Global
Warming Hotspot
by Louise
Burfitt-Dons
As
Campaigning Director, I’ve been speaking to the general public
for some years about the work of the Global Warming Alliance and,
at the same time, monitoring awareness to enlist support. In doing
so, I established there was a need for more information on what
was really going on to save the planet read
more about this and advertising opportunities with the GWA.
GWA STRONG WIND WARNING!!
Saturday
January 17th
GWA
Cat 1 Extra tropic
Cyclone Alpha 01 heads towards U.K. with potentially gale force winds
gusting up to 80 knots or 92 MPH expected along the Irish Sea coast
line and across Scotland. An intense Atlantic low with a core pressure
of 945 mbs is due to make landfall around midnight Saturday night
17th January. This is the first extra tropic cylone making landfall
in 2009
Sustainability Report
Yacht USA Tacks
November 5th 2008
Donald Burfitt-Dons, GWA
In
just one day the odds of technology providing a solution for global
warming jumped dramatically. By handing the helm of the world’s
largest economy to a president who has the intelligence to understand
the risks of climate change and the commitment to address them, a
glimmer of light has appeared on the edge of a very dark horizon.
Doubtless, the realities of the credit crunch hangover and budgetary
constraints will result in a softly softly approach but the will is
there and only with involvement by the US can the developed world
expect to find a way of first stalling and then reversing the steadily
mounting greenhouse gases in our atmosphere.
Well done that man.
Atlantic
Extratropic Cyclone Heads Towards Northern Europe.
October 7th,
2008
Donald Burfitt-Dons, GWA
The first winter extratropic cyclone, named as Alpha One on the Global
Warming Alliance listing system has a core pressure of 950 mbs and
is expected to cross Scotland and the Scandinavian States Thursday
and Friday. Currently rated as a Category one ETC with wind strengths
of 64 knots or greater the storm is forecast to sweep over Europe’s
shores accompanied by heavy rain. Alpha one has intensified over the
last twenty four hours and is due to intensify further as it moves
eastward. Read more about the
threat of ETCs on Europe and London
Berrimilla
Berths In Britain
29th
September 2008
Donald Burfitt-Dons, GWA
Ten
metre yacht Berrimilla finally made landfall in Falmouth, U.K. completing
her semi circumference of the earth via the legendary North West passage
starting in Sydney,Australia.
Alex Whitworth, ably assisted by team members Corrie McQueen and Kimbra
Lindus had to cope with the long hot windless days and nights of the
equatorial zone as well as the below zero waters off Alaska and Northern
Canada. Their extraordinary adventure is told in dramatic detail on
the ship’s blog
where the various hardships encountered were met always with a stoic
good humour. Read more about Berrimillas voyage to study the
effects of climate change on the Arctic ice
Berri
Does It
24.8.08
Donald Burfitt-Dons
Highlighting
in dramatic fashion our shrinking ice fields, yacht Berrimilla has
just cleared the dangerous North West passage and is heading to Nuuk
on Greenland’s West coast. With a courageous crew of three and
at just 33 feet in length, the tiny boat has sailed through the melting
ice unscathed, illustrating just how quickly our world is changing
Read more about this yachting
voyage to study the effects of global warming
Extra Tropic
Cyclones Threaten UK and Europe
Powerful
winds from extra tropic cyclones could threaten both UK and Europe
with the potentially destructive force of a tropical category four
hurricane, global warming researchers warned at a conference held
at the Institute of Physics on the 6th June.
The
Global Warming Alliance, which monitors the core pressures of Atlantic
depressions and extra tropical cyclones, revealed dramatic evidence
of the increase in risks from devastating super winds for the UK and
Europe
Read more about how extra tropic cyclones are a real threat to Europe
and UK
Superwinds:
Plan Ahead Now
The Global Warming Alliance held a mini conference at the Institute
of Physics, 76 Portland Place, London W1 on Friday 6th June 2008.
For more information on Superwinds,
Plan Ahead Now
Berrimilla
Update 2nd May 2008 Sourced GWA
At 2025
on 30th April 2008 Alex Whitworth and Corrie McQueen crossed the equator
on their epic effort to sail through the North West passage in tiny
33’ Berrimilla. The first leg takes them to Dutch in the Aleutian
chain, a 6000 nautical mile distance. Due offering was made to Father
Neptune on crossing the line due west of Tarawa in the former Gilbert
and Ellis Islands as is the custom. Tarawa, the scene of the bloody
WW2 battle in November 1943 will itself be threatened as sea levels
rise due to climate change. Bonriki International Airport at the highest
point on the island is only 3 metres in elevation. Read the blog of
Alex Whitworth as he describes his voyage to record the
effects of climate change on the Arctic
Berrimilla Takes on La Nina
10th April 2008
D. Burfitt-Dons
Two
circumnavigators who have earned their titles, not in Club Class but
the hard way, by being tossed around in fibreglass yachts, set off
from Sydney on 10th April in the 33 foot Berrimilla on the latest
of owner Alex Whitworth’s imaginative global voyages.
To
highlight the climate changes, Berrimilla intends to plough her way
through the North West Passage to Devon Island, which lies west of
Greenland deep into arctic territory. Devon Island has topography
not dissimilar to Mars and the Haughton Mars Project has a research
station there read
more his research voyage
Deeper Atlantic Lows or Hurricanes?
11.3.08
Donald Burfitt-Dons
In
Hertford Hereford or Hampshire hurricanes hardly happen. Eliza Doolittle
may have struggled to pronounce her aitches but the song implied that
hurricanes are normally associated with the tropics. There the atmosphere
has relatively high surface temperatures to draw on to create the
conditions for cyclone generation.
No
longer. Last week, a tragic accident occurred in the Western Tyrols
in Austria. A business man from Liverpool was killed while driving
from Salzburg Airport, crushed in his car by a falling rock which
had been shaken loose from the mountain above by a hurricane read
more about the increasing threat of extra tropic cyclones to Europe
and UK
Thar She Blows
3.2.08
GWA
Captain Ahab’s
memorable line from Melville’s Moby Dick could well have been
spoken by a latter day ship’s captain as his ship homed in on
the west coast of England. Captain Smith, presumably under pressure
from his operating company, had decided that conditions were suitable
to set out from the Northern Ireland port of Warrenport for Heysham
in Lancashire to read more on
the changing meteorological conditions and this effect on the seas
The Last of
the Mohicans
6th December 2007
GWA Editorial
The Australian delegate
covered himself in glory in Bali by signing up to the Kyoto Agreement.
Timing was perfect as 187 delegates assembled in Bali to begin the
process of shaping up the son of Kyoto, which is due to expire in
2012.
Since the original
agreement, which puts statutory limits on greenhouse gas emissions
limiting them to 5% below the 1990 levels, Australia had been amongst
just two recalcitrant nations which refused to endorse the agreement.
to read more on Australia's position
on greenhouse gas reductions
Explorer to
check ice melt
November 2007, GWA
The Ice Warrior Jim McNeill is seeking
volunteers for a range of expeditions to collect crucial climate
change data at the four North Poles which will benefit organisations
like the Global Warming Alliance who are seeking solutions to the
climate change crisis
Alice Springs
October 2007
GWA Chairman Donald
Burfitt-Dons recently did a trip into the Simpson Desert in Central
Australia to see what effect the expansion of the Hadley Cells was
having on the arid regions lying along the affected latitudes.
With a view to devising a program to offset and reduce the reradiation
of the expanding deserts in countries such as Australia and those
in the North African Continent, Central Australia was considered to
be ideal for a case study to read
more on the desertification research of Alice Springs
Northern
Summer 2007
As
summer draws to a close we can take stock of what the year has brought
and there is plenty to reflect on. The world's climate is adjusting
to the relentless increase in the earth's temperature and the changes
are showing up in a wide variety of ways. Distortions are occurring
throughout
the planet's
cooling systems and it might be timely to refer back to earlier articles
which we have published relating to what's going on in the air, oceans
and land masses on which our survival depends. (See GWA articles in
side panel)
Early summer brought wide spread flooding across many countries. The
United Kingdom was particularly hard hit in the worst flooding for
60 years. In Oxfordshire the Thames broke it's banks inundating the
surrounding areas. Floods affected not just the low lying and thus
vulnerable countries such as Bangladesh and India but also occurred
in the mid USA leaving 26 people dead in the Houston area and in Minnesota
State. A record 15 inches of rain fell in Houston County. In China
mid July brought extensive flooding to the Huai river basin, the worst
for half a century and displacing half a million people from their
homes. DJBD
Rising sea temperatures increase the air temperature in turn which
can therefore hold more water vapour. More water vapour means more
rain when the air sample cools to Dew Point.
Fire
August Fires in Greece Image Courtesy
NASA
The
ongoing forest fires in Greece which have caused over 60 deaths
have perplexed even the locals who are inured to the regular summer
outbreaks which are fanned by their strong gusty North Easterly
winds they call the Meltemia.This year the spontaneous nature of
the outbreaks have led to arsonist theories, as uncontrollable fire
after fire have swept the Peloponnesian peninsular and the northern
island of Evia. Arson may be part of the answer but more likely
is that the ancient land has been experiencing ever warmer summers.
In the seventies and eighties temperatures in the mid thirties were
to be expected. But, as Romania and other eastern European countries
experienced this summer, the gauge now tops 40 degrees Celsius for
protracted periods. It takes very little to ignite a fire in such
hot dry conditions. Simple magnification of the sun's rays through
pieces of broken glass can be enough. We have to prepare ourselves
for more of the same.
Air
:
Hurricane Dean Forming Image Courtesy
NASA
The ongoing forest fires in Greece which have caused over 60 deaths
have perplexed even the locals who are inured to the regular summer
outbreaks which are fanned by their strong gusty North Easterly winds
they call the Meltemia.This year the spontaneous nature of the outbreaks
have led to arsonist theories, as uncontrollable fire after fire have
swept the Peloponnesian peninsular and the northern island of Evia.
Arson may be part of the answer but more likely is that the ancient
land has been experiencing ever warmer summers. In the seventies and
eighties temperatures in the mid thirties were to be expected. But,
as Romania and other eastern European countries experienced this summer,
the gauge now tops 40 degrees Celsius for protracted periods. It takes
very little to ignite a fire in such hot dry conditions. Simple magnification
of the sun's rays through pieces of broken glass can be enough. We
have to prepare ourselves for more of the same.
Earth
NorthWest Passage Image Courtesy NASA
Around the planet 2007 has been a year of extremes with records for
wetness, dryness or excessive temperatures being experienced. The
Hadley Cells are expanding affecting adjacent latitudes causing increasing
droughts while the rising ocean temperatures are loading up the atmosphere
in the temperate zones with more moisture. At the poles further reductions
of sea ice are being recorded. In northern Canada the search through
the legendary North West Passage is about to be achieved. For five
hundred years explorers have sought in vain to find a more direct
route to the Pacific. Always frustrated by the blocking sea ice August
2007 saw the last remnants in the process of disappearing. Images
from Nasa's satellite Aqua show what little remains in the way of
achieving that long held ambition. Short term the more efficient transportation
of goods from Asia to Europe will benefit us all, but the long term
implications of what we are doing to our vulnerable world must make
us change our ways before it is too late.
Perhaps
the brooding philosophers from classical times are telling us that
something is not right. The earth was considered firstly dry and secondly
cold. While still dry it is now no longer cold.
Around
the planet 2007 has been a year of extremes with records for wetness,
dryness or excessive temperatures being experienced. The Hadley Cells
are expanding affecting adjacent latitudes causing increasing droughts
while the rising ocean temperatures are loading up the atmosphere
in the temperate zones with more moisture. At the poles further reductions
of sea ice are being recorded. In northern Canada the search through
the legendary North West Passage is about to be achieved. For five
hundred years explorers have sought in vain to find a more direct
route to the Pacific. Always frustrated by the blocking sea ice August
2007 saw the last remants in the process of disappearing. Images from
Nasa's satellite Aqua show what little remains in the way of achieving
that long held ambition. Short term the more efficient tranportation
of goods from Asia to Europe will benefit us all, but the long term
implications of what we are doing to our vulnerable world must make
us change our ways before it is too late.
Perhaps
the brooding philosphers from classical times are telling us that
something is not right. The earth was considered firstly dry and secondly
cold. While still dry it is now no longer cold.
GWA
Develops Hurricane Forecasting Index
30.1.07 A20
Donald Burfitt-Dons
2006
Hot Hot Hot
14.12.06
GWA Met Correspondent.
It
hasn’t happened yet because the New Years Eve parties still
lie in front of us, but the Met Office has predicted 2006 to be the
warmest in the UK for 300 years. Following the hottest July, September
and autumn no one is going to be surprised that the whole year looks
set break the record book too. To
read about how the jet stream is moving
It’s June in January
7.12.06
D. Burfitt-Dons, GWA Aviation Correspondent
The words from the Bing Crosby classic It’s June in January
from the 1934 movie “Here is my Heart” weren’t referring
to the weather. It was all about love of course, but by the time the
old crooner rerecorded it just a month before his death in 1977, world
climate was responding to global warming. Ironically, Bing entitled
the album “Seasons ” to
read more on the formation of towering cumuli and unseasonal weather
caused by climate change
Angry Seas
16.11.06
GWA correspondent
‘Two
men died and another was seriously injured yesterday when an oil tanker
was hit by a huge wave in gale force winds near Orkney,’ reported
the Mail on Sunday, November 12th. ‘The men are believed to
have been on the deck of the Singapore-registered tanker, which had
just picked up a load of crude oila the Scaapa Flow terminal when
it ran into the storm, with winds up to 63mph and a 12-15 ft swell’
for GWA related article comment read Life
On the Ocean Wave
NEW
ESDs ON GWA WANTED LIST
15.11.06
GWA Talent Scout
At
GWA we are always on the lookout for original ideas which can save
energy and make a contribution to reducing Man’s heavy carbon
footprint on the planet read more.
Grain
Markets Explode as the Great Dry Extends
23.10.06
Donald Burfitt-Dons, GWA
The
striped shirted traders in the Grain Pits of Chicago are generally
first to get the message on what is likely to move the prices of soybeans,
corn or wheat. But last week the commodity markets were shocked when
Australia announced a massive reduction in the country’s projected
wheat crop. Read more
The Secret Greenhouse Gas
29.8.06
GWA Science Correspondent
It’s
not as sexy or scary as the greenhouse gases we read about every day
in the papers such as carbon dioxide, methane or nitrous oxide. Barely
a day passes without some pronouncement on what has to be done to
reduce these products which we are all producing in too great an abundance
for our future well-being. But what about poor old water vapour? Why
is it being ignored? Read more
Trade
Winds Weakening
6th July 2006
By GWA Correspondent
In the harbour, in the island, in the Spanish Seas,
Are the tiny white houses and the orange trees,
And day-long, night-long, the cool and pleasant breeze
Of the steady Trade Winds blowing.
John
Masefield’s poem from his Sea Ballads was written over a hundred
years ago, but the steady reliable trade winds to which he referred
are weakening according to a recent study released in the 4th May
issue of Nature read more
Tracking
the Jet Stream
16th June 2006
Donald Burfitt-Dons
Whether
flying as a passenger or a pilot you always know when you’ve
jumped on board the Jet-Stream. The ride can be exhilarating and also
cut watchfulls of minutes off your flight. The telltale signs are
a rumbling tremor in the fuselage, punctuated by sudden bursts of
wave like turbulence which might concern the pilot enough to put on
the seat belt sign. Of course it’s a lot easier to pick up in
the cockpit. The pilot has only to look at his navigation system and
check the wind strength and O.A.T.(outside air temperature) read
more .
Life
On the Ocean Wave
31st May 2006
GWA Correspondent
So
goes the Royal Marines marching song and a catchy number it is but
for how much longer mankind will be able to use the seas for his purposes
of trade, military expression of power, or simply for pure pleasure
is a question that is anything but trivial Read
more
Contrails
and Why They Matter:
13th April 2006
Donald Burfitt-Dons, GWA
The
amount of sunlight reaching the earth’s surface has been steadily
reducing since the sixties at 1.4% per decade. It is a widely accepted
assumption that the greenhouse gases such as CO2 and methane, which
we are releasing into the atmosphere, are causing this Read
more about how contrails disperse to form single cloud cover
High
Seas Set To Become Higher
23rd May
GWA Correspondent
We’ve
all read about it, worried and wondered about rising sea levels due
to melting glaciers and polar ice caps. That’s part of it, but
thermal expansion as the surface layer of the sea heats up is viewed
by the IPCC * as likely to have the greater effect on sea levels over
the 21st century. The oceans around us are a heat sink and after all
cover 71% of the earth’s surface.read
more
What's
Happening to our Tropopause ?
15th May 2006
Donald Burfitt-Dons
First
of all what is the tropopause? Well, it’s the dividing line
between the troposphere, which is the lowest layer in the atmosphere
and significantly the part where all the weather activity takes place,
and the stable layer above called the stratosphere Read
more
Climate
Change Debate:
The Danube Deluge
Global Warming Models Under Question
GWA member to discover Four Poles