Updates
December 15, 2012: I assume
this document would have been too much for the writer of the article linked below to understand. If you have the time, look at the graphs on page 16 and 17 of this document which shows the spring temperature change in the ND-SD-MT-WY / West North Central Region of the United States. The first graph, from 1895 to 2007, shows the average spring temperature to be 42 degrees. In 1895, it was about 41 degrees; in 2007, it was about 43 degrees. The second graph is even more interesting. It is from 1991 - 2005. This graph shows the average spring temperatures in the same region (ND-SD-MT-WY): the temperature trend is actually ... drum roll ... DOWN.
By the way, the best line in the document, and I paraphrase: "without greenhouse gases, the average temperature in the West North Central Region would be 60 degrees colder." Again, "60 degrees colder." The temperature would not be 60 degrees without greenhouse gases; the temperature would average about 60 degrees COLDER without greenhouse gases.
Again, the global warmers have never been able to tell me the "correct" temperature for the earth, and who set the global thermostat in the first place. And, of course, manmade CO2 accounts for three (3) percent of all greenhouse gases. Water vapor is the number one greenhouse gas, and water vapor is the by-product of fuel cells. I can't make this stuff up.
Original Post
Link here. A huge thanks to a reader for sending me this article.
A lot of anxiety by the writer of the article at the link, but somewhat interesting to scan through.
Some of the writing is beyond the pale, to say the least:
Already, a mere 1 degree Fahrenheit of global temperature rise over the
past 50 years has caused a 5.5 percent decline in wheat production,
according to David Lobell, a professor at Stanford University’s Center
on Food Security and the Environment.
A mere one (1) degree Fahrenheit of global temperature rise over the past 50 years has resulted in a 5.5 percent decline ... oh, really? ... 5.5 percent? Is one not sure that it's more like 5.4% or 5.6%? A degree Fahrenheit::a degree Celsius, by the way is about 9:5. A degree Fahrenheit is about half-a-degree Celsius, the usual way scientists measure temperature. A half-degree over 50 years. Okay.
And if you read a bit farther down, one finds that a slightly warmer temperature will actually increase wheat production. I can't make this stuff up.
Then this:
“We stressed our farm crops this year pretty strongly, and many of them
almost folded,” says Jay Fuhrer, a U.S. Department of Agriculture
extension agent in North Dakota. “Does that concern you as a consumer?
It should.”
- Sugar beets: "The crop appears to be fairly strong right now," Schweitzer said. "It's why we were able to start so early."
- Corn: there's so much of it, the US government mandates more corn by turned into ethanol to be burned in SUVs.
- Durum wheat: hit badly this year by the drought ... but blaming it on man-made global warming seems to be a bit of a stretch. Let's see what next year brings.
But it's not all bad:
In the short term, hotter temperatures might actually boost wheat
yields, at least in some places. [Again, we are talking half-a-degree Celsius over 50 years.] A study of western Australia, a key
wheat exporter, found that, up to a 3.6˚F rise in temperature, yields
increased. But a coauthor of the study, Prof. Senthold Asseng of the
University of Florida, cautioned that this result might not hold true in
locations closer to the equator, such as India, the world’s
second-largest producer and consumer of non-durum wheat after China.
One rancher in North Dakota can see "thousands of wells outside his backyard":
Teddy Roosevelt, the godfather of American conservationism, used to hunt
big-horned elk on these prairies. Now his former ranch overlooks land
that is dotted with thousands of oil wells and enough pipes flaring
natural gas that, like giant torches, the flares are visible from outer
space.
His ranch must have quite an "overlook." The most dense (densest) area in North Dakota for oil wells is probably the Beaver Lodge field. I count 15 wells in one section (640 acres). It would take a lot of sections for a ranch to "overlook" to see thousands of wells. See
Vern Whitten photography to see how "crowded" the Bakken is with wells.
But perhaps the best:
For North Dakota, the Bakken boom has been both blessing and curse. It
has helped lower unemployment to 2 percent and generated enough tax
revenue to give the state a $1.6 billion budget surplus. However, it has
also upended the state’s traditional lifestyle and transformed a
remote, ruggedly beautiful place into a sprawling, get-rich-quick
industrial zone.
Check out Vern Whitten photography and see if you see the same thing.
Williston is an industrial zone. Williams County can brag about being an industrial zone. But North Dakota is hardly an industrial zone. The oil patch in North Dakota, for all practical purposes, touches about six western counties. The oil patch barely extends to the center (if one wants to call Minot the center), and doesn't even come close to the capital (Bismark) or Devils Lake or Grand Forks or the big industrial city in North Dakota: Fargo.
Ah, yes, blogging. It doesn't get any better than
The Daily Beast.