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Record Weather Disasters Prove Costly for 2011

January 31st, 2012 | Posted in Articles | Comments Off

 

(Reuters) – From floods that crippled countries, to mega cyclones, huge blizzards, killer tornadoes to famine-inducing droughts, 2011 has been another record-breaker for bad weather.

While it is too early to predict what 2012 will be like, insurers and weather prediction agencies point to a clear trend: the world’s weather is becoming more extreme and more costly.

Following are details of major weather disasters for 2011 and some early forecasts for 2012.

2011 OVERVIEW

Global reinsurer Munich Re says natural catastrophe losses for the first nine months of 2011 totalled $310 billion, a record, with 80 percent of all economic losses occurring in the Asia-Pacific region. Since 1980, weather-related disasters globally have more than tripled.

The United States set a record with 12 separate billion-dollar weather disasters in 2011, with an aggregate damage total of approximately $52 billion, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said this month.

The U.N.’s World Meteorological Organization said global temperatures in 2011 are currently the 10th highest on record, higher than any previous year with a La Nina event, which has a relative cooling influence.

The 13 warmest years have all occurred in the 15 years since 1997. The extent of Arctic sea ice in 2011 was the second lowest on record, and its volume was the lowest.

Scientists say a warming atmosphere and more moisture in the air are providing fuel for weather systems, leading to more extremes. Rising levels of greenhouse gases from industry, transport and deforestation are providing that extra heat.

MAJOR WEATHER DISASTERS OF 2011

January — Record floods swamp Australia’s east coast, killing 35 people, shutting coal mines, wiping out roads, rail lines and thousands of homes and costing more than $2 billion in insured losses.

– “Snowmageddon”: Heavy snows blanket large parts of the United States including record falls in New York.

February — Cyclone Yasi, one of the largest and most powerful storms ever to hit Australia, strikes northern Queensland state, devastating sugar and banana crops.

– Massive winter storm hits U.S. Midwest and Northeast, causing travel chaos and power outages.

April – Series of tornadoes batter U.S. Southeast, killing an estimated 364 people.

May – Tornado hits U.S. town of Joplin, killing about 160 people, the single deadliest U.S. twister since 1947.

– Floods in U.S. Midwest and Mississippi River Valley inundate millions of acres, trimming corn and soy plantings.

June – Floods in China’s central and southern provinces kill more than 100 people. More than half a million are evacuated.

July – Worst drought in decades in the Horn of Africa triggers famine in Somalia and leaves 13 million people at risk starvation in a crisis expected to last well into 2012.

– Flooding between July and late November in Thailand kills more than 600, affects a third of the country, causes damage of at least $42 billion and inundates nearly 1,000 factories near Bangkok, disrupting auto and electronics global supply chains.

August – Hurricane Irene kills at least 40 people in the eastern United States and triggers the worst flooding in decades in some states. Economic losses estimated to top $10 billion.

September – Scores die in worst flooding along the Mekong river since 2000.

October – Rare October snowstorm kills 13 in U.S. northeast and leaves 1.6 million without power.

December – Tropical storm Washi hits the Philippine island of Mindanao, triggering flash floods and mudslides and killing more than 1,200 people.

– Year-long drought in U.S. state of Texas causes more than $5 billion in agricultural losses and triggers wildfires that burn 4 million acres (1.6 million hectares). Summer temperatures in Texas break U.S. records.

PREDICTIONS FOR 2012

A La Nina event in the Pacific Ocean is expected to last well into 2012. The phenomenon is a cooling of waters in the central Pacific and has a global impact on weather.

Forecasters expect it to bring above-average rains to northern and eastern Australia and more cyclones than normal during the Australian November-April storm season. La Nina events also tend to strengthen the Atlantic hurricane season.

Colorado State University researchers expect an above-average hurricane season if conditions that bring warmer than usual tropical water temperatures in the Atlantic continue and there no major El Nino event.

El Nino is a warming of surface waters in the eastern and central Pacific, affecting wind patterns that can trigger droughts in Australia and suppress Atlantic hurricanes.

Winter across Europe and the United States is also expected to be milder, forecasters say.

“The common thread this winter compared to last is the presence of La Nina,” said Chris Vaccaro, public affairs director, at the National Weather Service in Washington. “But the La Nina we have now and through the winter is not anticipated to be as strong as last year.”

In addition, the Arctic Oscillation, which was negative last year and sent frigid air southward leading to huge snowstorms, has largely been positive this year. The oscillation is a shift in atmospheric pressure cells that changes wind patterns.

A negative phase triggers high pressure over the Arctic and low pressure at mid-latitudes, which makes the Arctic zone relatively warm, but spills cold Arctic air southward to places like the U.S. Midwest and Northeast.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/27/uk-weather-global-idUSLNE7BQ00520111227


NPPC Files Comments on EPA’s CAFO Rule

January 26th, 2012 | Posted in Articles | Comments Off

As published by National Hog Farmer on January 23, 2012 (emphasis added):

image from www.connecttristates.com

The National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) on Thursday joined nearly 90 agricultural organizations in filing two sets of comments with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on the Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) Reporting Rule.

The first set of comments was signed by a coalition of 88 national, state and local agricultural groups. The second set of comments was filed on behalf of NPPC and the American Farm Bureau Federation and concerned the various legal issues the organizations have with the rule and challenges the rule would face if finalized.

Under EPA’s proposal, large livestock and poultry facilities would be required to submit to EPA substantial confidential farm and business information. The CAFO database was established as a clearinghouse for activists on the location of farms as part of a settlement between the Obama administration and anti-farming groups.

NPPC expressed concerns that as a result of these actions pork producers would face substantial legal liability and that compiling this information would threaten the biosecurity of producers’ operations.

NPPC also believes the CAFO rule would provide virtually no added benefits to improving manure management or protecting water.

NPPC Vice President Randy Spronk, a pork producer from Edgerton, MN, met with Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson in December to express the pork industry’s concerns with the proposed rule.

To view the article in its original format, visit http://nationalhogfarmer.com/environment/nppc-files-comments-epas-cafo-rule/?YM_MID=1286899&YM_RID=palmer@myrainreport.com


BASF Moving Plant-Science Unit to U.S.

January 17th, 2012 | Posted in Articles | Comments Off

 

Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) — BASF SE is moving the plant-science unit that genetically modifies crops to the U.S. from Germany after European consumers resisted the technology.

The division’s headquarters in Limburgerhof will move to Raleigh, N.C., and development and commercialization of all products targeted solely at cultivation in the European market will be halted, BASF said today in a statement.

The move will result in the loss of 140 European jobs, the Ludwigshafen, Germany-based company said.

“There is still a lack of acceptance for this technology in many parts of Europe from the majority of consumers, farmers and politicians,” Stefan Marcinowski, the BASF board member responsible for plant biotechnology, said in the statement. “It does not make business sense to continue investing in products exclusively for cultivation in this market.”

The flight of research means Germany may lose out on the $12 billion market for genetically modified plants, which is set to grow 5% annually over the next 5 years, according to advisory firm Phillips McDougall. BASF founded the agricultural center in Limburgerhof in 1914 and has 11,000 square meters of greenhouses and about 40 hectares of fields.

Limburgerhof will retain its crop-protection activities, and the company will close sites in Gatersleben, Germany, and Svalov, Sweden, it said. Research activities for plant science will continue in Ghent, Belgium, and in Berlin, BASF said.

The plant-science unit will concentrate on the Americas and Asia, BASF said. Genetically modified potato products will no longer be developed specifically for Europe, though the unit will continue seeking regulatory approval to “maintain all options,” the company said.

BASF won U.S. approval last year for cultivating a drought-tolerant corn developed in collaboration with Monsanto Co.

http://www.no-tillfarmer.com/pages/News—BASF-Moving-Plant-Science-Unit-To-US.php



Rains Boost E TX Forage Growth

January 12th, 2012 | Posted in Articles | Comments Off

As posted in Hay & Forage Grower January 10, 2012:

image from www.farmprogress.com

Late-December rains have taken the pressure off scarce hay supplies in parts of East Texas for the time being, reports Aaron Low, agriculture agent for Texas AgriLife Extension in Cherokee County.

“Things are looking better,” says Low, noting that 5-7” of rain fell in the area during the last two weeks of 2011. “A lot of (cattle) producers here planted ryegrass and clover back in late September and October rather than buy hay. Then they had to sit on those plantings without any rain for two months.

“It was a gamble. But now, because of the recent rains, it looks like it’s paid off. If they make use of rotational grazing, some producers will be able to utilize some of these fields through the end of the winter.”

Due to last summer’s crippling, widespread drought, area hay supplies were “pretty much wiped out” as of early fall, says Low. “There just wasn’t any hay to be found all the way into Mississippi and on up through Arkansas.”

That shortage of hay set off extensive culling by beef producers. Cherokee County lost about 50% of its cow herd in 2011, Low estimates. “Out of what’s left, we estimate we could lose another 25-50% if we have another year like last year.”

To view the original article, visit http://hayandforage.com/hay/rains-boost-east-texas-forage-growth#node-6651?NL=HFG-02&Issue=HFG-02_20120110_HFG-02_740&YM_RID=palmer@myrainreport.com&YM_MID=1283640


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