Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
A report co-authored by a climate scientist from Australia's CSIRO has found that global sea level has been rising at an alarming rate projected to be a hefty 88cm increase between 1990 and 2100. Global warming has been named as the cause.
In a review published in the journal Science
today, an international team of climate scientists from six
institutions around the world, reviewed actual observations of carbon
dioxide, temperature and sea level from 1990 to 2006 and compared them
with projected changes for the same period.
The team found that carbon dioxide concentration followed the modelled
scenarios almost exactly, that global-mean surface temperatures were in
the upper part of the range projected by the IPCC, and that observed
sea level has been rising faster than the models had projected and
closely followed the IPCC Third Assessment Report upper limit of an
88cm rise between 1990 and 2100.
Sea levels have risen largely due to warming of the ocean and the
consequent thermal expansion and melting of non-polar glaciers and ice
caps and the ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland, according to the
report.
The climate system, and in particular sea level, may be responding more
quickly to rising carbon emissions than climate scientists have
estimated with climate models.
The team of climate scientists has cautioned against suggestions that
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has previously
overestimated the rate of climate change.
The scientists noted that because the review period (1990-2006) was
short, it would be premature to conclude that sea levels will continue
to increase at the same rate in the future. However, they also said
their findings show that previous projections have not exaggerated the
rate of change but may in some respects have underestimated it.
Measurements of carbon dioxide through facilities such as the
Australian Bureau of Meteorology's Cape Grim observatory in Tasmania
support the paper's conclusions. The global average temperature
estimates are collated separately by NASA's Goddard Institute for Space
Studies in the USA and the Hadley Centre and Climatic Research Unit in
the UK. The sea level observations come from both coastal and island
tide gauges and data provided by satellites.
One of the authors of the review, Dr John Church of the Antarctic
Climate & Ecosystems CRC and CSIRO, noted that any (or all) of the
modelled contributions could be underestimated but that there is most
uncertainty about the contribution made by ice-sheet melts. "Models of
the potential contribution of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets
need to be improved to include the potential of a relatively dynamic
response," Dr Church said. This work is a component of the Wealth from
Oceans Flagship, an initiative of CSIRO to more broadly understand the
impact of marine climate change.
Lead author of the review was Dr Stefan Ramstorf, of the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Research, Potsdam, Germany; with
contributing authors: Dr Anny Cazenave, Toulouse France; Dr John
Church, Antarctic Climate and Ecosystem CRC and CSIRO; Dr James Hansen
at NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, USA; Drs Ralph E. Keeling
and Richard C.J. Somerville, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD,
USA; and, Dr David E. Parker, Hadley Centre, Met Office, UK.
David Bass
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