Showing posts with label WINDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WINDS. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Study finds global warming ‘pause’ comes from unusual Pacific Ocean trade winds


By The Guardian
Sunday, February 9, 2014 19:43 EST


A serene beach in Kiribati, which may soon vanish beneath the waves due to rising ocean levels. Screenshot via YouTube.


GUARDIAN NEWS SERVICE


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Oliver Milman, The Guardian


The contentious “pause” in global warming over the past decade is largely due to unusually strong trade winds in the Pacific ocean that have buried surface heat deep underwater, new research has found.


A joint Australian and US study analysed why the rise in the Earth’s global average surface temperature has slowed since 2001, after rapidly increasing from the 1970s.


The research shows that sharply accelerating trade winds in central and eastern areas of the Pacific have driven warm surface water to the ocean’s depths, reducing the amount of heat that flows into the atmosphere.


In turn, the lowering of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific triggers further cooling in other regions.


The study, which is published in the journal Nature Climate Change, calculated the net cooling effect on global average surface temperatures as between 0.1C and 0.2C (32.2F and 32.4F), accounting for much of the hiatus in surface warming. The study’s authors said there has been a 0.2C gap between models used to predict warming and actual observed warming since 2001.


The findings should provide fresh certainty about the reasons behind the warming hiatus, which has been claimed by critics of mainstream climate science as evidence that the models are flawed and predictions of rising temperatures have been exaggerated.


The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) addressed the warming pause issue in its 2013 climate report, pointing out that the Earth is going through a solar minimum and that more than 90% of the world’s extra heat is being soaked up by the oceans, rather than lingering on the surface.


Matthew England, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, and leader of the research, said that while the solar minimum and aerosol particles have contributed to the slowdown, strong trade winds are the significant factor.


“Temperature models have an envelope of uncertainty but it is clear that the last decade has seen a much flatter temperature change compared to the 1980s and 1990s, when the increase was rapid,” he said.


“We found that the wind acceleration has been strong enough in the past 20 years to pump a lot of the heat into the ocean. Winds accelerated in this period more than at any time in the past century; it really is unprecedented and the models haven’t captured it all.”


The acceleration of Pacific trade winds has been twice as strong in the past 20 years compared with the prior 80 years, cooling the east Pacific and propagating the trend to other parts of the world.


The study suggests the warming hiatus could continue for much of the present decade if the trade winds continue; however, should the winds return to their long-term average speeds, rapid warming will resume.


“Even if the winds accelerate even further, sooner or later the impact of greenhouse gases will overwhelm the effect,” England said. “And if the winds relax, the heat will come out quickly. As we go through the 21st century, we are less and less likely to have a cooler decade. Greenhouse gases will certainly win out in the end.”


England said it was unclear what has caused the increase in Pacific trade winds, although warming in the Indian Ocean has been cited as a potential trigger.


Dr Steve Rintoul, research team leader at CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, said the research shows that pauses in the rate of global warming are to be expected.


“The oceans have continued to warm unabated, even during the recent hiatus in warming of surface temperature,” he said.


“Natural variations of the climate system also mean that climate trends estimated over a short period are unlikely to reflect long-term changes. A decade or two of slower or faster warming does not tell us anything about long-term climate change.”


Richard Allan, professor of climate science at the University of Reading, said it is likely the current warming slowdown is only a temporary reprieve from brisk increases in global temperatures.


“This new research suggests that when the trade winds weaken again, the planet can expect rapid warming of the surface to resume, as greenhouse gas concentrations continue to rise,” he said.


“We don’t know what is causing these unprecedented changes, but the implications could be substantial.”


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media 2014




The Raw Story



Study finds global warming ‘pause’ comes from unusual Pacific Ocean trade winds

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Big chill, big snow, big-time winds to sock Northeast




  • NEW: Hundreds of flights are canceled in and out of Chicago’s O’Hare airport, website reports

  • NEW: Boston cancels school for Friday, two days ahead of time, due to expected storm

  • Long Island faces a blizzard warning; NYC may get 10 inches of snow, sub-zero wind chills

  • Much of New England is also bracing for a powerful winter storm



(CNN) — Snow is no surprise in the Northeast and northern Plains states in winter.


But a blizzard? That’s something different — and dangerous.


Especially when it threatens New York City, with more than 8 million residents and legions of visitors perhaps still stumbling home from Times Square after the Big Apple dropped on New Year’s Eve.


As of Wednesday night, New York City was under a winter storm warning, just like many other densely populated communities in parts of eight states.


A stone’s throw away in neighboring Long Island — including in Nassau County, which borders New York — the National Weather Service has issued a blizzard warning from 6 p.m. Thursday through 1 p.m. Friday because of a forecast marked by 8 to 10 inches of snow, wind chills dipping to 10-below zero and sustained winds up to 35 mph and gusting 10 mph stronger than that.


“Falling and blowing snow with strong winds and poor visibilities are likely,” the Weather Service said. “This will lead to whiteout conditions making travel extremely dangerous. Do not travel.”


Even if it doesn’t officially get socked with a blizzard — which meteorologists define as three hours or longer of 35 mph winds or more and considerable snow — New York City should come close. Its forecast calls for about 9 inches of snow, subzero wind chills and winds regularly blowing between 21 and 26 mph, which could test newly inaugurated Mayor Bill de Blasio.


By sheer numbers, other cities are predicted to have it worse.


Albany, New York, could shudder at lows of 11 below and some 14 inches of snow. Boston’s temperatures alone (not just the wind chill) should be minus 3 on Friday night, by which time the Hub should have 5 to 11 inches of flakes on the ground. Two days ahead of time, due to the storm, the city called off school for Friday.


Citing likely “near blizzard” conditions Thursday night into late Friday morning, the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency warned that 1 to 2 feet of fluffy, drifting snow could accumulate in some pockets and that there could be moderate coastal flooding.


The combination of everything — especially the extreme cold and strong winds — has homeless shelters at the ready, knowing there may be more people needing their help. Crossroads Rhode Island, for example, expects a number of people will end up sleeping on its floors over the coming days.


“Our main emphasis is getting people inside where it is safer and warmer,” said Jennifer Harris, a spokeswoman for the Pine Street Inn shelter system in Boston. “… Pine Street Inn is making sure to have extra staff and food and water. We are geared up to provide to a greater number of people.”


Already, wintry weather was hitting parts of the Midwest on Wednesday night in the form of snow in Kansas, Missouri and Illinois. The weather contributed to nearly 600 flight cancellations in and out of Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport — more than half the total for all the United States, according to airline tracking website FlightAware– and it should get worse, with 5 to 9 inches of snow forecast for Thursday alone.


And parts of the northern United States should get even colder, somehow, as the week rolls along.


Green Bay’s beloved Packers will welcome the San Francisco 49ers to Wisconsin, where low temperatures could bottom out Sunday night around at minus 17. It will be relatively balmy Sunday in Cincinnati, Ohio, but potentially a lot wetter with snow and rain possible when the city’s Bengals host the San Diego Chargers in another NFL playoff match-up.


CNN’s Lorenzo Ferrigno contributed to this report.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Big chill, big snow, big-time winds to sock Northeast

Friday, December 13, 2013

Exclusive: After "cataclysmic" Snowden affair, NSA faces winds of change




FORT MEADE, Maryland Fri Dec 13, 2013 6:35pm EST



U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) Director General Keith Alexander testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington December 11, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron

U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) Director General Keith Alexander testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington December 11, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron




FORT MEADE, Maryland (Reuters) – The U.S. National Security Agency has made dozens of changes in its operations and computer networks to prevent the emergence of another Edward Snowden, including potential disciplinary action, a top NSA official said on Friday, as a White House review panel recommended restraints on NSA spying.


Former NSA contractor Snowden’s disclosures have been “cataclysmic” for the eavesdropping agency, Richard Ledgett, who leads a task force responding to the leaks, said in a rare interview at NSA’s heavily guarded Fort Meade headquarters.


In the more than hour-long interview, Ledgett acknowledged the agency had done a poor job in its initial public response to revelations of vast NSA monitoring of phone and Internet data; pledged more transparency; and said he was deeply worried about highly classified documents not yet public that are among the 1.7 million Snowden is believed to have accessed.


He also stoutly defended the NSA’s mission of tracking terrorist plots and other threats, and said its recruiting of young codebreakers, linguists and computer geeks has not been affected by the Snowden affair – even as internal morale has been.


“Any time you trust people, there is always a chance that someone will betray you,” he said.


The NSA is taking 41 specific technical measures to control data by tagging and tracking it, to supervise agency networks with controls on activity, and to increase oversight of individuals.


Measures include requiring two-person control of every place where someone could access data and enhancing the security process that people go through and requiring more frequent screenings of systems administrative access, Ledgett said.


After months of sometimes blistering criticism in the news media and by Congress and foreign governments, the publicity-averse NSA is now mounting an effort to tell its side of the Snowden story.


It granted access to NSA headquarters to a team from CBS’ “60 Minutes” program, which is scheduled to broadcast a segment on the agency on Sunday.


Ledgett, a 36-year intelligence veteran who reportedly is in line to be the agency’s deputy director, joked that doing media interviews was “a complete out-of-body experience for me.”


He spoke to Reuters on the same day that the White House said it had decided to maintain the practice of having a single individual head both the NSA and U.S. Cyber Command, which conducts cyberwarfare – an outcome the NSA leadership favored.


Separately, news reports late Thursday said an outside review panel appointed by the White House has recommended changes in a program disclosed by Snowden that collects basic data on Americans’ phone calls – known as metadata.


The panel reportedly said the data should be held by an organization other than the NSA and stricter rules should be enforced for searching the databanks.


Ledgett declined to discuss the panel’s specific recommendations. But he seemed to acknowledge that tighter guidelines for NSA eavesdropping were in the offing, saying that what is technologically possible “has gotten ahead of policy.”


Snowden, who is living under asylum in Russia, disclosed a vast U.S. eavesdropping apparatus that includes the phone metadata program; NSA querying of Internet communications via major companies such as Google Inc and Facebook Inc; and widespread tapping of international communication networks.


Ledgett made no apologies for what many see as overly aggressive NSA monitoring. He noted that the U.S. government’s intelligence taskings to the agency run to 36,000 pages, and said its activities take place within a “box” of U.S. laws and policies.


“We’ll color in every square millimeter of that box,” he said, implying the NSA will use its legal authorities to the fullest extent possible.


The NSA’s internal review has determined about 98 percent of the scope of the material that Snowden had accessed, and officials have found no evidence that he had help either within the NSA or from adversary spy agencies.


Ledgett said that when Snowden was downloading the documents, NSA was ahead of other intelligence agencies in installing “insider threat” software that President Barack Obama ordered in the wake of an earlier leak scandal involving the group WikiLeaks. But installation of the software, which might have stopped Snowden, was not complete.


“Snowden hit at a really opportune time. For him – not for us,” he said.


Ledgett said that most of the Snowden material released publicly so far has been about NSA programs and partnerships with foreign countries and companies, rather than intelligence reports and “requirements.” The latter refers to U.S. government taskings to the NSA to answer questions about specific targets.


That last category is what keeps him up at night. “Those make me nervous because they reveal what we know and what we don’t know and they are almost a roadmap for adversaries.”


No one at the NSA has yet lost their job over the Snowden crisis, including at the Hawaii site where he worked. Ledgett said three people are under review for potential disciplinary action, but declined further comment.


He challenged those who call Snowden a whistleblower, saying the former contractor did not use multiple channels available to vent his concerns. “I actually think characterizing him as a whistleblower is a disservice to people who are whistleblowers.”


Ledgett said he knew of no U.S. government move toward reaching any kind of a legal deal with Snowden, a decision that would be up to the Justice Department.


But, he said in his opinion, such a conversation would have to include concrete assurances that Snowden would secure any of the material he has that has not yet been made public.


In the aftermath of Snowden, the NSA is trying to be more open about what it does so the public can have more confidence in the agency’s mission.


“We as an agency are a little naive, for a long time we were ‘No Such Agency’ or ‘no comment’ and were not adept at presenting our face to the public,” he said.


“I think quite frankly had we done more of that over the last five or 10 years we might not be in the same place that we are vis-a-vis the public perception of who we are and what we do,” he said. “So too late to learn that lesson, so what you are seeing now is our new face.”


(Editing by Lisa Shumaker)





Reuters: Top News



Exclusive: After "cataclysmic" Snowden affair, NSA faces winds of change

Exclusive: After "cataclysmic" Snowden affair, NSA faces winds of change




WASHINGTON Fri Dec 13, 2013 4:53pm EST



U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) Director General Keith Alexander testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington December 11, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron

U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) Director General Keith Alexander testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington December 11, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Gary Cameron




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s administration said on Friday it will keep one person in charge of both the National Security Agency spy agency and the military’s Cyber Command, despite calls for splitting the roles after revelations about vast U.S. electronic surveillance operations.


The White House had considered splitting up the two agencies, possibly giving the NSA a civilian leader for the first time in its 61-year history to dampen controversy over its programs revealed by former contractor Edward Snowden.


Both the NSA and Cyber Command, which conducts cyber warfare, are now headed by the same man, Army General Keith Alexander, who is retiring in March. Given that the chief of Cyber Command must be a military officer, the White House decision means that Alexander’s successor will be from the military as well.


“Following a thorough interagency review, the administration has decided that keeping the positions of NSA Director and Cyber Command Commander together as one, dual-hatted position is the most effective approach to accomplishing both agencies’ missions,” said Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for the White House’s National Security Council.


“Without the dual-hat arrangement, elaborate procedures would have to be put in place to ensure that effective coordination continued and avoid creating duplicative capabilities in each organization.”


The White House announced that Obama had received an outside panel’s recommendations on what constraints might be in order for the NSA and that the 40 recommendations would be reviewed.


“We expect our overall internal review to be completed in January and the president thereafter to deliver remarks to outline the outcomes of our work,” Hayden said.


The review was driven by public disclosures about NSA spying, including reports that German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s phone had been monitored.


Based in Fort Meade, Maryland, Cyber Command tries to detect and stop computer penetration of military and other critical networks by U.S. adversaries like China, Iran and North Korea.


However, there is an increasing focus on offense as military commanders beef up plans to execute cyber strikes.


A steady drip of revelations from Snowden about the vast scope of NSA spying has raised widespread concern about the reach of such U.S. operations, with its ability to pry into the affairs of private individuals as well as the communications of foreign leaders.


REVIEW OF SPYING


Obama said last week he intended to propose NSA reforms to reassure Americans that the agency was not violating their privacy.


“I’ll be proposing some self-restraint on the NSA and to initiate some reforms that can give people more confidence,” Obama said in a television interview on December 5.


The Wall Street Journal reported late on Thursday that the outside panel’s draft proposals call for changing the NSA leadership from military to civilian as well as storing the vast amount of data on phone calls collected by the agency at a third-party organization.


The proposals also recommend stricter standards for searching the data amassed by the NSA, the Journal said.


The recommendations from panel, called the Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies, are among several measures suggested this year by Obama, who has said he ordered a review of the surveillance programs before Snowden leaked secret documents to media.


Hayden declined comment “on a report that is not yet final and hasn’t yet been submitted to the White House.” He said the administration was still working out the details of how and when it will be made public.


(Additional reporting by Alina Selyukh and Steve Holland; Editing by Alistair Bell and Christopher Wilson)






Reuters: Politics



Exclusive: After "cataclysmic" Snowden affair, NSA faces winds of change

Saturday, September 21, 2013

TYPHOON USAGI: 135 MPH WINDS...


Typhoon Usagi, a strong tropical cyclone in the western Pacific Ocean, is packing winds equivalent to a categoy 4 Hurricane. Over the next 24 hours Usagi will threaten parts of Taiwan, the far northern Philippines and southern China.


Usagi strengthened to a super typhoon Friday morning before weakening slightly to below super typhoon strength Friday night.  Further weakening is expected before making landfall late Sunday, local time. 



Background


Latest IR Satellite Image


Latest IR Satellite Image


Latest IR Satellite Image


Latest IR Satellite Image




Background


Usagi Forecast Path


Usagi Forecast Path


Usagi Forecast Path


Usagi Forecast Path



A tropical cyclone is dubbed a “super typhoon” when maximum sustained winds reach at least 150 mph. Usagi underwent a period of rapid intensification from early Wednesday through midday Thursday (U.S. Eastern time), going from a 55-knot tropical storm to a 140-knot super typhoon in just 33 hours, or just under a 100 mph intensification, based on satellite estimates of intensity.


By Friday night, though, Usagi underwent an eyewall replacement cycle, causing the storm to weaken slightly. In addition, the outer rain bands began to interact with Tawain and Luzon, disrupting the storm’s low-level inflow, further weakening the storm.


Nevertheless, Usagi is still a powerful typhoon, and it is expected to maintain a west-northwest path through the weekend. Here are the potential forecast impacts by location for Usagi:


Taiwan


  • Closest approach of center of Usagi: Saturday afternoon, local time.

  • The most likely path for the center of Usagi is to pass near the southern tip of Taiwan at that time. This would put Taiwan in the most dangerous eastern semicircle of Usagi.

  • Potential impacts: Surge flooding/battering waves (eastern coast especially), damaging winds (particularly southern Taiwan), flooding rain/mudslides (central, eastern Taiwan).

  • Local forecast: Taipei

Northern Philippines


  • The center of Usagi will likely pass north of the north coast of Luzon on Saturday, local time.

  • Potential impacts: Coastal flooding/high surf along the north coast of Luzon, bands of locally heavy rain (trigger flash flooding/mudslides), some wind damage possible.

  • Local forecast: Manila

Hong Kong


  • Closest approach of center of Usagi: Sunday afternoon/evening, local time.

  • Current forecast anticipates Usagi will weaken before reaching southern China, but still may be a Category 1, 2 or 3 equivalent system.

  • Potential impacts: These will depend on exact track of Usagi’s center Sunday. It is still too soon to forecast these impacts.

  • Local forecast: Hong Kong

Incidentally, Hong Kong is one of the most densely populated places in the world, with over 7.1 million residents, as of a 2012 estimate.


MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Typhoon Utor Photos (August 2013)





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TYPHOON USAGI: 135 MPH WINDS...