Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersWe must take steps now on climate change issue

We must take steps now on climate change issue

Tony Hassall of Ballandean (SFT July 7) accuses me of making broad generalisations about climate change without any figures to back them up. Even though he is guilty of the same sin (I quote, “there has been a slight global cooling over the last 10 years”, with no corroborating data) I will provide some figures from respectable bodies such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
In the century 1906 to 2005, the average surface temperature of the earth rose by 0.74°C. In the second half of this period the increase was twice what it had been in the first half. In the lower troposphere (the lowest layer of the atmosphere) there has been a 0.13-0.22°C rise per decade since 1979. 1998 was the hottest year on record, followed by 2005, then 2003 and 2010 in equal third position. The IPCC believes that 1998 was particularly warm because it coincided with the strongest El Nino event of the 20th century.
So much for the widely touted claims that the earth is actually cooling.
The 2007 IPCC report estimates that the global average temperature will have risen by 3.4°C (perhaps as low as 2.0°C or as high as 5.4°C) by 2100. This exceeds the 2.0°C increase recognised as dangerous climate change by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Thus I stand by my assertion that we must take steps now to ameliorate climate change through cutting greenhouse gas emissions, rather than waiting and hoping for the best, as it seems that there is no “the best” to hope for.
Tony mentions that extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will benefit humanity by allowing plants to grow more rapidly and thus produce more food. However, carbon dioxide concentration is only one of several factors that influence plant growth. Research by the CSIRO, for example, suggests that in Australia and probably many other parts of the world, shortages of water due to climate change are likely to severely curtail the fertiliser effect of increased carbon dioxide levels. We would also need to increase the production of artificial fertilisers to enhance plant growth if we were to rely on extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to overcome food shortages in the future.

Ed Diery, Warwick

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Dalveen Sports Day returns after decades on the sidelines

The age-old tradition of Dalveen Sports Day has been resurrected after the Dalveen Sports Club and Dalveen School P&C joined forces to host the...
More News

Hands-on ag education event to debut in Warwick

Warwick students will get a hands-on taste of life in agriculture when the SCOTS PGC College hosts the town’s first Moo Baa Munch event...

Border Rugby league set to kick off

The Border Rugby League competition will start with a Round Robin event on 23 May at Tenterfield. Stanthorpe Gremlins president Roger O’Brien said round...

Warwick teen earns Boys Brigade’s highest honour

Standing inside Queensland’s Government House alongside an exclusive group of top Boys Brigade members, Warwick teenager Cain Cristina-Holland celebrated an achievement years in the...

UniSQ’s global role in groundbreaking space discovery

Researchers from the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ), alongside those from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard University, have made a groundbreaking...

Stanthorpe voice to lead global women’s group

Stanthorpe’s Sandy Venn-Brown has been voted president-elect of global women’s rights organisation Zonta International. Ms Venn-Brown secured the role at the organisation’s worldwide election earlier...

Free movie day draws a crowd

Churches of Christ's One Table Cafe function room turned into a mini-cinema when "Song Sung Blue" screened for free on the big screen. The free...

Jobs expo shines light on local opportunities

Job hunters flocked to Warwick TAFE campus last Thursday chasing new employment opportunities. Running for the second year in a row, the Warwick Jobs Expo...

Allora farmer to join global climate talks

Allora farmer Sally Higgins will take regional Queensland’s voice to the world stage after being named Australia’s Youth Climate Champion for this year’s COP31...

Big weekends for dragway

Warwick Dragway is gearing up for a busy two weeks of racing, starting with this weekend’s round two Track Championship action. Then next week...

Groovy Grannies raise more than $4k for LifeFlight

Fashion took full flight on the runway at Regency Park on Saturday morning as more than 100 people gathered for a Mother’s Day fundraiser...