.

If the trend continues, climate change scientists say, it will imperil the ocean environment.


An unhealthy pterapod whose shell is dissolving due to rising levels of oceanic acidity. (NOAA/Steve Ringman)

"These are alarm bells," said Nina Bednarsek, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle who helped lead the research. "This study makes us understand that we have made an impact on the ocean environment to the extent where we can actually see the shells dissolving right now."

Scientists from NOAA and Oregon State University found that in waters near the West Coast shoreline, 53 percent of the tiny floating snails had shells that were severely dissolving -- double the estimate from 200 years ago.

Until now, the impact on marine species from increasing ocean acidity because of climate change has been something that was tested in tanks in labs, but which was not considered an immediate concern such as forest fires and droughts.

The new study, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a scientific journal based in England, changes that.

"The pteropods are like the canary in the coal mine. If this is affecting them, it is affecting everything in the ocean at some level," said one of the nation's top marine biologists, Steve Palumbi, director of Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove.

The vast majority of the world's scientists -- including those at NOAA, NASA, the National Academy of Sciences and the World Meteorological Organization -- say the Earth's temperature is rising because of humans burning fossil fuels like oil and coal. That burning pumps carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and traps heat, similar to a greenhouse. Concentrations of carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere have increased 25 percent since 1960 and are now at the highest levels in at least 800,000 years, according to measurements of air bubbles taken in ancient ice and other methods.

Many of the impacts are already being felt. Since the 1880s, when modern temperature records were first taken, the 10 hottest years have all occurred since 1998. Polar ice has melted, forest fires are burning in the West with increasing frequency, and the ocean has risen 8 inches since 1900 at the Golden Gate Bridge.

But what many people do not realize is that nearly a third of carbon dioxide emitted by humans is dissolved in the oceans. Some of that forms carbonic acid, which makes the ocean more corrosive.

Over the past 200 years, the ocean's acidity has risen by roughly 30 percent. At the present rate, it is on track to rise by 70 percent by 2050 from preindustrial levels.

More acidic water can harm oysters, clams, corals and other species that have calcium carbonate shells. Generally speaking, increasing the acidity by 50 percent from current levels is enough to kill some marine species, tests in labs have shown.

The new research on the marine snails does not show that increasingly acidic water is killing all of them, particularly older snails. But it is causing their shells to dissolve, which can make them more vulnerable to disease, slow their ability to evade predators and reduce their reproductive rates, the researchers said.

Some of the corrosive water near the shore could be a result of other types of pollution, such as runoff from fertilizer and sewage, said Stanford's Palumbi, who was not involved in the NOAA research. But because the study found rates of the snails' shells dissolving in deep water, far from the shore, human-caused carbon dioxide is the prime suspect, he added.

If people reduce emissions of fossil fuels, cutting carbon dioxide levels in the decades ahead, the damage to the oceans can still be limited, he said.

"But if we keep on the emissions profile we have now, by 2100 the oceans will be so harmed it's hard to imagine them coming back from that in anything less than thousands of years," Palumbi said.

"We are in a century of choice," he said. "We can choose the way we want it to go."
mercurynews.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (19546)4/30/2014 12:01:17 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49090
 
In today's edition of The Seattle Times:

Inslee orders a move toward limits on carbon emissions

Calling the response to climate change “a moral responsibility,” Gov. Jay Inslee on Tuesday appointed a task force to find ways to meet the state’s targets on cutting greenhouse-gas emissions.

By Jim Brunner

Seattle Times political reporter

Calling the fight against global climate change “a moral responsibility,” Gov. Jay Inslee signed an executive order Tuesday aiming to push Washington closer to a limit on carbon emissions.

The Democratic governor’s rhetoric was urgent and his goals sweeping, but his executive ordercalled for actions to move at a deliberate pace.

Inslee appointed a 21-member task force to help design a “market-based” carbon-reduction plan, such as a cap-and-trade system or carbon tax, to take to the Legislature next year.

Inslee also directed state agencies to further support clean-energy technologies such as solar power, and to work with utilities to reduce and eventually eliminate the use of electricity produced by coal-fired power plants, some of which comes from out of state. And he ordered a study of possible new clean-fuel standards.

“This is the right time to act because the facts are clear and they are compelling. Climate change is already upon us because of carbon pollution,” Inslee said during his announcement at Shoreline Community College’s car-repair training center.

Unless climate trends are reversed, Inslee and supporters say, the state will suffer increasingly catastrophic woes, such as intensifying ocean acidification that is threatening the shellfish industry.

The announcement drew quick criticism from a Republican legislative leader, who accused Inslee of sidestepping lawmakers.

State Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, who chairs the Senate’s committee on energy and environmental issues, said he was irritated Inslee did not share his plans with Republicans in advance.

Ericksen was skeptical of Inslee’s plans and said the governor’s antipathy to fossil fuels “will drive jobs out” of the state “for no reason.”

Inslee, during his announcement, pointed to a 2008 law passed by the Legislature that says the state will cut greenhouse gases to 1990 levels by 2020, with deeper reductions in subsequent decades.

“It is the law of the state of Washington ... what we are designing is the tools,” Inslee said.

State Sen. Kevin Ranker, D-Orcas Island, said Republicans should not be surprised by Inslee’s proposal, which follows the outlines of a plan Inslee and Democrats floated to a legislative climate-study panel that included Ericksen.

“This has been a very public process, and for anybody to say they were surprised — they need to pull their head out of the sand,” Ranker said.

But Ericksen, who called the 2008 law’s emission limits “goals,” said Inslee’s talk of carbon pollution was “loaded language,” adding that “carbon is a natural process.” Asked whether he believed global climate change described by scientists is real, Ericksen said his own views were “irrelevant.”

Ericksen said Washington’s impact on greenhouse- gas emissions is too minuscule to make a difference.

Inslee said Washington should not wait for other states or nations to act. “Wrecking our future and our home with carbon pollution is just wrong, no matter what anybody else does,” he said.

Last year, Inslee signed an agreement with the governors of California and Oregon, and the premier of British Columbia, in which he pledged to push for limits on carbon emissions and other actions to combat climate change.

But lawmakers here have balked at sweeping climate legislation before.

In 2009, the Legislature nixed a plan by then-Gov. Chris Gregoire to implement a cap-and-trade policy, which would have required industries to cut greenhouse-gas emissions below a certain limit, or buy extra permits in a marketplace.

Inslee also took a cautious step Tuesday toward a clean-fuel standard in Washington state, ordering the Office of Financial Management to conduct a feasibility study and a cost-benefit analysis. A low-carbon fuel standard would reduce greenhouse-gas emissions from cars, but opponents argue it could raise gas prices.

Republicans in the Legislature have been suspicious that Inslee might abruptly impose a costly low-carbon fuel standard by executive order.

Inslee said he does have that authority. But he said his administration will carefully examine the costs and benefits before moving forward.

Inslee’s 21-person Carbon Emissions Reduction Task Force includes representatives of business, unions, environmental organizations, utilities and immigration advocates.

The co-chairs are Ada Healey, vice president at Vulcan Real Estate, and environmental attorney Rod Brown of Cascadia Law Group.

Jim Brunner: 206-515-5628 or jbrunner@seattletimes.com. On Twitter @Jim_Brunner

seattletimes.com